Peacemaker - Season 1- Episode 2 Today
John Cena’s performance here is extraordinary. He doesn’t cry. He doesn’t shout. His face just... crumbles. He looks like a little boy who just realized he will never be loved. In that moment, the loud, vulgar killer disappears, replaced by a broken child who only knows how to destroy things because that’s all his father taught him. As the credits roll over a classic hair-metal needle drop (Warrant’s “Cherry Pie”), the show sneaks in a final, quiet twist. Back at the team’s hideout, Adebayo is alone. She opens a secret file on her phone. The text on the screen reads: “Project: Butterfly. Objective: Monitor Peacemaker. Source: Waller.”
Following the gloriously unhinged premiere, Peacemaker Season 1, Episode 2 proves that the show is not just a fluke. “Best Friends, For Never” takes the foundation of extreme violence, juvenile humor, and emotional trauma laid out in Episode 1 and builds a surprisingly poignant (and still very bloody) second act. This episode pivots from “introducing the weirdo” to “deepening the wound,” showing us that Christopher Smith’s biggest enemy isn’t the aliens he’s hunting—it’s himself. The Butterfly Trap The episode kicks off in media res, with Peacemaker (John Cena) waking up in a daze. After the disastrous, glitter-bombed stakeout of the previous episode, the team has captured a "Butterfly"—the parasitic alien insects controlling human hosts. The team’s tech support, the perpetually exasperated John Economos (Steve Agee), explains that the Butterflies are weak to a specific sound frequency, causing them to flee their human vessels. Peacemaker - Season 1- Episode 2
But the real tension isn’t the bug in the jar. It’s the bug in Peacemaker’s ear: his newly appointed "partner," Clemson Murn (Chukwudi Iwuji). Murn, the ruthless team leader, makes it painfully clear that he doesn't trust Peacemaker for a second. He assigns him a "babysitter": the stoic, no-nonsense Leota Adebayo (Danielle Brooks). John Cena’s performance here is extraordinary
Suddenly, everything recontextualizes. Adebayo isn't just a new recruit; she’s Amanda Waller’s spy, planted to ensure Peacemaker doesn’t go completely off the reservation. The "best friend" she’s trying to become is just another lie. Peacemaker’s paranoia, it turns out, is entirely justified. “Best Friends, For Never” is a better episode than the premiere because it understands that shock value wears off, but character wounds don't. It balances grotesque comedy (Peacemaker trying to awkwardly hit on a female guard) with real pathos. His face just
The episode’s centerpiece is an explosive hallway fight scene that rivals anything in The Suicide Squad . When the team corners the target (a corrupt congressman), Peacemaker is ordered to stand down. He doesn't. What follows is a brutal, balletic takedown where Peacemaker uses a decorative samurai sword and a fire extinguisher to turn a pristine white hallway into an abattoir.
This forced partnership is the episode’s comedic engine. Brooks plays Adebayo as a grounded everywoman trapped in a cartoon. Watching her try to maintain professionalism while Peacemaker obsesses over the correct pronunciation of "economical" with Economos is pure gold. Cena’s delivery of absurd lines with dead-eyed sincerity continues to be the show’s secret weapon. The mission: infiltrate a glitzy, high-society fundraiser to identify a high-profile Butterfly host. This requires the team to dress in formal wear—a sight gag that pays off immediately, as Peacemaker’s idea of “undercover” is his signature chrome dome helmet hidden under a too-small suit jacket.