So I kind of love Community. I've not really wanted to admit that I could possibly enjoy an American sitcom as much as I enjoy Community, but there it is.
There's something that just doesn't work with the American sitcom style of airing 76 episodes a season. There's no way a steady level of quality can be maintained and, unless it is a rare case (Seinfeld), ends up falling back on repeating jokes & catch phrases to the point of saturation (Big Band [Typo I'm keeping] Theory) or is just the same damn episode over and over and over again (Two and a Half Men [Which could break that cycle if they would start filming yesterday and create one of the most bizarre & innovative TV shows the world has even known.])
But Community seems to work by virtue of embracing the notion of an ensemble cast (Unlike, say, Friends, who would focus on two characters in an A plot, two characters in a B plot and Joey and Phoebe as afterthoughts.), genuinely good writing that eschews beating you over the head with the same dumb catchphrase. Bazoonga!
[Aside 1: I wonder how different Seinfeld would have been if it aired today in the age of viral videos and video memes. One of the odd things is how ahead of its time it appears in terms of coining catch phrases in an age before DVD box sets and YouTube.]
[Aside 2: Am I the only one who now finds Seinfeld uncomfortable to watch in light of the tremendous amount of less than subtle racism that emanates from it, its cast and its legacy?]
Community is the American re-make of Spaced without realizing it. It's got the same themes (Friendship, an obsessive love of pop culture, a meta-awareness that it's a TV show.) and in spite of what may go on in each episode, a tremendous amount of heart, in which the characters deal realistically with whatever zany adventure that might have.
The characters are also real. One of the characters has Asperger's and I would compare how the actor plays it verses how another Emmy Award winning actor plays his interpretation and let the difference speak for itself. Not just in how it's acted but in his interaction with the audience and show as well.
There's an intelligence and an understatement behind the show that American sitcoms lack, avoiding the obvious jokes (Then mocking them when they go there) and a heart that grounds it in reality. At the end of the day, if you said to your friends and family a third of what characters say to each other on other TV shows, you would be disowned as a social leper. Community deals with this in a realistic way and as such, makes the antics of the characters a community you actually want to join. God, how corny is that.
Very corny, but after watching a few episodes, reluctantly, I want more!
ReplyDeleteI think your comparison to UK's Spaced is intriguing and possibly very important.
Especially if you watch some of the later 'theme' episodes.
ReplyDeleteI am looking for something new to watch, will try this. Dexter is finished for the season and Nurse Jackie hasn't begun.
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