
In the fluorescent-lit corridors of corporate America, where watercooler banter and PowerPoint slides reign supreme, a single moment of humiliation can unravel a manâor, in the case of The Chair Company, propel him into a labyrinth of paranoia so absurd itâs impossible to look away. Enter William Ronald Trosper, or âRon,â played with manic brilliance by Tim Robinson, the comedic genius behind I Think You Should Leave. HBOâs latest gamble, The Chair Company, which premiered on October 12, 2025, and barrels toward its finale on November 30, isnât just a showâitâs a fever dream that marries cringe-inducing comedy with the pulse-pounding dread of a 1970s paranoid thriller. Picture Chinatown scripted by the guy who gave us âSloppy Steaksâ and âDan Flashes,â and youâre halfway there. With a second season already greenlit, this eight-episode odyssey has hooked 1.4 million viewers in its debut weekend, marking HBOâs biggest comedy launch in over five years. But what makes this bizarre blend of office rage, conspiracy spirals, and Tim Robinsonâs signature awkward outbursts so irresistible? Buckle upâthis is the story of The Chair Company, a show thatâs as unsettling as it is hilarious, redefining what a comedy can be in an age of fractured trust and corporate absurdity.
At its core, The Chair Company is a mystery wrapped in a joke that refuses to wink. Ron Trosper, a middle-aged project manager at Fisher Robay, a property development firm in Canton, Ohio, is riding high on a rare promotion. Heâs tasked with spearheading a new shopping mall, a career-defining moment thatâs as much about personal redemption as professional clout. Ronâs life isnât glamorousâheâs got a loving but exasperated wife, Barb (Lake Bell), a teenage daughter, Natalie (Sophia Lillis), a son, Seth (Will Price), and a car he doesnât have to share with Barbâs flower business. Heâs the everyman whoâs clawed his way to âpretty okay,â the kind of guy who polishes his glasses with his tie and dreams of being taken seriously. But on the day of his big presentation, disaster strikes in the form of a defective office chair. As he sits to bask in his speechâs applause, the seat collapses beneath him, a slapstick catastrophe that sends colleagues into stifled snickers and Ron into a tailspin of mortification. What follows isnât an apology tour or a quiet recoveryâitâs a crusade against Tecca, the chairâs manufacturer, that spirals into a conspiracy so vast and surreal it threatens to upend Ronâs entire reality.

This isnât your standard workplace sitcom. Created by Robinson and his longtime collaborator Zach Kanin, The Chair Company takes the DNA of their Netflix hit I Think You Should Leaveâwhere characters double down on embarrassment to catastrophic endsâand stretches it across a serialized narrative that feels like The Parallax View run through a shredder of absurdity. The showâs genius lies in its refusal to play by genre rules. One moment, youâre wincing at Ronâs hostile outbursts in a customer service call (âThis is ssssstunning!â he barks at a waiter, over-emoting about a saladâs presentation); the next, youâre gripped by the eerie possibility that Teccaâs shoddy chairs are just the tip of a sinister iceberg. Is Ron uncovering a corporate cabal that controls the furniture industry, or is he a delusional desk jockey chasing shadows in his own head? The series dangles both possibilities, blending cringe comedy with psychological thriller elements so seamlessly that youâre laughing, squirming, and questioning all at once.
The inciting incidentâRonâs chair collapseâis a masterclass in Robinsonâs comedic alchemy. Picture him, hunched in a âcrap suitâ (as The Guardian aptly described), squinting through smudged glasses, delivering a speech with the earnestness of a kid at a spelling bee. The room claps, he beams, he sitsâand then, crack. The chair buckles, dumping him to the floor in a heap of polyester and wounded pride. Itâs the kind of moment Robinson was born to play: his face a kaleidoscope of shock, rage, and desperate denial, his voice climbing octaves as he scrambles to salvage dignity. But instead of brushing it off, Ron fixates. He tracks down Teccaâs customer service line, demanding answers with the fervor of a detective on a cold case. What he finds isnât a quick refund but a rabbit hole of cryptic responses, shady subsidiaries, and a growing suspicion that Teccaâs chairs are a front for something far bigger. âI swear I have the worst pillow in town!â he bellows in a throwaway scene, thrashing his bedding in a fit of domestic furyâa line that captures his spiraling headspace and the showâs knack for finding humor in lifeâs mundane failures.
The showâs aesthetic, helmed by director Andrew DeYoung (Friendship), amplifies this unease. DeYoung shoots with the moody dread of a conspiracy flickâstatic shots of Ron staring at his computer, close-ups of his sweat-slicked face, fluorescent lights casting sterile glows over cubicle mazes. Itâs All the Presidentâs Men if Woodward and Bernstein were obsessed with ergonomic lumbar support. Yet the cinematography never feels like a gimmick; itâs a deliberate contrast to the chaos of Robinsonâs performance, grounding the absurdity in a world that feels unnervingly real. Critics have lauded this balance: Collider calls it âone of the strangest comedies youâll watch this year,â while The Hollywood Reporter praises its âuncomfortable, unsettling, and very funnyâ vibe. The score, a blend of ominous synths and jazzy flourishes, underscores the paranoia, turning mundane office scenes into pulse-quickening standoffs.
Ronâs descent isnât a solo act. The ensembleâstacked with talent like Lake Bellâs sardonic Barb, Sophia Lillisâ eye-rolling Natalie, and Will Priceâs earnest Sethâgrounds his unhinged quest with human stakes. Bell, in particular, shines as the wife who loves Ron but is exhausted by his antics, her deadpan delivery (âYouâre calling about the chair again?â) a perfect foil to his mania. Joseph Tudiscoâs Mike Santini, a coworker with his own quirks, becomes an unlikely ally in Ronâs investigation, their road-trip episode in âI Won. Zoom In.ââdescribed by The AV Club as a âvirtuosicâ high pointâplunging into surreal chaos involving a method-acting Scrooge and a bar full of coked-up locals. Lou Diamond Phillips pops up as Jeff Levjman, a shadowy figure whose cryptic warnings only fuel Ronâs obsession. The castâs ability to match Robinsonâs intensity without stealing his spotlight is a testament to the showâs tightrope walk: itâs a Tim Robinson vehicle, but itâs not just about him.
What sets The Chair Company apart from Robinsonâs sketch-driven past (I Think You Should Leave, Detroiters) is its ambition to weave a season-long arc without sacrificing the manic energy of a five-minute skit. The conspiracy plotârevolving around Teccaâs alleged corruption in chair manufacturing and distributionâis deliberately preposterous, yet the showâs intimate photography and immersive mood make you invest in it, even as you laugh at its lunacy. Ronâs outbursts, like his refusal to let go of a botched customer service call or his over-the-top reaction to a restaurantâs plating (âThis is ssssstunning!!â), carry a darker edge here, reflecting what The Hollywood Reporter calls âthe fragility of masculinity and the frustration of failing to communicate.â Heâs not just a buffoon; heâs a man teetering on the brink, desperate for respect in a world that feels rigged against him.
Critics have been effusive, with the show boasting a perfect 100% on Rotten Tomatoes from 21 reviews and a 73% audience score. AwardsWatch dubbed it âone of the best shows of the year,â TV Guide hailed it as âthe funniest show of the year,â and Soap Central called it âthe most daring and harmonious of all Robinsonâs creations.â But not everyoneâs on board. Timeâs Judy Berman argued the mystery subplot lacks suspense, suggesting Robinsonâs style âmay not be best suited to longform narrative,â while The New York Timesâ James Poniewozik noted it often feels like âextended I Think You Should Leave sketches.â The Los Angeles Times cautioned that Robinsonâs chaos requires âa certain staminaâ to endure, his antics sometimes âdrowning out the human inside.â Yet even detractors admit the showâs pull: Poniewozik confessed to being âdrawn in, wondering what strange, sleazy alley this shaggy dog would lead me down next.â
The showâs cultural resonance is undeniable. In an era of âenshittificationââwhere customer service fails, subscriptions multiply, and tech glitches haunt daily lifeâRonâs war against Tecca feels like a funhouse mirror of modern frustration. Rolling Stone nailed it: the show captures âthe increasingly common horrors of being forced into another lousy subscription service or bombarded with spam messages.â A scene where Ron grapples with a scam email sent from his own hacked account to his CEOâdemanding a raise, no lessâhits painfully close to home, blending slapstick with the dread of digital betrayal. Itâs no coincidence that The Chair Company premiered just as HBO Max hiked its prices, a meta twist that underscores the showâs timeliness. Ronâs paranoia mirrors our own: are we all just one bad chair, one rogue algorithm, away from unraveling?
The seriesâ narrative gambitâblending high surrealism with human stakesâpays off in episodes like the fifth, âI Won. Zoom In.,â where Ron and Mikeâs road trip descends into a psychedelic whirl of bar fights, concussions, and a regional-theater actor obsessed with playing Scrooge year-round. Itâs Barryâs âRonny/Lilyâ meets Twin Peaksâ backwoods weirdness, a testament to Robinson and Kaninâs ability to stretch a premise without snapping it. Fans on platforms like ResetEra and IMDb rave about the showâs polarizing nature: âIf you like Tim Robinson, youâll love this. If you donât, youâll hate it,â one viewer wrote, while another called it âpossibly the hardest Iâve laughed at any of his shows.â The podcast The Chair Company Files, hosted by Michael Wolf and Carlos Rodela, dissects each episode with fanboy glee, likening it to Severance and Office Space for its corporate uncanny.
With Season 2 confirmed before the finaleâa bold move given the showâs miniseries vibeâthe stakes are sky-high. Will Ronâs Tecca obsession deepen, or will he stumble into a new corporate quagmire? The showâs renewal, announced November 20, 2025, sparked fan theories: perhaps a rival company (tables, anyone?) or a pivot to Ronâs family dynamics, with Barb and the kids taking center stage. Collider speculates the conspiracy could âcompound,â while The AV Club wonders if Ronâs two concussions (one from a pipe, another from an iPad-wielding drug dealer) hint at brain-damage-driven delusions. Whatever the path, Robinson and Kanin have a playground vast enough to keep the chaos coming.
The Chair Company isnât for everyone. It demands a taste for the absurd, a tolerance for squirming through Ronâs self-inflicted wounds, and a willingness to embrace a mystery that might be nonsenseâor everything. But for those tuned to Robinsonâs wavelength, itâs a revelation: a show thatâs âhilarious, strange, and ridiculous,â as Collider raved, yet oddly moving in its portrait of a man chasing meaning in a world that doesnât care. As Ron prowls his âsleazy alleysâ of conspiracy, heâs less a hero than a warningâa middle-aged everyman whose refusal to let go mirrors our own battles with a glitchy, indifferent universe. With its perfect Rotten Tomatoes score and a fanbase chanting âmore chairs!â on X, The Chair Company is HBOâs wildest bet yet: a comedy that dares you to laugh, cringe, and believe, all while wondering if the real conspiracy is how much youâre rooting for a guy whoâs probably wrong about everything.