It was a really good review, and a return to form after the TFA review which was a bit meandering. I would say that it took a little to get rolling, but when it did, it had a lot of quality stuff in it. The comparison between the original and the remake was eye-opening, and there were some great Plinkett moments that are up there with the opening line of his TPM review. The suicide note joke was hilariously dark.
I think, considering the amount of time between the last Plinkett review and this one, the lack of skits was more so Mike could get this one out quicker, and not do as much hard work on it. Try and stick to his main points. This is from someone who really enjoyed the dead hooker from earlier on. Honestly, considering what Jay has said about Mike and how RLM generally operates, I highly doubt Mike chose to cut back on the skits and not really touch on the sexism aspects surrounding the movie because of people criticized RLM for it. Mike only takes fandom reaction into account when he decides to double down on it, like with the Transformers 5 reviews. Those were hilarious. Me, personally, I believe Mike just believed he already said what he wanted to say on the controversy surrounding the movie in the Scientist Man and the HitB review. It's consistent with his previous behaviour.
I honestly don't get the idea that people should refrain from discussing or criticizing this film because doing so would "encourage the alt-right". The whole argument is dumb. GB2016 is an awful movie, and people shouldn't walk on eggshells around this movie because a small group of nazis don't like it. It's basically a "Hitler Ate Sugar" argument coupled with stupid fearmongering. If anybody was responsible for making this terrible movie into some cultural battle, it's probably Sony, so I don't see why RLM shouldn't not tear it down because of a defense pretty much set up by the corporation. The whole point of their Scientist Man video (which a ton of people misrepresent) is that Sony, by focusing too much attention on a few vocal sexist people, essentially amplified their views and made them seem more important than they really were.
The Melissa McCarthy quote at the end basically sums up the main idea and point. If anything, I would say Sony's actions did a better job of "encouraging the alt-right" than any negative takedown of the movie.