01x01 - Big Eyes

Episode transcripts for the TV series, "Primo". Aired: May 19, 2023.*
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A coming-of-age comedy about a teenager balancing college aspirations, societal expectations, and a hectic home life anchored by his single mom and five uncles.
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01x01 - Big Eyes

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[Upbeat music playing]

[Sighs]

{\an }[Takes deep breath]

[Mike] You're being ridiculous.

[Mondo] What's ridiculous
is your narrow view of the world.

Hurry up and get some food
before your uncles eat it all.

All right, ma.
I just gotta go to the bathroom.

Hey, what's up, primo?

What? Uncle Rollie.

- Oh, come on.
- [Rollie] Too slow.

What are you talking about too slow?

- I was here first.
- [Rollie] Too fast then.

- Too fast?
- [Mike] You can't wisdom your way

out of this one.

Primo. Perfect.

How tall can a person be
before you think he's dumb?

- What?
- If you're looking at a person,

let's say it's a guy,

how tall can that guy be

- before you think he's dumb?
- You've got it backward.

The taller a person is,
the smarter they are.

The brain has already expended
all of its energy on making you tall

and now it can work on other things.

When things get more advanced,
they do not get bigger,

they get smaller.

Computers, cameras, phones.

Kareem Abdul-jabbar,
Abe Lincoln, queen latifah.

- Are there any eggs left?
- No.

Awesome.

Hey, what happened
with that girl you like?

Hey, whose advice did you take?

Well, I had a lot of really good options.

The way you connect with someone
is through communal crying.

The two of you stare
into each other's eyes and cry together.

No words, just tears.

[Rollie] Primo, forget all that.

See, what you wanna do
is find someone she hates, right,

then punch him in the mouth
right in front of her.

Prove that you can protect her.

- That's not terrible.
- It isn't?

No, but it's more about
proving how strong you are.

Find a reason to pick her up.

Just right off the ground,
like the Stanley cup.

I think that's where they get
the term trophy wife.

I think I'm gonna go about it my own way.

Just be super weird in front of her
and never do anything?

- Correct.
- Nice. Good job.

What are you watching?

It's a supercut of all the cocaine scenes
from wolf of wall street.

It ends up being the whole movie.

I thought ma said
no Wolf of wall street Before : A.M.?

Wolves don't follow rules.

- Turn it off, Ryan.
- You got it.

Primo, sit down. Let me ask you something.

How many of your teachers
would you say are...

Satisfied with their
current banking situations?

Why would I know that, uncle Ryan?

All right. Do me a favor.
Leave these on your teachers' desks

and tell them that I will personally
take care of them.

Did you staple these?

You got a better way to attach
business cards to apples?

Tape.

Damn it.

I made business apples.

Ernesto is sick.
We're a man short

and I got four irrigation systems
to install.

Which one of you all
is coming with me today?

- Not me.
- [Rollie] No, no, no, no.

Take them all.
Get everybody out of my house.

Rafa, breakfast.

Okay. I'm leaving. Bye.

All right. Too slow for real this time.

- Are you kidding me?
- [Jay] Let's go, guys.

We don't have all day.

- Guys, you heard him.
- [Jay] You, what are you waiting for?

And, you, put some shoes on.

- And you know what? Let's get some...
- And why are you wearing a fleece?

- Boots on top of [indistinct]
- It's like a hundred degrees outside.

I got a job. But you know that already.

[Man] Why are you telling me [indistinct]

[Overlapping chatter]

[Dramatic music playing]

[Rafa] Before you start, Mr. Flores,
can I just say that

whatever you think that I did,
I didn't do it.

And if I did do it, then I didn't mean to.

And if I did mean to,
then I didn't know that it was wrong.

Also, are you happy
with your current banking situation?

I have a business apple.
Just careful of the staple.

Mr. Gonzalez... where do you think
you might wanna go to college?

- I'm sorry?
- College.

Surely, you've thought about it.
I know I have.

You haven't gone to college yet?

I meant for you.

There's a college prep program here

that helps our juniors and seniors
prepare for the admission process.

Oh. Yeah, I don't think that's for me.
I'm probably not right for college.

What does that mean?

I mean, college is for kids
who do boat sports.

[Gernesto] Do you know what that is?

No, but it's definitely good news.
There's a lot of green here.

If you get a thing from a teacher

and it has a green on it,
it's usually good.

Red is almost always bad.
Red cards in soccer,

the-the buzzer in Family feud,
Red wedding in Game of thrones.

sorry. I'm kind of nervous.
You talk now.

Those are the results
from the standardized tests

you and your classmates took
at the end of sophomore year.

You scored in the rd percentile.
You scored higher than %

of all the other sophomores
in the state of Texas.

You're telling me you're not right
for college.

I'm telling you
you're exactly right for college.

Here's an application.

I think you should apply to the program.

Oh, no. What does blue mean?

[Harris] Yo, you're a genius.

[rafa] It's not a big deal.
It's just one test.

but now the guidance counselor

wants me to apply
to this college prep program.

Did you all know anything about that?

I honestly didn't even know
we had a guidance counselor,

so, no, I did not know about
the college prep program.

I've been in a college prep program
since I was born.

Both my parents went to Howard.
Their parents went to Howard.

So guess where I'm going?

I'm sorry. Who's Howard?
I wasn't really listening.

I'm trying to figure out
if I could rock a bucket hat?

College. We're talking about college.

I don't need college.

I'm gonna inherit my parents' store
and be the Filipino godfather.

See? That sounds good.
I need a plan like that.

You know, I could work for my uncle Jay,
maybe become the irrigation scarface.

Oh, is that what you wanna do?

Oh, I have no idea what I wanna do.
I thought that was obvious.

[Chuckles]

You all give me a minute.
I'MMA say what's up to my mom?

All right.

- [Andrea] Looks better if you had red...
- Hey, ma.

Oh, get out of here. Go.

Oh, hi. Hi.

Who's that? Do I know him?

Uh, he works at the tire shop?

- What's in the box?
- Oh, this?

This is a beautiful, handmade,

one-of-a-kind
none of your g*dd*mn business.

Oh, is, is that our new neighbor, Mya?
Bring her in so I can meet her.

No, no, I can't. I gotta go.
We'll be at Harris' house though, okay?

- Bye.
- I need you home by : .

What? No, no, no, no, no.
I was hoping I could hang out at Harris'.

I was hoping I could be home by : .

Perfect.

[Dramatic music playing]

- Mike, here. This is your job.
- [Mike] Hmm.

Write, "congratulations, rafa"
on the cake.

- What's the other bag for?
- Oh, hell, yeah.

Cake icing.

- It's gonna turn your teeth blue.
- [Bottles clink]

Okay. I need to talk to you guys
about something.

Rafa's guidance counselor called me
a few weeks ago

and said that rafa scored really high
on some test

and he thinks rafa has a good chance

of getting into college
after he graduates.

Rafa hasn't said anything to me
about it yet

but I know that he met with him today.

College is a scam.
He should be working.

He's now. He'll be
by the end of the school year.

Soon he'll be .

Hey, Jay's right.
That is how numbers work.

If he starts working for me now,
he'll be ready to run his own crew

by the time he graduates high school.

What if he doesn't wanna dig holes
for a living?

Maybe he wants to work in finance like me.

You're a bank teller.

You son of a bitch. [Chuckles]
If you would've read the apple,

you would've known
that I am an account manager now.

- I read the apple.
- Thank you.

Okay.
This is exactly what I'm talking about.

I don't need you all in his ear about this
like you are about everything else.

So, nobody says a word to him about it.
Not a word. Leave him be.

Jay, after rafa turns ,
what age does he turn next?

[Dog barking]

Well, thanks for walking me home.

I still don't really know my way
around here

and there's a lot of stray dogs
in this neighborhood.

No, of course. It's no problem.

- But honestly, if any of the dogs come...
- Mm-hmm.

- You're on your own.
- [Chuckles] Whatever.

Hey, you still applying
to that college thing?

Part of me wants to.

No one in my family has ever been
to like a real college before.

My mom would freak.

- She'd be so happy.
- [Chuckles]

But who knows
what all my uncles would say?

All your uncles? How many uncles you got?

- Five.
- Oh.

It feels like most of the time though.

My dad left when I was little,
so they're always around

and they're super protective
of my mom and me.

Yeah. What's that like?

Mostly it's like being
inside a cloud of bees...

- Mm-hmm.
- Except the bees are always

like cussing and punching at each other.

[Chuckles] Okay.

Uh, you wanna come
and wait at the front porch?

I'll go inside and get
those history notes for you.

Yeah. Sure.

[All] Surprise!

Mya, you're here? Come in.

Does that sign say you're a junior?

Yeah. It's just what my mom does.

Any time I do a thing that she's proud of,
she throws me a party.

[Dramatic music playing]

I'm an only child.
It's kind of embarrassing.

I don't know. It seems really nice.
I won the at a track meet last year

and my father just said,
"you performed adequately."

It's so nice to meet you, Mya.
I'm Andrea, rafa's mom.

- Welcome to the neighborhood.
- Thank you.

Okay. Everybody, gather around.

First of all, we just wanna say
how proud we are of you, rafa.

I cannot believe that you're a junior.

- [Cheers and applause]
- [Andrea] My baby!

This is for you.

- What's this?
- It's a present.

I knew that. I was asking what's inside?

Do you not know how presents work?

- Right.
- [Laughter]

- Okay.
- [Andrea] Okay. Open it!

- Yes. Come on.
- [All] Open it!

Open it! Open it!

Open it! Open it!

[Cheering]

- [Andrea] Okay. Try it on.
- What?

[Chuckles]

Oh, thanks.

I just figured that you
might need something nice

for, you know, future occasions.

Like court.

Um...

i actually have an announcement
to make too.

I met with my guidance counselor today

and he thinks that I have a sh*t
at going to college.

- What?
- [Cheers and applause]

My boy.

That's-that's great, baby.

College is a scam. Don't be stupid.

- Not the time, Jay.
- No, he's right.

It's just four years of expensive nonsense
where the system tells you how to think.

Education is not stupid.
Plus, the m*llitary will pay for it.

He's not going into the m*llitary, dummy.

Are you gonna take that from him, Mike?

- Kick his ass.
- Okay. That's enough.

He should be working.
Contributing to the family. Helping drea.

Higher education is the key to success.

I make the most money
out of anyone in this family

because I got a degree.

You took one class at a technical school
and you got a certificate.

And you made $ more than me last year.

And is that more or is that less?

Kick his ass, Ryan.

He doesn't need a university
to be educated.

The universe is a university.

- You're homeless. Shut up.
- My home is the planet earth,

and mother nature doesn't charge me rent

nor does Jay whose shed
I've been sleeping in.

God damn it, mondo, stay out of my shed.

Hey, well, someone better
kick someone's ass.

[Overlapping chatter]

Just relax. And you? Stay out of my shed.

Oh, I get it. Cloud of bees.

- [Overlapping chatter continues]
- Hmm.

[Mouse clicking]

[Andrea] When I said
don't say a word about college,

did I need to define what a word is
for your little t-Rex brains?

Listen to me.

We are gonna fill this house with joy
or I swear to god

I will slit all of your throats.

[Gasps] Denise. Hey, girl.

Man, what's got her all worked up?

Us.

Oh. Right.

You spelled it wrong.
There's an apostrophe in congratulations.

- No, there's not.
- Yes, there is before the s. Like this.

[Mike] That's definitely wrong.

They don't do spelling
at "universe university"?

Ryan, who's right, me or Mike?

{\an }Huh. Well, I know the answer
because I got a degree.

- Certificate.
- But I will not tell you the answer

- because you're a d*ck.
- Hmm.

If it were me, I would just pay
for the bakery to ice the cake,

because I can afford these things,
'cause I got a job,

- because I got a degree.
- Certificate.

- Rollie.
- Yo.

Come here. Is this right?

It's ugly.

So if you meant for it to be ugly,
then, yeah, it's right.

Hey, good job.

Apostrophe shows ownership
or combines words.

Mm-hmm. Right.

And this is primo's cake,
so he owns it, so it needs an apostrophe.

You know what? Good idea. Here.
Let's put apostrophes everywhere.

- Look. Ra...
- [Mondo] No, Mike. Don't be crazy.

No, Mike. Stop it. Stop it, Mike.

- You're being crazy. Mike. Come on, Mike.
- No, no, no.

- You want apostrophe.
- Don't be crazy, Mike.

- Come on.
- I'll give you apostrophe.

- Apostrophe. Apostrophe.
- [Andrea] Hey.

- One for Ryan. One for you.
- [Andrea] Hey.

Did you finish the cake?

Yes.

There you go. Cake time, everybody.

- Hey, ma.
- [Andrea] Yeah?

- Don't get mad but...
- [Andrea] Uh-hmm.

I was getting on the computer
and your bank account page was up

and I saw that you only have...

Oh, no, no. Don't worry about that.
I have it under control.

What do you mean don't worry about it?
Ma, you only have $ in your account.

You're throwing me a party.
You just bought me this new coat.

Rafa, you have small eyes.
You can't see the whole picture yet.

Why are you talking
like the oracle from The matrix?

this is serious.

College costs money that you don't have.
That we don't have.

Rafa, relax.

All of this has been in the works
for a long time.

Last month, Carlos,
Who you saw at the store earlier,

kept talking about how he had a rash
On his foot.

so, you know, Gloria,
The receptionist at the clinic,

she traded me some samples
Of the foot medicine for some bus passes,

because I know she rides the bus,
Because it stops in front of the store

and I see her getting on it each morning.

how did you get bus passes?

[Andrea] I always hear Sammy,
The bus driver, complaining

about having to eat a cold lunch every day

because his break isn't long enough
To find some place to eat.

so, I made him a hot plate
Every day for a week

and he slipped me some bus passes.

so, food for Sammy,
bus passes for Gloria,

foot medicine for Carlos,
and he has a booth at the flea market

where he sells clothes
and he gave me the coat

for free.

So, if Carlos didn't have
some gross foot fungus,

I wouldn't have this new coat?

One man's rash is another man's treasure.

Okay. Well, I mean,
what about all the food at this party?

What messed-up skin condition
bought us those ribs?

Oh, that is a good one. Okay.

So like, three months ago,
There was this lady up the street

who was having trouble with her car.

i could tell by the sound,
It was her alternator.

stop, stop, stop. This is too much, ma.
Our life is like a jenga tower.

We make one tiny wrong move
and it all comes tumbling down.

Do not worry about any of that, okay?
That's my job.

Your job is to be and
figure out what you want.

Big eyes.

Okay.

Mm. I love you. Eat some cake.

[Indistinct chatter]

[Dramatic music playing]

What's up, uncle Jay? You got a minute?

Yeah, but not much more.

I got Rollie, Mike,
and mondo working today.

We're running late
because Rollie hit Mike with a shovel.

Why?

Because earlier Mike hit Rollie
with a shovel. What's up?

Well, you keep saying that I should start
coming to work with you more hours.

Is that offer still available?
I think I need a steady job.

[Phone rings]

- [Ryan] You've got, Ryan.
- I know, stupid.

Rafa is here with me right now.

I want you to hear the conversation
him and I are about to have

so that you can know that I b*at you.

- [Ryan] What are you talking about?
- Go ahead, rafa.

Uh, hi, uncle Ryan.

I was just telling uncle Jay
I think I'm ready to start working.

Jay, Rollie hit me in the head
with a shovel.

Hey, he's lying.

- Hey, primo, what are you doing here?
- Good. You're all here,

so now you can all hear
what rafa was about to say.

Uncle Jay, I kind of just wanted
to talk to you like one on one.

Well, this is better than one on one.

- It's a full uncle meeting.
- [Rafa] I don't want that.

I-I never want that.
I want the opposite of an uncle meeting.

An aunt separation?

Hey, that was pretty good.

Hey, I'm sorry I hit you with a shovel.

[Ryan] Hey, primo, listen.

I'm sorry that I couldn't be there
For this great conversation,

but I can't be there
Because I have a good job,

- 'cause I have a higher degree.
- Certificate.

Primo, if the concern is money,
then you should know the m*llitary

will pay for your schooling
if you serve four years.

- That's what I did.
- You didn't go to college.

But I could've and they would have paid.

Hey, for the record, I don't really care
what primo decides.

I just hate Ryan. What's up, Ryan?

Actually, I hate all you guys.
I wish I had a giant shovel.

College is just handcuffs for the mind,
and money's a disease.

Great. I won't pay you for today.

Fine. Then I'm moving out of your shed.

- That's what I want.
- Can you please just stop?

I came here to talk to uncle Jay
about working...

- [Ryan] [Indistinct]
- But this, what's happening right now,

is what happens all of the time.

You guys just come over the top
of everything, and it's chaos,

and none of you even listen
to what I'm saying.

Hey, I listen. They don't listen.

That's not true.
You don't listen to any of us.

[Overlapping chatter]

[Andrea clears throat loudly]

What's going on, guys?

- Is that drea?
- Yeah.

And like I was saying, we shouldn't
Be doing this without drea present...

good news.
Primo's decided he wants to...

Shut up, Jay.

- Mike.
- Mm-hmm?

[Andrea] Give me your keys.

I'm gonna drive rafa home
and I'll see you all at dinner tonight.

Oh, that super calm, quiet voice.

Hey, she's pissed.

Hey, she might kick someone's ass though.

- I don't understand why you're mad.
- [Scoffs]

I didn't go to primo. He came to me

and said he wants to work.
How is that bad?

A decision that you pressed him to make.

But don't you want him to go to college?
Why aren't you telling him that?

Why aren't you telling him anything?

What I want is for you all
to leave him alone.

- Okay. I understand but...
- No buts, Ryan.

You guys have to understand

that your influence on him
is meaningful, okay?

This is not like you teaching him
how to ride a bike.

He's not a kid anymore.

You could push him
toward making a decision

that he will regret for a long time.

Now, I want him to go to college.
That's what I want.

But whatever he chooses,
it's a decision that he needs to arrive at

on his own or it's not going to work.

That doesn't make sense.
If you want a thing, speak up.

It's like a restaurant.

You don't just hope for the waiter
to bring you cheese sticks.

You tell him.

So, you're smart today?

I'm smart every day.

Your t-shirt's on backwards.

Man.

It's a v-neck.

What is wrong with you?

I thought it was from Europe.

[Rollie] He's like a magician
with that cane, man.

[Indistinct TV chatter]

Hey, your mom took off for work already
but she left food for you on the table.

[Rafa] And then you ate it.

I did eat the food, yes.

Perfect.

[Rollie] Hey, hold up, boy.
Hey, you forgot something.

What? What did I forgot, uncle Rollie?
Do you want my lunch too?

Do you wanna hit me with a shovel?

How'd you know I threw that away?

- Or even what it was?
- [Rollie] I didn't.

I was looking for chicken wings
people might've tossed out,

because most people when they eat wings,
only eat like half the meat.

So, if you gather enough of them,
it's basically like a whole extra meal.

Gross.

Anyways, I found that paper.
Didn't know why you threw it away.

What's going on, primo?

I don't know what to do.

I have way too many opinions
coming at me at once.

It's like, you know,
do i... do I go to college?

Do I start working?
Do I join the m*llitary?

Do I join the m*llitary
and then go to college?

And how does ma figure into any of it
because she has $ to her name

- so who's gonna take care of her?
- Hey, wait.

Hold up. Hold up.

You don't think you'd take
care of your mom, do you?

I mean, she's been taking care of
all of us

since she was like years old.

I mean, you saying
you'd take care of your mom

is like saying a flower
takes care of the sun.

And, second, boohoo.

So, you've got six people in this house
who give a damn about what happens to you.

That must suck.

All right. Look,
I'm not gonna sit here and tell you

that we're not gonna keep
shoving advice into your ear

because we are.

That's what we do.
We've been doing it since you were tiny

and we're gonna keep doing it
till we're all dead.

Hey, but, ultimately, that's your call.

And whatever you decide to do,
it'll be fine.

And your mom will be fine too,
because besides her own toughness,

hey, she's got us. Her brothers.

Every single one of us
would do jail time for her.

Hell, I just did.

You didn't serve jail time for her.

You served jail time
'cause you jumped a dog track

and tried to race the greyhounds.

Let me tell you something.
Those skinny b*tches are fast.

I stand corrected.

Hey, get out of here. I'm trying
to watch my show. Bug off.

[Upbeat music playing]

[Indistinct chatter]

Okay, okay, okay, everyone.
Uh, I have an announcement to make.

Didn't we do this already?

I have decided

that I am going to apply
to that college prep program.

And I don't know
what happens after that just yet

but I do know that this is the decision
I wanna make right now

and so... I'm making it.

We're so proud of you, baby.

Whatever your path is, man,
that's your path.

That poem sucked.

If this blows up in your face
and you need a job,

I'll be here.

Primo, all that matters
is that you're happy.

- [Andrea] Mm-hmm.
- And that you basically chose my thing.

Those are the two main takeaways
we should all be focusing as a family.

Okay. Let's eat.

Actually, the point is that
I'm grateful for you guys.

You are all looking out for me

and I'm sure I'm gonna to need
to lean on all of you all

at the appropriate times
for advice on different things.

Like when you're gonna ask Mya out?

Who told you Mya is the girl I like?

Our brains every time
we see you make Google eyes at her.

Hold on. Did you just say Google eyes?

Yeah. Google eyes.
That's why they call it Google.

It's like your eyes
are searching for information.

No. It's goo-goo eyes.

No, it's googly eyes.

Gentleman, it's ghoul-y.
Like a ghoul,

because you're so scared
of how much you like that person.

That is the dumbest thing
I have ever heard anybody say.

[Overlapping chatter]

No apostrophe. Mike was right.

I wonder if there's any cake left.

[Andrea] Next, on primo...

listen up. It's that time of year.
The Gonzales family neighborhood barbecue.

You know how insane the barbecue gets.

I need you to shield Mya and her family
from the worst of it.

This year, I'm bringing my crossbow.

It's cinnamon, bro.

[Howling]

[Sparks, crackles]

Yeah, this is what I mean
when I say the worst of it.

[Theme music playing]
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