but it seems that she has a great voice but too often is given songs that don't fit her.
Definitely. And I think she weakens her sound to try to match better with Finn, too.
'Get It Done'
This thread is for comedy TV, including network and cable shows. [NAFDA]
but it seems that she has a great voice but too often is given songs that don't fit her.
Definitely. And I think she weakens her sound to try to match better with Finn, too.
Ok, WTF. I'm all with the hand wavery and all but really, Sue as a former co-director of one of the competing teams being allowed to judge regionals? No f'ing way. All anyone needed to do was point that out and get her booted for clear conflict of interest. I can hand wave Quin giving birth in about three minutes and her baby coming out with eyes wide open. I just can't hand wave Sue being allowed to judge, no matter how useful of a plot device it was. Sheesh.
A nice discussion of the Issues of Glee: [link]
A nice discussion of the Issues of Glee
I don't agree with her assessment of Sue Sylvester. I don't think Sue's character's POV is validated. I do think that the show's own race/gender/queer self-analysis tends to be kind of shallow, but the show is shallow and it's at least nodding at the issues.
I also don't remember Tina saying her stutter was a put on. When the kids were recounting what they "overcame" didn't she say, "I had a stutter"?
Yeah, but Tina admitted in an earlier episode with Artie that she was faking it.
Huh. Don't remember.
That was when Artie went off to sing "Dancing with Myself."
"I had a stutter"?
"I used to stutter." Which could actually be read both ways.
I don't expect any show to hit everybody's xylophone chart of necessary statements. I just expect a show to be self-aware about its own contradictions. Anything that doesn't have contradictions, or thematic dissonance is going to be kind of flat and rote.
The very nature of the tropes of backstage musicals and melodrama (the two flavors Glee favors) tend to be historically very sexist.
Hmmm, now I'm trying to imagine a Douglas Sirk directed Glee episode. Way more interesting than the Vincent Minelli version.
Tina definitely said in a previous episode that she'd been faking her stutter. It was something like that she was shy and didn't want attention, so if she stuttered, then people would think she was weird and would ignore her. (Which doesn't at all make coincide with the experience of jr. high and high school of any actual stutterer I know -- stuttering doesn't make people ignore you, it makes people mock you -- but, well, it's Glee.)