The show explains that all of the broadcast writers are on holiday because of the Golden Week period. As a result, the program is divided into three segments. Three different people each volunteer to take on a role and create their own short scenario, and the cast performs them as situational role-play. Of the two guest comedians, only one is completely unaware of this setup. Whether the writers are truly on holiday or not is unclear. What is certain is that the first two segments are short, about five minutes each, written by different individuals. The guest who does not know about the staged premise keeps “breaking the matrix,” delivering tsukkomi reactions and pointing out the absurdities and contradictions in each bizarre situation. What is truly surprising happens in the third segment. The guest correctly identifies that the story was written by the comedian Horiuchi Ken. And the face of Arita when the guest got the right answer is amazing. Known as Horiken, he is famous for his unusual ideas and highly energetic, unpredictable comedic style. The fact that the guest was able to recognize his authorship from a short performed scenario alone was remarkable. Even I thought, when I suspected Horiken, that it would be unlikely—but he turned out to be right. That made the moment even more shocking. Of course, understanding why this was impressive requires knowing who Horiken is. It carries an insider quality, a kind of in-group humor that not everyone can fully participate in. Perhaps I am outside that circle. Still, as a fan, it was an astonishing moment. There was a segment where someone acted as if they had fallen asleep during the broadcast. At the end, however, they inserted something called a “compliance committee.” Through this device, they commented that the expected tsukkomi reactions had not been properly executed and that only a formal, surface-level response had been given. A committee member then suggested that, to viewers, it might genuinely look as though someone had fallen asleep on air. Framing it this way felt intelligent. In the final two minutes, they used the committee format to “explain” what had supposedly happened, as if clarifying the incident for the audience. This added another layer of humor while also providing context. It is particularly useful for viewers on platforms like Netflix who may not fully understand the conventions of Japanese variety shows.