The orphans find themselves under suspicion in the wake of a devastating murder. But time behind bars leads to an important realization.
Mr. Poe brings the Baudelaires to V.F.D., a bird-loving village with an Old West vibe. Jacques and Olivia continue their search for the Quagmires.
Still posing as conjoined carnival freaks, the Baudelaires brace themselves for a beastly fate. Will good fortune intervene … for once?
The Baudelaires find their friends — and then lose them — at the bottom of an elevator shaft. Count Olaf conducts an auction in disguise.
Violet, Klaus and Sunny get new guardians in a fashionable building, where stairs are in — and the elevator’s out. Jacques Snicket trains a recruit.
While the Quagmires keep up the search, the Baudelaires struggle to balance their studies with a punishing workout schedule, courtesy of Count Olaf.
The Baudelaires begin life at boarding school and meet a pair of mysterious siblings whose tragic lives sound eerily similar to their own.
Klaus just isn’t himself after seeing Dr. Orwell, an optometrist with oddly optimistic patients. Meanwhile, Violet works to clear her parents’ names.
The children arrive at the Lucky Smells Lumber Mill and unearth some unsettling accusations about their parents. Count Olaf courts an old flame.
Klaus and Violet look for clues in a suspicious note that passes custody to Captain Sham, a seafaring scam artist with clear ties to Count Olaf.
The orphans arrive at the aptly named Lake Lachrymose to meet their widowed Aunt Josephine, a strict grammarian who’s haunted by the past.
Klaus and Violet suspect Count Olaf and his evil cohorts when a lifeless body turns up in the reptile room. Sunny sees the inside of a suitcase.
After the Baudelaires move in with Dr. Montgomery, a renowned expert in reptile behavior, their new guardian hires a frighteningly familiar assistant.
While Mr. Poe’s secretary works overtime, Count Olaf casts Violet and Klaus in “The Marvelous Marriage,” a work of theater with alarming implications.
The dreadful history of the Baudelaire children begins with a deadpan narrator, a terrible fire and the ominous arrival of a distant relative.
Forced out of his own body by his smug alter ego, Nick fights back – with help from his friends and Gratitoad. Matthew comes out to his dad.
A trippy haunted house hosted by Kappa Kappa Kill forces each of the friends to reckon with their biggest fears.
The kids at Bridgeton Middle explore enthusiastic consent, feminine pleasure, coercion and more in four short films.
Wracked with guilt, Andrew tries to keep his urges in check. Matthew’s mom ices him out of the church bake=off after reading his texts.
Thirty years in the future, rich but lonely game show host Nick prepares to flee a dying Earth. But first, he has to track down the perfect plus-one.
On a trip to the 9/11 museum, Nick and Andrew sneak off to meet Jessi, Devon teaches Missy about code-switching, and Coach Steve gets a rude surprise.
After seeing their eighth grade classmates coupled up, Nick and Andrew make a play for two seventh grade girls. Jessi adjusts to life in the city.
On the last night of camp, bowel problems, a talent show and a hookup lead to hurt feelings. Back home, Jay and Lola throw a pool party.
While Jessi deals with menstrual mayhem, Nick tries to avoid showering with the guys, and Missy gets a makeover from her cousins in Atlanta.
At sleep-away camp, Jessi befriends her trans cabinmate, and Nick discovers his two best friends have a little too much in common.
When a freak storm gives everyone new superpowers, tensions between Andrew, Nick and friends boil over into an epic showdown.
A provocative school musical unleashes Missy’s inner thespian — and her new Hormone Monstress. The “Queer Eye” Fab Five pay a visit to Coach Steve.
A big standardized test sends everyone into a panic — except for Jay, who just scored an Adderall prescription.
As the friends feverishly swap lists of the hottest kids at school, newcomer Ali stokes the flames by announcing she’s pansexual.
The ghost of Duke Ellington takes Nick and friends on a journey back in time to 1913: the year he lost his virginity and found his true calling.
Connie gives Jessi a crash course in female pleasure, Maury tries to talk Andrew into sending a dick pic, and Nick lashes out at his new housemate.
While Nick tags along with the Gloubermans on a wild road trip to Florida, Jay discovers he’s been “Home Alone’d” — and moves in with a new family.
Cellsea goads Nick into posting a risqué video, Maury urges Matthew to speed things up with Aiden, and Jay feeds Missy ideas for her erotic fiction.
Nick is bewitched by his cool new phone. A call from “Pharmacy Boy” turns Matthew into a nervous wreck. Jay finds a Netflix show made just for him.
When a shop class mishap inspires a sexist dress code, Jessi rebels, Missy struggles to keep her alter ego in check, and Andrew gets a wake-up call.
Sappy cards. Stupid clichés. And so much pressure. For Andrew, Nick, Jessi and friends, Valentine’s Day is a total freaking minefield.
After traveling through a magic portal to puberty headquarters, Nick seeks out a new Hormone Monster and Jessi bonds with the Depression Kitty.
Andrew tries to drown his sorrows in a sea of porn, only to become hopelessly addicted. Coach Steve becomes a suspect in a murder spree.
Nick tries to lighten the mood at the sleepover with a new twist on Truth or Dare. The Shame Wizard meets his match. Jessi vows to change her ways.
A school sleepover turns messy as Nick dishes on a makeout session and the Shame Wizard works his miserable magic on the whole class.