Naturally, James tries to monetize his face. With Katie acting as his ruthless manager, he attempts to become a model. We get some of the episode's best visual gags here, including his "Luscious Lumberjack" and "Sassy Speed Skater" headshots.
Carlos "volunteers" (mostly because everyone else stepped back) to be Gustavo's personal assistant. This storyline gives us the legendary C.A.L. (a parody of HAL 9000), a prototype coffee machine that eventually goes rogue, filling the kitchen with an apocalyptic amount of foam. [S1E11] Big Time Jobs
The episode ends with a classic "Laser-Guided Karma" moment: the boys, Gustavo, and Kelly are all stuck washing cars to pay back Arthur Griffin for the new round of damages. Why We Love It Naturally, James tries to monetize his face
The episode kicks off with the guys doing what they do best: causing absolute mayhem at the Palm Woods. After a reckless race through the hotel results in a trail of destruction, Gustavo Rocque is left footing a bill for . The episode ends with a classic "Laser-Guided Karma"
Fed up with being the bank for "Bad Luck Rush," Gustavo decides it's time for a lesson in responsibility. The ultimatum? Pay him back every cent, or stay off the "No-Swim List." With Freight Train acting as a literal human barrier to the pool, the boys are forced to enter the workforce. The Hustle: Four Boys, Four Disasters
By the end of the episode, the boys technically "earn" the money back, but the "Big Time" logic prevails. Their "jobs" caused so much collateral damage—including a broken $8,000 coffee machine and legal fees for running an illegal daycare—that their debt balloons from $2,000 to .
"Big Time Jobs" works because it highlights the group's dynamic under pressure. It’s a perfect mix of slapstick comedy, like the foam-filled kitchen, and the recurring theme that the guys' greatest strength—and their greatest weakness—is their ability to turn any serious situation into a game.