Rick and Morty Deconstructs The Clip Show In Season 3’s Funniest Episode
Episode 3.08: “Morty’s Mind Blowers”

Among Rick and Morty’s unique talents is the series’s ability to break the fourth wall without seeming overly cheesy. That’s the luxury of having a protagonist who’s aware of every possible reality, including one in which his exploits with his grandson are being broadcast worldwide and reviewed by a Paste TV critic. When Rick makes obvious references to the outside world—which I recall him doing as early as the Inception spoof from Season 1—he’s moving the audience past the easy, first-level laughter and onto the second-level laughter that arises from his commentary. It’s one of the show’s most useful highbrow-lowbrow techniques, a key instrument in Rick and Morty‘s ability to be both profoundly stupid and simultaneously brilliant.
In “Morty’s Mind Blowers,” the fourth wall breakage is taken to its most extreme level. Rather than growing trite, it takes the series to new heights of humor. With the brooding cynicism of last week’s outstanding “The Ricklantis Mixup” providing a tough act to follow, Justin Roiland, Dan Harmon and company have responded with the goddamn funniest episode of Rick and Morty they’ve ever made. At the very least, it’s far more mileage than they could’ve gotten out of an “Interdimensional Cable 3,” and the episode ends up there, anyway.
I can only imagine how much fun the writers’ room had spitballing ideas for Mind Blowers (and how much leftover comedic gold didn’t make it into the script). With no real need for any of the clips to sustain some sort of episode-long lesson about the Rick-Morty dynamic, things could get as weird as possible, and Roiland in particular is the king of making weird things funny. (Go watch his pre-R&M webseries House of Cosbys for a glimpse of his pure, unfiltered flair for the grotesque.) Each Mind Blower is built around a single gag that isn’t given enough time to grow old, and they’re an excellent balance of the various types of humor used in Rick and Morty: bodily humor, existential void humor, Rick-pettiness humor, sight gags. Overall, they present a very nice summing-up of the series to date, which might have been a tedious exercise but is kept fresh by the rapid-fire pace, the self-referential core of the episode, and the outstanding quality of each clip. I’ll rank a top five for you right now, because a clip show-themed episode deserves a clip show-themed review:
5. Morty programming what is clearly supposed to be a Jessica magnet. Morty’s crush on Jessica has proven to be one of the series’s best running jokes—this is the third straight episode to have referenced it—and here, it’s exploited for a hilarious sight gag.
4. The light switch mixup. Roiland’s voice acting has received much-deserved praise this season, and the irritation in his voice as he describes Morty’s error in excruciating detail is key to the joke’s dead space travelers punchline. We don’t ever need to know why or how Rick was responsible for keeping these folks alive, and in fact, learning these things would kill the vibe.