While the last three episodes of Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt play more like a 90-minute movie and should all be watched in one sitting, I’m still going to go through them as individual episodes to break down the Trial of the Century - at least the one that happened in Durnsville, Indiana.

At the start of “Kimmy Rides A Bike!,” Lillian delivers Kimmy and Titus’ mail, which includes a new order from Columbia House Tapes. (Titus really wanted the Rain Man soundtrack on cassette.) Lillian also tells Kimmy that she’s been served! Yes, Rev. Richard Wayne Gary Wayne is finally going to be put on trial for keeping four women stuck in a bunker for 15 years.

Buy why does the stupid trial have to come up stupid now? Kimmy has so many other problems to deal with (OK, only two problems - Dong’s marriage proposal and Jacquline’s divorce) that she just can’t go back over that tragic part of her life. Titus is trying to be supportive, of course, but he just loves sensational trials. So, he’s going to go over to the library to watch the trial.

Before we go over the hilarious trial, let’s focus on Kimmy’s plot. She refuses to go to Indiana and decides to try to forget about her problems by joining a class at the gym. After all, it helps Jacqueline forget about her new life as a single woman, so it should help Kimmy. The cycling class is taught by Tristophe (Nick Kroll), who pushes his class of women (and a gay guy) to their physical limits.

Kimmy is so excited about Tristophe that she spends a whole day in the class and eventually moves up to the front row. She’s now Tristophe’s favorite student. This really angers Jacqueline who has been in the class for much longer.

After watching the trial, Titus realizes that things aren’t going well and tries to convince Kimmy that she must go to Durnsville or Wayne will walk free. Kimmy insists that her new class is helping her forget all that, but Titus suddenly realizes that Tristophe is just another cult leader. Kimmy figures that out too and is disappointed that she’s fallen under the spell of another male authority figure.

Kimmy then decides to go to Indiana, with Titus in tow. But first, she has to expose Tristophe for the fraud that he is. It turns out that his real name is Christopher and that he’s really sitting on a toilet during the whole class. We wouldn’t be too surprised if he also had a second life as one half of Crazy Ira & The Douche.

In Durnsville, the jury and even lawyers Marcia and Chris (Tina Fey and Jerry Minor) defending the other Mole Women are enchanted by the Reverend’s charms. After all, he looks awfully similar to Don Draper. He can sing, he can’t do math, he doesn’t have a beard and he believes in Gosh, Jeepers and the Holy Ghost. How could this guy possibly be a criminal? Even a member of the Mole Women, Gretchen (Lauren Adams) thinks he’s being wrongly accused. Cyndee seems to be the only one with her head on straight and keeps calling Kimmy during the trial.

Wayne represents himself and tells the jury that he is being prosecuted for his “faith” in his idea that the apocalypse was coming. He also jokes that he could be jailed for his poor math skills. Obviously, he’s the one guy who couldn’t understand Sesame Street.

Wayne even testifies and Cyndee is really outraged. Why aren’t her attorneys asking why Wayne didn’t let them out after the apocalypse didn’t happen on June 6, 2006? He says it was a safety concern. In the good book, it says that the Rapture is coming, so what if it happened just days after they were let out?

This trial is not going so well. Hopefully, Kimmy can save the day!

Check out our recap of the previous episode here.

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