

The second glee club come out to sing like normal unknown glee clubs who usually sing somethings weird and unmemorable. Just as thanksgiving dinner seems normal some of Isabelle's friends come in and they all break into song singing "Let's Have a Kiki/Turkey Lurkey Time".

The first glee club up is the Dalton Club Warbblers singing "Whistle" and "Live While We're Young". Glee circle goes on with old and new members. Back in New York Brody and Rachel continues their tension they do not act on. Jake then tells Ryder he is trained in ballet and that he could do the song better. While Ryder is practicing his main lead Jake walks in to try help him with his problems with the song. The both slap each other just as Brittany walks in. Santana comes in to talk to Quinn about Kitty but it turns into the two fighting over who is more miserable. Isabelle try's to give Kurt some advice about dealing with Blaine. While leaving work Kurt invites Isabelle and some friends to thanksgiving with him and Rachel. Quinn tells Jake to stay away from the innocent Marley. When Brody has nothing to do he gets invited to Thanksgiving with Rachel and Kurt. In Rachel's new class Brody teaches instead of Cassandra and she does not want to be anywhere near him. Kitty is in love with Quinn and really wants to be like her. To teach the females of glee the original threesome of Quinn, Santana and Brittany give them a performance of "Come See About Me". Finn and Mike do some dancing with the glee members where Ryder gets the male lead in the final number. In New York Rachel and Kurt celebrate their thanksgiving in the city even though are some people calling them home. Finn pairs up all the new members with coaches bringing up the glee club doing Gangnam style for their closing number. The returning graduates come back and Finn brings them to glee club to try help the new ones. Marley is starting to feel the pressure of sectionals. Everyone embraces Quinn for finally coming back top join the others singing "Homeward Bound/Home". During the episodes, the cast - including Lea Michele, Cory Monteith, Dianna Agron, Matthew Morrison, Naya Rivera and more - sang a variety of musical covers and original numbers that corresponded to the weekly plot or a character’s season-long arc.Quinn returns to McKinley with every other graduating senior including Puke, Santana, Mike and Merecedes. The Fox show, which began airing in 2009, followed the William McKinley High School glee club, the New Directions, as they worked to balance high school with competitive show choir aspirations. I will say, like, not our finest moment.” During a February 2017 interview on Watch What Happens Live! With Andy Cohen, Murphy revealed what he thought was the show’s worst performance.Īt the time, a caller asked the Hollywood creator which song he “regrets” the most, to which Murphy quickly replied, “I am mortified that we did ‘Gangnam Style’ by Psy. The show’s creator, Ryan Murphy, even had a few choice numbers that he regretted putting on during the show’s heyday. “ was me turning to the camera during ‘What the Fox Say,’ and just being, like, ,” McHale told Oakley at the time. Jenna Ushkowitz, who played Tina on the show, told Tyler Oakley in a May 2019 YouTube video that there were “lots” of messy story lines across the show’s six seasons. During a YouTube quiz, the Broadway alum joined Kevin McHale to dish about the weirdest ones, in which McHale also shared his disdain for the weirdness that was their “The Fox” number.

“So I’m sure there were people who were like, ‘What the f-k is this?’ and I was like, ‘I know, right?!’”Ĭriss’ admission is hardly the first time one of his former costars called out the show for its messy plotlines, confusing character arcs or bizarre song choices. “The more absurd it is, the funnier it is to me,” he said. The Golden Globe nominee recalled the number’s weirdness during the interview. “It was one of these 15 minutes of fame for this song and they just decided to put it into the show. “It was so weird,” the American Crime Story alum explained. After a brief debate, the pair agreed on “The Fox” by Ylvis from the seventh episode of season 5, even noting it was “conventionally understood as a huge ‘oops.’” “Oof, that’s too hard there’s too many versions of songs,” he quipped. While appearing on the “LadyGang” podcast in August 2021, Darren Criss (who portrayed Blaine) was asked about the “worst cover” that was performed on the former Fox musical-comedy, alongside cohost - and former costar- Becca Tobin. A slushy in the face for the messy Gleeplotlines! Years later, many of the stars of Gleehave been outspoken about their disdain for the source material and its often tone-deaf, inappropriate content.
