The following contains spoilers for Mike Judge's Beavis and Butt-Head Season 1, Episode 2, "The Special One," which aired. Thursday, Aug. 4 on Paramount+.

Beavis & Butt-Head was known for its interstitial segments in which the characters critiqued music videos and offer up hilarious MST3K-style commentary. While the Paramount+ revival, now titled Mike Judge's Beavis and Butt-Head, has moved away from just music and into social media trends, the show can still put a bad music video in its place. Just ask Cale Dodds.

In Season 1, Episode 2, "The Special One," Beavis and Butt-Head reamed Dodds' music video for his 2019 single "I Like Where This Is Going." The duo dished up scathing criticism for a video that was intended to be earnest, pointing out how it actually reinforced a terrible trope seen in many romantic comedies. In the process, they proved that Mike Judge's Beavis and Butt-Head can still dismantle music videos as well as the original series.

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Beavis & Butthead made fun of Cale Dodds

The "I Like Where This is Going" video used the Cyrano de Bergerac trope, where a better-looking, confident person tries to help an awkward, insecure person get the object of their desire. This concept has been used in so many movies and TV shows, from 1945's Love Letters to modern offerings in 10 Things I Hate About You, Whatever It Takes, The Ugly Truth and most recently, Netflix's The Half of It. Whether it's via letters, technology or the mentor working in person, they go all out to make the 'weakling' or 'ugly duckling' seem more attractive in what's essentially a form of catfishing.

The music video had Dodds helping another man after seeing his potential date reject him due to the guy's size. Dodds took him under his wing, teaching him about texting, bar etiquette, dancing and wardrobe. It ended with the teen catching a woman after she fell in a nightclub while Cale performed. It was a formulaic, cheesy video -- and Beavis and Butt-Head called that out. They also pointed out that folks in the mentor roles are usually dishonest jerks in no position to make anyone better, joking that Dodds might actually be preying on the guy rather than trying to help him.

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Beavis and Butt-Head watching TV

Plots like the one seen in the Cale Dodds video stifle the person's identity and honesty when they should be seeking someone who loves them for them. Beavis and Butt-Head laughed at how Cale only offered up surface-level solutions, and not something that would be healthy for his new friend and not smother his identity. "Does this video mean if you change your shirt, you'll score with chicks?" Butt-Head quipped, to which Beavis responded, "That's ridiculous! Because I have the coolest shirt you could possibly have and I still don't score."

Beavis and Butt-Head rightly pinted out how creepy, unrealistic and disingenuous the video was -- which is even more poignant in the age of social media, where it's mostly style over substance. Their "I Like Where This is Going" commentary provided interesting food for thought, proving that their juvenile antics aside, these two immature teens have more depth to them than it appears. At least, they still know how to cut a music video down to size.

Mike Judge's Beavis and Butt-Head streams Thursdays on Paramount+.