Tim Robinson in 'The Chair Company.' Sarah Shatz/HBO Share on Facebook Share on X Share to Flipboard Send an Email Show additional share options Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share on Tumblr Share on Whats App Print the Article Post a Comment In the very first sketch of his cult hit comedy series, I Think You Should Leave, Tim Robinson plays a man faced with a problem so trivial it's not really a problem at all: He pulls on a door that's meant to be pushed. Rather than change course, however, he digs in his heels. He insists the door swings both ways. He tugs until he's drooling from the exertion. He eventually breaks the hinge entirely. In trying to save himself the fleeting discomfort of admitting he was wrong, he humiliates himself in far more spectacular fashion. That refusal to let anything go, ever, that tendency to double down to the point of self-destruction over the dumbest shit imaginable, is a central pillar of Robinson's comic persona. In this summer's Friendship, about a man who grows obsessed with his neighbor, he and director Andrew DeYoung stretched the punchline to feature length. Now The Chair Company, on HBO, expands it even further, to eight half-hour installments. As with the rest of Robinson's oeuvre, it's a purposely uncomfortable experience, as likely to make you squirm as laugh. But those already turned onto his brand of weirdness are in for a bracing ride. Related Stories TV 'A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms': Trailer for 'Game of Thrones' Spinoff Shows a "New Vibe to Westeros" TV Rachel Sennott, Odessa A'zion Are Frenemies in 'I Love LA' Comedy Trailer The Chair Company The Bottom Line Uncomfortable, unsettling and very funny. Airdate: 10 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 12 (HBO)Cast: Tim Robinson, Lake Bell, Joseph Tudisco, Sophia Lillis, Will Price, Lou Diamond PhillipsCreators: Tim Robinson, Zach Kanin The comedy-thriller, co-created by I Think You Should Leave's Zach Kanin and directed in the premiere by DeYoung, begins, as so many Tim Robinson plotlines do, with a small but embarrassing mishap at the office. I've been asked not to divulge the details here, but suffice it to say it's the sort of thing that could happen to anyone, that most people might vent about to their loved ones later that evening and forget all about by next week. William Ronald Trosper, however, is not most people. "Ron," as he's usually called, is a Tim Robinson creation. So while he tries at first to brush it off with a joke, it's immediately obvious that Ron is never going to get over it. Desperate to prove he's anything but a fool, he convinces himself that he's the victim of a grand conspiracy, and then the hero who's finally going to bring it all into the light. It is at this point that you might be tempted to compare The Chair Company to the larger state of the world, and you wouldn't be wrong to do so. Ron is a middle-class, middle-aged white man so thin-skinned he'll destroy his own life in search of someone, anyone, else to blame for his own misfortunes or mistakes. The need to see himself as righteous and respected is so overwhelming that he'll neglect his mostly fine reality for a dark and twisted fantasy. He's not unlike a lot of people who've been in the news lately. But while Ron's anger may be directed outward, it pierces inward; his actions frustrate his colleagues and worry his family - which include wife Barb (Lake Bell), son Seth (Will Price) and daughter Natalie (Sophia Lillis) - but they only ever truly harm himself. Positioned this way, he's less a threatening anomaly than a funhouse reflection of the impulses and insecurities buried within all of us. Who among us hasn't fantasized in the shower about exacting elaborate revenge for petty upsets, or lain awake trying to reframe our humiliations as epic tales of triumph? Besides, though Ron's behavior is extreme, it isn't unique. His reality, a few degrees drabber but also stranger than ours, is one populated by socially awkward nerds taking "life of the party" classes, an acting coach who squats in a student's spare room, a henchman (Joseph Tudisco's Mike) whose favorite pastime is listening to two men scream X-rated obscenities at each other on the radio. Even folks who seem to have it all together, like Ron's slick CEO Jeff (Lou Diamond Phillips), only ever seem one twinge of embarrassment away from falling off the deep end. The difference between Ron and most of us is that in this case, he's right. There really is something going on, which feels a bit like if the Hot Dog Guy actually did manage to find the guy who did this. As Ron starts tracking down leads and paper trails - increasingly neglecting both his job and his family to do so - he finds himself hounded by eerie coincidences, and stymied by forces as menacing as armed thugs and as mundane as unreasonable customer service hold times. What these clues ultimately add up to is unclear, as of the seven half-hours sent to critics, and probably irrelevant. The conspiracy
The Hollywood Reporter
'The Chair Company' Review: Tim Robinson Brings His Delightfully Unhinged Vibe to HBO
October 11, 2025
2 months ago
6 celebrities mentioned