Category Archives: The Office

Thursday Night TV Club – February 22nd, 2007

 

The Office

I gasped. When Pam told Roy that she had kissed Jim a month before their wedding date, I gasped. Directed by J.J. Abrams, the episode was one built almost entirely around drama, really quite simple drama at that. Much like Joss Whedon worked for last week’s action/vampire oriented episode, Abrams worked well for this episode that was all about the drama caused by two budding relationships (Jan/Michael, Pam/Roy). At episode’s end, Roy went batshit crazy (Which was a bit sudden considering his recent character change, but his sobering down at the end at least put his moment of anger into perspective), and Michael and Jan find themselves at a crossroads where their secret relationship doesn’t work so well going public. It was a good episode, though, even though it focused almost entirely on the dramatic aspects. 

Scrubs

Scrubs continues to settle in around the good but not great area. There is still some solid comedy here, but it just seems like it isn’t going anywhere. J.D. is lacking a purpose, Turk and Carla are lacking drama, Eliot is lacking any real spark with Keith, and even Dr. Cox has lost any sort of drive. It’s really not much more than any multi-camera sitcom at this point; heck, I’d say it has even less of an overarching plot than a show like How I Met My Mother. Still, it has some fairly good jokes here and there, and it’s certainly still enjoyable to see these characters interact. I like recurring patients on the show, and Brian works well, but it just isn’t giving us anything new. 

30 Rock

“I would like to be Michelle Pfeiffer to your angry black kid,” “I want to take this cornbread behind the middle school and get it pregnant,” and Kenneth and Tracy harmonizing to Annie: all in the cold open to tonight’s 30 Rock. The fact that the episode’s writer, Matt Hubbard, came from Joey of all places shocks me, because it was very sharply written. Kenneth as the awkward Entourage member who stirs up the shit, Liz and Jack v. Josh and Agent, Jenna and her unfortunate political knowledge (The ol’ Osama/Obama slip. If it can happen to CNN, it can happen to everyone)…it was all pretty much amazing. Oh so much drama, oh so many cultural references…the fact that this show is in danger of being cancelled hurts me. It hurts me deep. “Television on. PORNOGRAPHY!” The entire thing was an incredibly well orchestrated piece of comedy, right down to the Bodyguard moment to end the episode.

 

The O.C.

In a show that was often about relationships, about the connections between two people, it was somewhat refreshing to see a finale that was more about individual characters than it was about Seth/Summer, Ryan/Taylor or Julie/Frank or Bullit. It wasn’t about these pairings, but rather the individuals at their centre. In the end, Ryan is happy, Seth is happy, Summer is happy, Julie is happy. Sandy and Kirsten are happy, connected as a unit, with a new daughter in tow.

Flashing forward six months skips what would have been unnecessary drama. While I thought that they turned Taylor into a bit too much of a spazz compared to the past few weeks, the fact of the matter is that it all makes sense. In the wake of the Earthquake, everyone looked to settle for what seemed easiest. Taylor and Ryan abandoned their relationship, Seth and Summer gave up on their passions, Kirsten settled on Newport as their home, Sandy settled his dreams, Julie settled on Bullit.

The episode, more than about creating happy endings, was about creating happiness for each individual character. It was about fixing the problems that caused as the earth, and the characters, settled after the Earthquake, not about fixing all of their problems in one fell swoop. Sure, there were the occasional contrivances designed to make everything sugary, but they were plot-based only; the characters reached natural, relevant conclusions.

I didn’t say much in my obituary piece about how I really felt about the show’s quality. The fact is that I didn’t pay much attention to the 3rd season, I stopped watching during the whole Johnny saga. And yet, I tuned into Season Four, and continued watching. I liked the addition of Taylor, and the character of Kaitlin was a pleasant surprise. Bullit was grating at first, but he grew ever so charming in the end. Season Four saw Ryan become more emotional (and funnier), and gave Summer a purpose she hadn’t had before.

Whether it was perfect or not, I think Season Four did a great job of leading us to a conclusion that was satisfactory. It’s tough to really complain with any of the conclusions found within the episode; we see Ryan as a successful architect, Sandy as a professor, Seth and Summer marrying, Taylor and Ryan’s relationship remaining ambiguous but friendly, Julie graduating from college (Bullit/Frank & Son/Kaitlin on Team Julie was incredibly powerful for the character’s trip from trailer park to Newport), and Ryan offering assistance to yet another hoodie-wearing youth on the streets.

Schwartz kept the nostalgia for the end, spending the rest of the episode on personal revelations in the present. That nostalgia was all through Ryan, his trip through the Cohen household for the first time intercut with his last. However, perhaps most importantly, the use of Marissa’s character was incredibly well handled. The locket with her picture was subtle, not overbearing, and her appearance in Ryan’s memory was brief, poignant. While I believe that her death was positive for the show, her importance to its narrative can’t be ignored.

So, a toast to Josh Schwartz and company for a job well done. You’ve left these characters in an existence where they seem happy, fulfilled. Yeah, Seth didn’t really get a real purpose and some things came together all too easily, but it was fulfilling. Much like Alias, which may not have ended perfectly but left its characters in the right place, so too has Ryan and the Cohens and everyone else found their happy place in TV Heaven. Things will never be the same for hoodie-wearing young offenders of future generations.

American Idol – Top 24 Results

Did anyone else find this to be one of the most awkward results shows in the show’s history? The first person is standing alone at the end of the stage and is told, point blank, that he’s going home, even before Ryan reads the judges’ comments. The second person is picked at random out of the lower line and unceremoniously told she’s going home. There is no time to collect her thoughts, no time to truly deal with the reality that her dreams are over. The second set of eliminations weren’t nearly as frustrating, and we got a video package for all of them at the end, but it still came off as more awkward than it needed to be. (Although that was quite the incestual choice of Chris Daughtry’s “Home” as the song played for the eliminated contestants (Paul, Nicole, Amy, Rudy).

The actual selections aren’t really all that surprising, as boring always loses out to crappy at this stage of the competition. Antonella and Sundance, arguably some of the worst on either side, both had substantial coverage in the earlier auditions; they might have sucked, but they were people that could build fanbases and the like.

The episode itself moved almost too quickly, which is always surprising considering its length. With four eliminations, a special performance from The Colour Purple by Fantasia (She seems well suited to the material, I’d say), the return of the Group Sing (Which wasn’t half bad) and gratuitous recaps, things moved quite briskly. I have to wonder, however, whether or not something a bit slower paced and, dare I say, respectful might be perhaps more entertaining in the end.

Grey’s Anatomy – Some Kind of Miracle

Shonda Rhimes may not be the best writer working in television right now, but she is fantastic at scripting and organizing these event episodes. The same sensibilities which made the two-episode Super Bowl arc last season work so well were in place here; it made for television which changed its characters, had great relevance to the show’s overall themes, and extending the show’s mythology that much further. Continue reading

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Shipper’s Log: Valentine’s Day Trauma Centre

On this the day of greeting cards and flowers, one has to think of the ones they love…and I, not really finding one in my thoughts, instead settled on the TV couples to which I am incredibly emotionally attached. I guess this is just how my life works, I might as well get used to it.

However, I was most concerned to find that some of my favourite Shipping subjects were in grave medical condition on this beloved holiday. So, it’s time for the good doctor to head out on a special Valentine’s Day edition of the Shipper’s Log to prescribe the proper remedies for these relationships that are suffering during this season of cold and flu. As a result, I made sure that the Shipmobile picked up the three most critical couples and brought them to Shipper’s Log General Hospital.

More specifically, they brought them to the Trauma Centre. This is their story.

 

Case One

 

 

Everything was going so well for Henry and Betty. Walter, Betty’s annoying and childish boyfriend agrees to move away and never grace our screens again. Henry tries to go on a date with Betty to go see Wicked, which Betty fumbles but prepares to recover at the episode’s end. The whole Christmas scenario was dealt with recently, everything was lining up, and we know Christopher Gorham is likely coming back next season.

But, then the Ex shows up. Honestly, an ex-girlfriend? Please. This is a dire situation, although I think a little bit of surgery will clear things up. We need to immediately do an X-Ray to find out who’s playing this girlfriend, and then figure out what level of a threat they represent. We can only hope that it is a benign tumour, able to be excised with little effort on our parts here at the Trauma Centre.

There isn’t any other barriers now that Walter is gone, so we need to make sure Betty stays on track. The show has plenty of characters to ignore this drama for awhile, but Betty is now without a storyline, so she needs to remain committed to making this relationship work, and Henry needs to get his act together. This girlfriend better be worth it, Henry, your Trauma Centre bill will be substantial. Should have bought insurance, tsk tsk. Continue reading

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How Do You Solve a Problem Like “EdHelms”a?

Earlier this season on The Office, after Jim had transferred to the Stanford offices of Dunder-Mifflin, he began working with an individual named Andy, played by former “Daily Show” correspondent Ed Helms. He was brash, somewhat ridiculous, and referred to Jim as “Big Tuna” at all times. Jim’s first attempt at pranking him, putting his stapler into Jello, was met with a violent trash can kicking. Since we all knew that Jim would eventually be headed back to Scranton, we all thought that perhaps Andy was short-lived as well.

We were wrong, and rightly so; the character began to gain traction, becoming less of a novelty and more of a foil, and quite a powerful one. Transferred to Scranton at the midpoint of the season, he proved a valuable comedic asset for the show. He feuded with Dwight over Michael’s affections, he made sexual passes at all of the women in the office, and he did everything in his power to suck up to whoever he had to suck up to. This particular story arc to Andy hit a fantastic peak as Jim decides that Andy should go after Pam, feeding him everything she hates as her most passionate likes, and then watching as the madness ensues.

The result of all of this was one of my favourite moments in the Office this season. Maybe it was just that the episode was written by Stephen Merchant and Ricky Gervais, executive producers of the UK version of the Office, but his character just clicked in this episode. This could not have been more evident than when, at the episode’s conclusion, Andy got out his banjo and did a falsetto, pig latin version of “The Rainbow Connection.” The character was sweet, charming, and not some sort of dangerous madman at this point.

The problem was that Dwight was also there, and Ed Helms as a guest star was playing second fiddle. They couldn’t have two Dwights, so they had to do something to make Andy a different type of nuisance. This, done slowly over a few episodes, was incredibly damaging to his character. He went from decent worker to someone who is absolutely terrible at selling things. He became a thorn in Michael’s side to a degree Dwight never reaches. He viciously badmouthed Dwight, trying to get him fired in a way that didn’t seem petty, but rather vindictive. Then, returning to his original introduction to the show, a workplace prank resulted in Andy punching a hole through the wall.

Now, this week was Andy free, which may have confused some. However, the Producer’s Cut of last week’s episode showed Andy being ordered into Anger Management courses. However, the Office environment just seemed more natural without him. If I hadn’t been reading the internet earlier that day, I would have wondered where exactly Andy was, and maybe thought he was gone for good.

Instead, it appears that he is here to stay. It was announced yesterday that for the remainder of the season, Ed Helms will be a regular on The Office. I like this news, on the surface. I like Ed Helms, and I enjoy seeing Daily Show correspondents move onto big things. But, I worry, because they’ve written themselves into a corner with Andy. And therefore, they have to ask themselves: How do they solve a problem like “Ed Helms”a? Continue reading

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