Inside the weekly meetings of a fraternity's dysfunctional executive board.
The vice president is unhappy that he isn't president and takes it out on the current executive, and no one has paid the treasurer their dues.
The secretary reads off the most ridiculous minutes from past meetings, the vice president vies for more power, and the treasurer is pissed because no one has still paid any dues, at all.
The house is summoned to the school's Office of Greek Life for a hearing after a philanthropy event gone horribly wrong.
The fraternity somehow manages to talk its way out of trouble with the office of Greek Life after an "offensive" party.
The Pledge Ed is way too enthusiastic about his job, which is sort of a problem for the president.
The exec board discusses policing the social media accounts of all the brothers so nobody accidentally offends someone on campus or gets the house in trouble.
The fraternity's exec board argues about how to handle their rival fraternity across the street.
After aggressively insane drunken nights and mornings filled with unspeakable hangovers, the fraternity's risk manager realizes the house has been making their trashcan punch way, WAY too strong.
Because no one has paid dues or social fee, the treasurer is losing his mind, and the fraternity has to go to desperate measures to fund their parties.
The chapter secretary keeps the fraternity's test file fully stocked so that no one ever has to study, is terrible at the rest of his job.
The fraternity is hit hard by winter and seasonal affective disorder, especially the pledge ed, who doesn't have the energy to haze that he once did. The social chair decides to pitch in and help with one of his most offensive party themes yet.
The fraternity president goes on a much needed spring break trip. Refreshed, he returns to the fraternity house wherein his hellish life immediately resumes.
The fraternity's vice-president, pledge ed, and social chair try to frame the president with a racist Snapchat to get him to resign so that they can take over and let alcoholic anarchy reign.
Everyone on Exec Board explains their general debate and negotiation strategies (most of which are terrible) as they argue over a party theme. The pledge ed introduces a horrifying new colloquialism to the fraternity's lexicon.
Things go horribly wrong after a miscommunication about which movie to screen on the house's front lawn for a sober event. And, also, to avoid being sober at said "alcohol free" events without breaking the rules, brothers start pounding cold medicine.
An Exec Board meeting that was only supposed to last five minutes goes on for hours, and nobody can seem to stop the madness.
A glimpse into the things the members of the fraternity's exec board -- the president, VP, risk manager, pledge ed, etc. -- do and deal with on a daily basis.
Because sometimes a fraternity president actually has to tell people not to explode things in or around the house. (RIP Bucky)
While auditing the house budgets, the treasurer notices a large discrepancy in the president's funds. The risk manager oversees a pledge lineup, and the vice-president reluctantly audits the fraternity's social calendar.
The pledge ed explains an uncomfortable truth about the homecoming blood drive, the risk manager finds something troubling in the hallway, the social chair tells a morally questionable story from study abroad, and the dumbest argument ever breaks out.
The fraternity's Exec Board debates what to do next in their war with the rival frat across the street.