Lina’s parent plot feels slightly underbaked compared to the others. A single dinner scene hints at deep cultural guilt and love, but it’s resolved a little too neatly with a hug. This could have been a two-episode arc.

Watch it tonight. Don’t text your parents after.

The B-plot with Sam’s plant (affectionately named “Morty”) is pure comedic gold, culminating in a hilarious yet sincere eulogy in his bathroom after Morty succumbs to overwatering. It sounds dumb. It’s not. It’s about our desperate need to care for something when we can’t care for ourselves.

Here’s a generated review for Adulting Season 2, Episode 5, written in the style of a pop culture blog or TV critic. Adulting Season 2, Episode 5: “The Ghost of Rent Past” – A Brutal, Beautiful Meltdown

“I’m not late. The month is just… early.” – Maya

★★★★½ (4.5/5)

Chen delivers a tour-de-force performance. The scene where Maya explains to her landlord that she does have the money, just “not in the right account at the right time,” is painfully real. But the episode’s masterpiece is a silent three-minute sequence where she eats instant ramen out of a coffee mug while watching old Friends episodes on her phone, laughing a beat too late. It’s gut-wrenching, relatable, and weirdly hopeful.

Just when you thought our favorite hot-mess millennials had started to figure things out, Episode 5 drops a cold, hard truth bomb: adulting isn’t a destination. It’s a treadmill that occasionally throws a shoe.