Monday, August 30, 2010

Tacky cattiness at the expense of plot

The show: Family Guy, once a paragon of animated freshness compared to the stale Simpsons, now degenerated to a platform for offensive jokes for the sake of being offensive, simultaneously tacky and catty attacks on celebrities, and a complete disregard for both inter- and intra-episode continuity.
The episode: "Big Man on Hippocampus," first aired back in January and rerun recently.
What happened: Taking a page from The Simpsons, the writers set up the main story of Peter's amnesia with a seemingly unrelated first act in which the Griffins go on Family Feud. During taping, Peter has an accident and loses his memory. The family tries to restore his memory with some old family videos, but Peter is more interested in watching Pretty Woman. That night, Peter spies on Lois undressing, and Lois re-introduces Peter to sex. The next day, Peter decides that despite how much he enjoyed sex with Lois, he'd rather have sex with other women. That night he brings Tiffani-Amber Thiessen home with every intention of having sex with her. Lois leaves in a huff. Peter asks Tiffani about her necklace. "Is that how you spend your Saved by the Bell money?" Peter asks.
What doesn't make sense: So when did Peter relearn what Saved by the Bell is? And why would he know about that teen comedy but not remember how to drive? So basically, Peter's amnesia is suspended just long enough for him to make a tacky, catty remark to a celebrity. Do the writers feel proud of themselves here? Worse, this is one of those nits that could've been prevented with a simple line of dialogue inserted earlier: besides Pretty Woman, the box of videotapes could have also have had a Saved by the Bell tape. It wouldn't have been necessary to actually show Peter watching that show, but just to mention it eliminates this nit free and clear.
One more thing: Yes, I'm still watching this on FOX. Supposedly the jokes are funnier on Adult Swim. Why? Because they can use all the swear words and racial slurs they want? Hey, look at me, I find humor in the prevalence of racism in this country! Give me a break. Besides, bleeps can be exploited for humor much funnier than any catty stereotype that could air on Adult Swim; this is something which this show has actually done in the past. In my opinion, this bit from "PTV" is the funniest in all of post-cancellation Family Guy:

"You know, you're lucky you're good at (bleep) my (bleep) or I'd never put up with you. You know what I'm talking about, when you (bleep) a lubed up (bleep) of toothpaste in my (bleep) while you (bleep) on a cherry (bleep) Episcopalian (bleep) extension cord (bleep) wetness (bleep) with a parking ticket. That is the best." — Peter Griffin

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

No soap writer watches legal dramas

I don't know what crime Hope Brady (Kristian Alfonso) plead guilty to on today's episode of Days of Our Lives, but the ensuing sentencing hearing served to confirm that the soap's writers have no more than a vague clue of how a courtroom actually runs.

Several of the show's main characters got on the witness stand at random to essentially give closing statements rather than to actually testify. Anyone can raise her hand and say "Can I say something, Judge?" and the judge will let her get on the stand.

The extras tasked with the rĂ´les of lawyers were mostly deprived of lines because the episode's writer seems to be completely unaware that in a sentencing hearing, the defense lawyer is supposed to gather witnesses to present evidence in favor of mitigating the sentence, while the prosecutor is supposed to gather witnesses to present evidence in favor of aggravating the sentence.

How do I know all this? Do I have a fancy law degree framed in my office? No. I watch shows like Law & Order (and its various spin-offs), The Practice, Ally McBeal, Boston Legal, JAG, The Deep End, Judging Amy, The Defenders, Perry Mason, Matlock, Crossing Jordan, Family Law, etc. It wouldn't hurt the soap writers to watch an episode of any legal drama they can catch on TV these days.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Closed captioning spoils joke, sort of

The first time I watched the Scrubs episode "My Fault," in which J. D.'s girlfriend Danni (Tara Reid) screams her own name during sex, I'm fairly sure I was watching it at medium volume on prime time NBC. (J. D. and the Janitor drop coy references to popular past NBC shows like Seinfeld and Friends). The joke is that Danni has been cheating on J. D. with a guy named Danny.

Just a short while ago I got done watching it on MyTV 20 Detroit at low volume with closed captions. I already know the joke that Danni did not scream her own name during sex. But if I didn't, perhaps the impact of the joke would have been lessened. Before the sex scene, J. D. tells Danni "Nobody cares, Danni." The captioning shows that her name is Danni with an I. Then, in the sex scene, Danni yells "Oh, Danny," with a Y. The joke is perhaps spoiled.

Although I suppose nitpickers would be complaining if the closed captioners had tried to preserve the joke by captioning Danni's scream with an I instead of a Y, or if instead they spelled her name with a Y instead of an I for the entire episode.

Monday, August 2, 2010

Sketchy on Bernero's record for job creation

In advance of tomorrow's primary, Virg Bernero has been airing ads claiming he "created/saved 6,000 jobs." I guess he's hoping voters don't start wondering as to what exactly that means, since creating a job is not the same as saving a job.

It's a very obvious difference, but let me spell it out anyway: to create a job means to cause to come into existence a position with a salary or wages that did not exist before; to save a job means to ensure that a position with a salary or wages that already exists continues to exist.

So, how many jobs did Bernero create and how many did he save? Maybe he only created about a hundred jobs (his campaign staff) and saved about 5,900. You can argue that even if he only created 1 job and saved 5,999 that's still a good thing. But then you have to ask yourself: what exactly does one have to do in order to be able to claim that you saved a job? If I tip my barber, does that mean that I saved his job?

However, note that I'm nitpicking his ad; I'm not saying that you shouldn't vote for Bernero just because I find a nit in his ad. After all, I'm not voting for Pete Hoekstra, even though I believe what he says about cutting taxes and spending—how do I know he's not gonna cut spending on the things I like to use, like roads and libraries?

You vote for whom you want to vote tomorrow. Just vote.