
Jake takes him back to the office in order to fill in an official report when he realizes that he's related to Deputy Commissioner Podolski. In The Tagger, Trevor is arrested by Jake and Holt after being caught vandalizing police cars by painting penises on them. Great fun.Michael Grant Trevor Podolski is the spoiled, condescending and callous son of Deputy Commissioner Podolski. They are gleeful pop-culture mashups of Beastie Boys videos and somehow spaghetti Westerns. Boyle always plays the victim when Peralta and he role-play.‘Santiago struck out with a 92-year-old.’ ‘That is not accurate, sir.’ ‘Wait, you hooked up with him? Ugh.’.
#B99 the tagger cast how to
The only puzzle he hasn’t solved…is how to grow up.’ Show, it doesn’t really help if you hang a lantern on how on-the-nose it is.
‘ loves putting away bad guys and solving puzzles. Words cannot adequately convey the pure pleasure of hearing Andre Braugher’s magisterial voice intone the words ‘titties’ and ‘they have adorable chubby cheeks’. Scully (Joel McKinnon Miller) and Hitchcock (Dirk Blocker): incompetent, but ‘they make good coffee’. I confess this element made me groan out loud when I first saw it. If he gets more than she does, she goes on a date with him. If she notches more arrests than he does, she gets his car. Amy Santiago (Melissa Fumeiro): the goody-two-shoes who wants Holt to be her ‘rabbi’, and who has an ongoing bet with Peralta. LoTruglio’s physical comedy is on point, of course. Oh yeah, and he’s supposed to be fantastically clumsy. Charles Boyle (Joe LoTruglio): the puppy-faced foodie with a doomed crush on Rosa and a tendency to overshare. Rosa Diaz (Stephanie Beatriz): she is tough but scary. Gina Linetti (Chelsea Peretti): the spacey-but-sharp office administrator. Terry Jeffords (Terry Crews): the archetypal gentle giant, with two new baby daughters and therefore a terror of getting hurt in the field. Also also, this is a pretty diverse cast, in a cheerful, no-nonsense way. Also, it’s kind of awesome that you have a gay character where the gayness isn’t his entire deal. And I thoroughly, thoroughly enjoy the interplay between the great Andre Braugher’s resolute deadpan and Andy Samberg’s manic energy. The scenes where Jake Learns His Lesson are a bit wince-inducing, but also charming in their earnestness. Ensuring that his team works as a team is important, and Jake’s showboating maverick tendencies undermine that. Holt, you see, is an openly gay police officer, and after a lifetime of discrimination despite a stellar record, has been given command of his own precinct. Jake keeps trying to clown at, along or through the rules – until he figures out why it’s so important to Holt that the precinct be perfect. It drives Jake crazy that he isn’t allowed to do whatever he wants so long as he’s putting away bad guys – at which, to be fair, he seems to be really good.
The two butt heads immediately over whether Jake wears a tie, and Holt puts him in his place quietly but firmly.
Captain Holt (Andre Braugher) is a deep-voiced, deadpan straight arrow who has no time for Jake’s seat-of-the-pants oafishness. He’s used to having a drunk and apathetic boss, but there’s a new sheriff in town. Jake Peralta (Andy Samberg) is a talented man-child, a detective at Brooklyn’s Ninety-ninth Precinct. It lays out its main themes and conflicts briskly, and then gets on with the job of making you laugh. The show is confident and breezy right out of the gate, trusting in its crackerjack ensemble and unashamed sincerity right from the off. It’s a delight, but be warned that there are a few kinks to iron out along the way. Its ensemble is fantastic and every single member of its cast has chemistry with every single other member. Brooklyn Nine Nine is a sweet, beautifully-observed workplace comedy.