Low key entry, concerned more with taking a rather wan look at an "issue" than with any kind of event-driven plot. Even moments where it seems like it might be picking up some energy--such as Ed going undercover as a high-school teacher--don't really amount to much. Kind of about 1/4 of the way in I began to hope that the script might actually be trying to engage in some serious questioning of the demonization of marijuana, but then you get a scene like the one with Ironpants facing down the Creepy Rich Druggie Poolside Girls' Club.
The episode is more good in a bad way, like how corny old movies can be fun to watch and talk back to. There's a lot of unintended humor to be found in some of the very dated dialogue and attitudes; if I heard someone say "turn on" with a straight face one more time I think it would have driven me to drugs. Also chuckleworthy was what I can only assume were supposed to be scary lesbians at the not-really-that-bad Girls Reform School, the happy-go-lucky demeanor of the niece's boyfriend as he was being busted for possessing and selling drugs, and the not-so-subtle contrast of the crew having a good, clean time playing a Boggle-type game at the beginning--complete with Ed in a Mr. Rogers sweater--compared to the illicit hijinks we would soon learn many of the younger generation were up to.
The synopsis for this episode got me excited because I thought it would be more of showcase for Eve; it wasn't, and that's a real bummer.