After all, says Ian Crouch, "a group of reactionary, mean-spirited, lying degenerates seems perfectly suited to the moment." He adds: "Yet while the series has, over the years, made surprisingly cogent arguments about everything from gun control to mental illness, its true dedication has been to its own flavor of nonsense, and to itself. In these later stages, it has taken to consuming its own history and probing the question of whether it should even exist anymore." ALSO: Kaitlin Olson talks working with Mindy Kaling and having less improv in Season 13.
TOPICS: It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, FXX, Kaitlin Olson, Mindy Kaling