Mark: It’s whoever, not whomever.
Mark: No. Whomever is never actually right.
Riven: Well, sometimes it’s right.
Edison: No. Mark is right. It’s a made up word used to trick students.
Elliot: No. Actually, whomever is the formal version of the word.
Shen: Obviously it’s a real word but I don’t know when to use it correctly.
Mark: [talking into the camera] Not a native speaker.
Naismith: [arms crossed] I know what’s right but I’m not going to say it because you’re all jerks who didn’t come see my band last night.
Zyn: Do you really know which one is correct?
Agarwal, poking her head in: It’s whom when it’s the object of the sentence and who when is the subject.
Mark: Well, it sounds right but is it?
Edison: How did Zyn use it? As an object?
Heiden: Bright used me as an object.
Edison: Is he right about that?
Agarwal: How did he use it again?
Cimmerian: It was Zyn wanted Mark, the subject, to explain the system, the object.
Cimmerian: -to whomever, meaning us, the indirect object, which is the correct usage of the word.
Mark: No one, uh, ever asked you anything ever. So, whomever’s name is Jeremiah Cimmerian, why don’t you take a letter opener and stick it in your skull?