Dreg: Glory, Your Most Fresh-And-Cleanness. It's only a matter of time-- Glory: Ugh, everything always takes time! What about my time? Does anyone appreciate I'm on a schedule here?! Tick tock, Dreg! Tick freakin' tock!

'Sleeper'


Comedy 1: A Little Song, a Little Dance, a Little Seltzer Down Your Pants

This thread is for comedy TV, including network and cable shows. [NAFDA]


Laga - Oct 06, 2010 11:24:33 am PDT #3063 of 8624
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

I can't believe he ate the sandwich!


DawnK - Oct 06, 2010 11:31:59 am PDT #3064 of 8624
giraffe mode

Both my daughter and I "ewww"'d loudly when he did 'cause stale grilled cheese is yek.


Vortex - Oct 06, 2010 11:41:26 am PDT #3065 of 8624
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

And I loved the kid who played mini-Kurt. He looked JUST like Chris Cofer.


Barb - Oct 06, 2010 11:41:48 am PDT #3066 of 8624
“Not dead yet!”

I thought Chris Colfer's performance was amazing, and they actually handled all the religion stuff with a lot more nuance than I expected, so kudos to them.

And that's just it, isn't it? When they do that stuff well, they just absolutely hit it out of the park. Which is why it makes the less-than-stellar episodes so damned painful.

Some of the stuff Sue said about her sister made me cringe a bit, but eh.

See, maybe it's just that Jane Lynch can deliver a soliloquy on the phone book and make it work, but those things Sue said about Janie just felt so damned real. And I can't think of another actor right now who can imbue a single syllable with as many layers and as much meaning as Jane did with Sue's simple "No" at the very end.


Laga - Oct 06, 2010 11:58:20 am PDT #3067 of 8624
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

I think some of the most beautiful music in the world is spiritual. 17-year-old-me didn't feel that way and I would have been the first one down to the principal's office to lodge a complaint. I'm a bit surprised that Kurt was the only atheist in class. Maybe the only one who felt he could speak up about it.

As a grown-up I do believe it's OK to teach the bible (as literature) in public school, just as it's OK to talk about The Last Supper in art class & therefore singing spirituals in glee club is just as OK. But there I go again- analyzing this largely non-sensical show.


Gris - Oct 06, 2010 3:24:44 pm PDT #3068 of 8624
Hey. New board.

I loved that episode. I thought that the religious stuff was well-done, on the whole - I'm sad that Kurt's atheism was being treated as a religious outlier, but not unrealistic, especially in small-town America. In the end, I think the show ended up landing on "It's good when other people care about you, however they express that caring in their own spiritual way" which I mostly agree with. I am an atheist, but if I was having a rough time I would accept every "I'm praying for you" and feel truly thankful for it, so I guess I liked that Kurt came around to that way of seeing it. I didn't think even when Mercedes took him to church that she was really trying to force her belief system on him - she was just using her faith as a way of expressing her personal support.

Also, I liked all of the musical numbers and LOVED three of them: Puck's Billy Joel, Rachel's Yentl moment, and, most of all, "I Wanna Hold Your Hand." That was brilliant. Such a wonderful repurposing of the song, and Chris Colfer sang it amazingly and acted it even better. And the little bow-tie child Kurt was adorable. The show doesn't often depart far from the original ( Dancing with Myself and.... anything?) but I like it when they do, and this really got me. I cried.

I would've really liked the spiritual Bridge over Troubled Water except that I love the original more than perhaps any song in the history of life, so I have a hard time enjoying even good covers.

And I liked Sue, too. The sister storyline doesn't always work, and sometimes feels on the verge of manipulative, but Jane Lynch is such an amazing actress that I always feel it in the moment, even if after, during analysis, I have doubts. Also...

And I can't think of another actor right now who can imbue a single syllable with as many layers and as much meaning as Jane did with Sue's simple "No" at the very end.

...this.


quester - Oct 06, 2010 3:58:10 pm PDT #3069 of 8624
Danger is my middle name, only I spell it R. u. t. h. - Tina Belcher.

Safety Dance was a standout, as well.

I could have done with less of Rachel's Yentl - by that I mean a shorter version - and a longer closing song, I thought it got it short shrift.

Totes second the Chris Colfer love. I adored his "A House is not a Home", as well.


Morgana - Oct 06, 2010 7:02:38 pm PDT #3070 of 8624
"I make mistakes, but I am on the side of Good," the Golux said, "by accident and happenchance.” – The 13 Clocks, James Thurber

I think it's time they stop giving solos to Finn -- maybe a verse here and there, but the guy just doesn't have the chops to carry an entire song and there are so many other people in that cast who deserve the opportunity to shine.

Like Mercedes. I love her voice. Although I am ambivalent about this week's "Bridge" cover, because I don't care for gospel as a genre.

I did find it interesting that the religion/spirituality episode immediately followed the Britney Spears episode.


Laga - Oct 06, 2010 11:22:00 pm PDT #3071 of 8624
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

I wish they would do a High Society episode. I have this vision of Kurt and Mercedes singing "Well Did You Evah?"


Fred Pete - Oct 07, 2010 4:43:34 am PDT #3072 of 8624
Ann, that's a ferret.

I've only seen this week's Glee to the first commercial break, so I can only say that Puck did a brilliant job on "Only the Good Die Young." But Puck has that Tin Pan Alley showmanship thing going for him, and Billy Joel is possibly the most Tin Pan Alley rocker ever (with Elton John being his only real competition, and possibly Stevie Wonder if you count Motown artists as "rockers").

While I like the idea of a High Society episode, and Kurt in particular would nail "Well Did You Evah?," I'm not sure who you build the plot around. There aren't any potential triangles at the moment. (Artie vs. Mike isn't strong enough, I don't think.)