Nathan For You: “Nail Salon/Fun” (3.07)

For Nathan Fielder—the actual person—every episode of Nathan For You attempts to both create a crazy idea for a business and also have that idea build into brilliant insanity. However, for Nathan Fielder the character the core goal of Nathan For You is a desperate need to be liked and accepted. Underneath all of his plans, there’s an underlying sadness and a desire for a friend or, what seems to be his holy grail, for a girlfriend. “Nail Salon/Fun,” more than any other episode prior, focuses on Nathan himself, as he attempts to gain acceptance from women and from new friends.
With “Nail Salon,” Nathan’s primary goal is acceptance from the very beginning. When he goes “undercover” at the Corner Beauty Nail Salon, he barely dresses up, putting a bandana in his hair and wearing a tiny purse. When he mentions his lack of a disguise, he responds that a “modern woman can present herself however she likes.” After getting his nails done, he realizes that going for his keys can ruin his new manicure and decides a valet stand would alleviate this common problem. After getting the women who work at the salon to become the valets, he believes that people act weird towards the valets because of prejudices that Asian women cannot drive. In order to fix this, he hires stunt driver Verena Mei to squash that stereotype.
As we’ve seen this season, Nathan is more than capable of navigating the people he interacts with in a way to get fantastic reactions. But there’s something so great about Nathan For You when he is also surprised by the reality of the situation. Nathan doesn’t have to create a situation in which people are wary to allow Asian women to drive their cars, it’s sadly just what happens. Maybe they’re just weirded out by a nail salon having a valet, but the reactions don’t seem to point in that direction.
But “Nail Salon” and the entire episode succeeds because of Nathan’s thorough attempts to be liked by everyone. When he asks Mei to do an Asian accent so customers won’t think she’s a plant, he goes through about a minute of assuring her that his impression isn’t accurate, before giving an incredibly offensive and terrible Asian voice. Nathan also sees a social injustice with the prejudice against the salon employees and by showing them an Asian woman who can drive, he is trying to make the world a better place for everyone. Yet the true prize for Nathan is in the end of the segment, when Nathan asks the owner Kim Han what she thinks of the idea and gets her to admit to him that he knows what women want.
It’s in this moment that all of Nathan’s hard work, all of his sucking up and all of his attempts to make everyone happy pays off. He gets what he needs: despite every woman in the show so far denying his advances, he’s been told by a woman that he knows what they want. There’s a sad victory in Nathan hearing this, almost as if every segment up until this point has happened so that one day, maybe, someone would say that to him.