Noah wants nothing more than for the soft-spoken Howie - his closest confidante - to get laid, but Howie is more of a walks-on-the-beach romantic type, so he immediately gets sucked into the orbit of kindly rich kid Charlie (James Scully) and his more snobbish pals. As it turns out, Erin’s financial situation has taken a turn, which means the house may not be hers for very long - which also means that this could be the last time the friend group gathers for this particular escape, so they try to make the most of it.
Poor, gay, and wanting nothing less than monogamy, he meets up with his excitable best friends, Howie (Bowen Yang), Keegan (Tomas Matos), Luke (Matt Rogers), and Max (Torian Miller) for their annual trip to Fire Island, the famous gay shoreside getaway a few hours from NYC, where their older, attention-starved lesbian friend Erin (Margaret Cho) has a beach house waiting for them as always. It begins with Austen’s famous opening to Pride - “It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife” - as narrated by sarcastic protagonist Noah (Joel Kim Booster, the film's screenwriter), who immediately rejects this premise.