By Jake Flanagin

​The best kind of odd couple: Seth Rogen as a young George Bluth, Sr. and Kristen Wiig as a young Lucille

Ladies and gentlemen, the day has finally arrived. Yours truly, along with a group brave/admittedly sybaritic Airship ​staffers, worked his way through all 15 episodes of the Netflix revival of Arrested Development​. And I'm happy to report that, like all of us at The Airship​, Hollywood was so eager to see this quirky piece of non-linear comedy return that she lent some her finest talents to fill in the corners.

During its tenure on Fox, AD​ was known as a prime destination for the guest star set--who can forget Charlize Theron as the unwitting Michael Bluth's mentally-challenged love interest? Or Julia Louis-Dreyfus masquerading as a blind attorney? Unfortunately for us, neither Theron or Louis-Dreyfus have reprised their roles (this season), but trust me when I say you'll be more than satisfied with the supporting cast Netflix has drummed up.

As always, SPOILER ALERT:

Kristen Wiig as Lucille Bluth, circa 1982.​

​Seth Rogen as George Bluth, Sr., circa 1982.

​Max Winkler (son of Henry Winkler, a.k.a. Barry Zuckerkorn) as Barry Zuckerkorn, circa 1982.

​From left to right: Adam DeVine, Anders Holm, and Blake Anderson (all of Workaholics​) as "the Airline Assholes."

​Mary Lynn Rajskub as Heartfire, the would-be telepath.

​Henry Winkler (all grown up) as Barry Zuckerkorn, "attorney" at law.

John Beard as himself (if John Beard hosted a morning news program in Orange County), and Busy Philipps and Natasha Leggero as his (drunk?) hecklers.​

John Slattery as Dr. Norman, the disgraced anesthesiologist.​

​Ed Begley, Jr. as Stan Sitwell, the alopecial real estate tycoon and Bluth family rival.

​Rizwan Manji as the mountaintop purse vendor. "Best bag on the mountain!"

​Ed Helms reprising his role as real estate/talent agent James Carr (RIP).

​Chris Diamantopoulos as Marky Bark, vaguely Marxist ostrich farm owner and son of Johnny Bark (also RIP).

​Maria Bamford as DeBrie Bardeaux, B-movie actress turned junkie/butter enthusiast.

​Scott Baio dropping Loblaw law bombs as Bob Loblaw.

​Ron Howard as Ron Howard (Happy Days​ reunion!) and Judy Greer as Kitty Sanchez, lazy-eyed serial flasher and film development exec.

​Carl Weathers as Carl Weathers! Again!

​John Krasinski as the douchey Bruckheimer film exec. "You're not charring my tree."

​James Lipton returns as the prison warden turned screenwriter.

​Conan O'Brien and Andy Richter as dysfunctional (we hope) versions of themselves.

​This guy (Beck Bennett) from those AT&T commercials as the "straight-bait" porn star.

​Nelson Franklin as DeBrie's doctor.

​Liza Minelli as the inimitable Lucille 2.

Terry Crews as Herbert Love, the black birther and redhead fetishist.​

​Ben Schwartz, a.k.a. Jean-Ralphio Saperstein, as John Beard, Jr. (JBJ).

​Mae Whitman as Anne Veal, a.k.a. "Egg," a.k.a. "Blank," a.k.a. "... Her?"

​Ben Stiller as Tony Wonder, the gay(ish?) magician.

​Alan Tudyk as Pastor Veal/Anne's dad, and Kids in the Hall's Bruce McCullough as Father Marsala.

​Justin Grant Wade as STEVE HOLT!

​Clint Howard as Johnny Bark (pre-mortem).

​Isla Fisher as Rebel Alley, budding actress and Ron Howard love child.

​Christine Taylor as Sally Sitwell, Lindsay's high school/political nemesis.

​Justin Lee as Annyong.

​Tommy Tune as Argyle Austero, rehab clinic administrator, choreographer extraordinaire... and loan shark?

Lonny Ross as Marvel Entertainment's intellectual property attorney.​

​From left to right: Bobby Lee, Suzanne Wang, and Amy Hill as The Real Asian Prison Housewives of the Orange County White Collar Prison System​.

​Martin Mull as Gene Parmesan (AHHHHHHH!), private eye.

Jim Cramer as Jim Cramer. HYPOTHETICALLY BUY FAKEBLOCK!​

​Jeff Garlin as the scatalogically vengeful Mort Meyers. 

Maria Thayer (Kenneth's blind girlfriend on 30 Rock) as the deceased Tracey Bluth (another redhead).​

David Henrie, a wizard of Waverly Place, as himself.

​Zach Woods as Buster's drone-buddy.

​Andy Buckley (right) as the commanding officer of a strip-mall-based contingent of remote drone pilots.

​Diedrich Bader as the surgeon behind Buster's monster hand transplant.