However, Forrest's compulsive curiosity and uncompromising commitment to the show unexpectedly backfire in ways that increasingly impact his own formerly ideal real life.
[3] Season two guest stars include Allison Tolman, Mary Birdsong, Johnny Pemberton, Ian Roberts, and Matt Besser.
He starts with "Stealing" and after lifting some malted milk balls from his local grocer, he rapidly escalates to an attempted bank heist that goes wrong, resulting in intern Josh getting shot in the butt.
During the first review, "Making a Sex Tape", Forrest asks for the assistance of his faithful wife Suzanne, who refuses, finding it a bit weird.
A child asks what it's like being Batman and Forrest dresses the part, but doesn't engage in any crime fighting, only returning shopping carts used by the homeless and agitating a man urinating in public.
This reinvigorates him to feel like Batman and he violently assaults a convenience store attendant, rattles a snack free from a vending machine, and kicks intern Josh out of his office, where he has been sleeping.
He drives intern Josh to a medical marijuana dispensary and sees Suzanne on a date with her divorce attorney which sends Forrest into a fury.
Entering the house for the orgy, Forrest is initially awkward, but is encouraged by the host and vigorously has sex with several women and becomes obsessed.
Forrest attends a seminar from financial guru Thad Valentine, where he steals another attendee's business idea and severely burns himself while walking on hot coals.
A follow-up tweet clarifies that the initial request was intended to be for "bubblebaths" and this got swapped with her user name "the real Lisa Ching" run together as "thereallisaching".
A family man dentist wants to know what it's like to run from the law and Forrest plans on throwing a brick at a parked cop car and Eliza instead takes a police officer hostage.
He takes a job in the lobby of a building at a coffee shop run by elderly man Willy who has an obsessive autistic employee Wendell.
Lucille is inspired to have sex with a stranger and Forrest and Josh go to shoot guns, drink champagne, and have a cocaine-fueled orgy broken up by the police.
An email comes in from a Turkish viewer who wants to know what it's like being Irish and Forrest becomes an ethnic stereotype and Suzanne excuses his bizarre actions due to possibly having a brain tumor.
Meanwhile, dancer Trinity took Tim to a gay bar, where he met a man that he liked and decided to stop trying to cure himself of homosexuality, but Forrest misunderstands, thinking that he and the female stripper became a couple.
A young man is concerned that he will be fingered for eating a cake that his sister ate, and Forrest investigates what it is like to be falsely accused.
Facing eight years of imprisonment, Forrest is saved at the last minute by the confession from Tina's psychotic roommate who actually was the arsonist.
Giant William Nilly wonders what it would be like to be a little person and he initially simulates this by surrounding himself with oversized items in his office and home, such as a toothbrush as long as his body.
Mrs. Greenfield gets jealous when Forrest starts having sex with the female members and she turns it into a violent, criminal gang, drawing the attention of the authorities.
Forrest becomes obsessed with manipulating her and ends up hiring the man who is in his profile picture to video conference with her: baseball player Joe Dale, Jr.
His pain pills from the arrow injuries cause him to pass out for six hours and he awakens with his oars having fallen off the boat, adrift in the ocean, with no food, water, or means of communicating with the outside world.
His recording loses battery power and it starts up again over 90 days later as Forrest has ended up at the Great Pacific Garbage Patch and has been able to eat off of scraps and birds he has killed until some Japanese whalers save him.
A drunk Forrest puts away his planned comments and instead rambles, going from some initially awkward but kind sentiments and he ends up reminiscing and proposes to her.
Forrest defers to the toy for every question or decision that he encounters by shaking a Magic 8 Ball hidden in a fanny pack; the jostling at his crotch strongly resembles near-constant masturbation.
A rattled Forrest is always struck by the memory of killing a man and a young woman with a new prescription for Lexapro wonders what it is like to be happy all the time.
While A. J. visits him, he calls the absurd state of being perpetually happy 3 stars and issues his next challenge: to review what it is like to have a pillow fight.
He attends a lecture by a conspiracist and feels that if all his misfortunes due to hosting Review were actually part of a plot to harm him rather than random chance, it may provide him some comfort.
Forrest forgives her, which causes her shock and outrage, leading her to outline all of the miserable experiences that he has imposed on his former family and slam the door in his face.
The website's critics consensus reads, "The subversive Review lures viewers with a seemingly innocuous hook and gradually reveals a disturbing commitment to its high concept, making for one of the darkest – and uproarious – of comedies.
The website's critics consensus reads, "Review's sophomore season marks a series at its most confident and sardonic, with star Andy Daly committing a masterclass of self-destruction as the increasingly unhinged Forrest MacNeil.