
"Come on dawg, how are you broke on payday? What are you, 12 years a slave?" "Yeah, my name is 12 years a slave. The slave".In this week's episode of Atlanta, we find out what it means to be broke in the city of Atlanta.
This episode shares the same structure as last week's second outing, as the storytelling opens with a sequence shared by both Earn and Alfred, and then the narrative switches to two different point of observation, where we follow both characters in their different, yet eerily similar in many aspects, adventures.
The show a cold opens with Earn trying to order a kid's meal at the local fast food (in an effort to be as cheap as possible) only to find out that you can't order a kid's meal unless you're 14 or ounger. He ends up buying a glass for water and then filling it with Coke.

Later on, while at his house, Earn confesses to Alfred that despite being pay-day, he still feels like he's barely hanging on, and that's when he finds out that Alfred is making money, and basically paying his carrer as a rap artist, by selling drugs; and that he has some kind of big deal up ahead with some "Mexicans".



The deals workout, and then the recurring joke about the briefcase being cuffed to Darius' wrist comes to a head when the leader of the gang says "we can solve that" just right on the ad-break.

Back to Earn though, he has a scuffle with Vanessa, and ends up defending his right to "chasing my dreams" because he thinks that ultimately that's the right way to do right by his daughter. Once again, Earn proves to be plenty stubborn about his way of doing things being the right way, we'll find out if he's right about it.
The half-hour kind of comes full circle in the final sequence, with Earn reporting the theft of his now empty credit card.
I found this to be another strong outing for the newborn series, though probably not as strong as last week debut. What did you all think? Sound off in the comments!
1.03 - "Go for Broke" - B+