Earl was great tonight. I wonder if the show is going to become too boring if/when they go back to a format of Earl crossing things off his list while not in jail or a coma.
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]
30 Rock was very, very funny tonight.
Who can name the four most important demographics?!
I think last night's Office was good as an episode but the wrong choice for the return. I dare say it was Buffy-esque in its willingness to step outside of its genre. (Really -- how many sitcoms would venture so close to Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?-land?). And for being able to do that while keeping the characters in character.
But for the first ep back, I'd have liked to have seen more of the minor characters. Yet we hardly saw any of them.
And I'm not sure it was wise to step so far out of the show's comfort zone on the first ep back. I was looking for workplace comedy, not domestic drama. If it had been shown right after the last ep before the strike, I think it would have blown me away. But not for the return ep.
At the culmination of the argument, Michael's frantic "THAT'S WHAT SHE SAID!" cracked me up. I don't know why it's so funny.
I'll agree, that was funny in a weird way. Probably because it's so Michael, as well as being at the same time both the perfect and the absolute worst thing to say.
And it was exactly what Jan had said. There was no subtext there.
Really -- how many sitcoms would venture so close to Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?-land?
That's funny. While we were watching, my wife asked, "Did Edward Albee cross a picket line to write this?"
30 Rock was very, very funny tonight.
That it was. The very idea of "MILF Island" still gives me the giggles. I've forgotten the four most important demographics, though.
Watching The Office. Pain. Lots of pain. I want to kill Jan.
Why single out Jan? Michael also bears a lot of the responsibility. (Serious or joking, it's never a good idea to tell your SO, "I'm living in Hell!") Though she did plan a menu that wouldn't be ready until three hours after everyone got there.
That it was. The very idea of "MILF Island" still gives me the giggles.
We laugh now, but 5 or 6 years down the line some new Fox executive hungry for reality programming to develop is going to remember that episode and get the premise greenlighted.