While not as wildly compelling as the previous two episodes, the latest installment in Sacha Baron Cohen's amazing 'Who is America?' series is likely to be unfortunately overlooked despite being filled with plenty of outrageous and hilarious content. The previous two episodes were a bit darker and more damning, so this one's a little bit more light and potentially easier to watch in a way. It didn't fill me with the hilarious hopelessness that the previous two did, which works both for and against itself. In the previous two episodes, Cohen also seemed to mainly be mocking the right with a few bursts of satire aiming at the left, but this episode splits it more equally and also spends its time with my two favourite characters to be introduced on the show thus far, the hilarious archetypical far left, "social justice warrior" college professor and the heavily accented Israeli "anti-terrorist expert". The Roy Moore segment does have a great punchline and a few funny lines throughout, but it is generally less insane and shocking than one would hope. The second segment is likely my favourite in this episode in which Sacha's far left prof. persona sits down a conservative politician with some local gangster rapper and makes a total fool of himself under the guise of trying to "heal the divide", and that scene is filled to the brim with all sorts of humour that derives from both Cohen's hilarious lines and the reactions he gets out of the other two in question. The third segment will likely stir up the most controversy, and hilariously degrades three men passionately against immigrants in a very ridiculous, ribald way that is entertaining and just so absurd it's borderline unbelievable (although, as the first two episodes have well displayed, no insanity in this country can necessarily be referred to as totally "unbelievable"). The fourth segment is the lightest and most fun and just further parodies extremely far leftist beliefs and is just generally very funny and a weirdly warmhearted closer. Definitely not as eye opening as other episodes have been, but it is consistently hilarious and has a generally successful satirical edge.