
It's well cast too, with Jay Baruchel fitting into his typecast as the affable lovelorn dork, Eric Andre working as the ideal comic foil to it, and a whole host of great cameos pop-up throughout the season too. It can be a bit much at times honestly, but the show is also strongest when these outlandish situations act as such potent metaphors for the in-and-outs of modern relationships, and the show is consistently interesting from just a visceral standpoint.

There simply are no rules to the world of Man Seeking Woman, with some of the problems that Josh faces this season include dating a troll, misplacing his penis, and misusing time-travel to inadvertently install an evil global overlord. A bizarre and often hilarious look at contemporary dating, that separates itself from the pack by essentially being a live-action cartoon.