Season 3, Episode 18
Have I mentioned how much I love callbacks in comedy? Or,
to rephrase the question, you know that I love Arrested Development, right? For the longest time, I though that
callbacks were the Old Faithful of comedy, one of the true ever-reliant sources
of humor. They combined my two favorite things in television shows, well-told
jokes and a sense of continuity, and I loved them for that. “Course Listing
Unavailable” had these things in spades, and on that account this should have
been one of my favorite Community
episodes of the season. Yet somehow it all ended up falling a bit flat.
Surprisingly, the humor here actually did work. The first
act, which just allowed for the study group to bounce off of one another in the
wake of Starburns’ death, worked like gangbusters. The obvious key here was
just allowing the humor to bounce off of the group members, no surprise given
that the show has always mined some of it’s greatest scenes from just the core
group sitting around the table. It specifically worked here because the jokes
weren’t about Starburns’ death so much as they were about the reactions that
were expressed by the group in the wake of it. We’ve always known that the
group is largely selfish and misanthropic when it comes to anybody outside of
the group, so this was a largely funny reminder of that, and it also played
into the season’s darker focus quite well.
It was in the second and third acts of the episode that
everything really started to fall apart, and it was unfortunately thanks to
seed that had been planted in the first. Before the first commercial break, we
saw Jeff become devastated only when he learned that he would have to attended
summer school. It was a funny, believable moment for the character, and I even
liked it when he gave a Winger Speech at Starburns’ memorial meant to ferment
hatred against the school. Jeff has always been a character who makes grand
pronouncements and fling bullshit for his own benefit, and takes personal
inconveniences way too seriously, so I was willing to go along with what was a
really bombastic move on his part. Again, it seemed to be playing up this idea
of the selfishness of the members of the group in any situation, so I though it
worked.
The problem then came when Jeff’s hatred of the school
suddenly seemed to affect everybody else in the study group as well, and eventually
the whole school. Suddenly Jeff’s moral outrage was no longer strategic bullshit,
but rather a legitimate emotion that he seems to have awoken in the rest of the
student body. I can see how this was maybe meant to be a joke on the part of
the writers, something that would had to the comedic insanity of the whole
thing, but it’s an insanity that goes too far and strains credibility. In order
for the scene to work, we have to buy that generally forgiving persons like
Shirley and Annie, and someone who loves the school as much as Pierce does,
would somehow be suddenly fed up with the school. None of it really makes
sense, and nothing ruins comedy quite like an episode that rings false to what
we know of the characters. (But hey, at least the show didn’t suddenly have
Abed mad about something. That really wouldn’t have made any sense.)
It’s here that the callback problem starts, with Annie
listing the technicality that’s keeping her at Greendale for the summer, and
Shirley the loss of her sandwich restaurant, as reasons for their anger with
the school. (Pierce doesn’t really give a reason for why he’s upset, so I have
to assume that like the rest of the Greendale crowd, he’s mostly just caught up
in the group mentality of anger that pervades the moment.) I get that the show
would point to its own past as justification, and it’s a relatively smart move,
except for the fact that I don’t think they are substantial enough claims given
what we know about the character. Shirley for instance has every right to still
be upset about losing her restaurant, but I’m not sure if I buy the requirement
of summer school to be a large enough issue to break the camel’s back. And
while Annie should be even more upset over her incomplete in Biology
considering that it was just last week that she had to deal with the grades
issue, and she it prone to outbursts, taking part in such a larger, sustained
demonstration of anger betrays her character. Sure, this could be the show
attempting to show the darker side of somebody besides Jeff, but to do that,
the darkness has to come from a believable place.
That the second act ends with Chang asserting his power
over the school was a welcome relief to this action, because even though it’s
over-the-top, it’s befitting of the most cartoonish character of the show, and
it’s the sort of grand epic idea that the show does well with. (Note: I believe
that the show will deal with this more next week, so I’m sort of projecting
forward here.) However, the aftermath of Chang’s actions, at least at they
relate to the third action, weren’t all that great and sort of ruined any
forward momentum that seemed to be building when seemed to be slowly building
his domination over the school. The gang
gets kicked out of the school thanks to Chang replacing the Dean with his
Imposter, Not Moby, and his schmoozing with the school board.
All of this I’m okay with. Chang can rise all he wants.
It’s the group’s reaction to everything that bothers me. While it makes sense
within the space of the episode for them to get over their expulsion, especially
considering their recently found aggression against the school, I’m not sure I believe
their optimistic attitude. Part of this comes from the fact that the group’s
sudden optimism at their situation the reversal of the darker aspects of the
season, made even more frustrating that their was a long, callback-filled
conversation used to justify it. It also doesn’t help that this episode is
obviously being setup for next week’s episode, and that regardless of what
happens, the group will somehow end up re-enrolled at Greendale, so that scene
ends up being a bit of a non-starter.
It’s here that I’ll note how neatly these three acts
divided up the episode, each tackling a different idea. The first was the group’s
reaction to Starburns death, the second was the their disillusionment with the school,
and the third was their expulsion and them dealing with that. This would be
something commendable in another, better episode, where the ideas expressed
didn’t run counter to the continuity of the episode of the whole. As it stands,
it’s the one thing that works for the entirety of the episode, but it’s
certainly not enough to save this misfire.
Quotes, Etc.:
“How one armed was he? Tell me when to stop.”
“You mean ‘Starburns died how he lived: in a meth
lab explosion’?”
“Is it always about the Holocaust with you
people?”
“Okay, I gotta go. This call costs seven dollars!”
“You seemed smarter than me when I met you.”
“Thank you.”
“Starburns, I didn’t know you all that well, but
why did you always smell like salami?”
“…No soft serve?”
“Now think about that last little puppy in that basket full of puppies. And now, that puppy is catching on fire.”
“Name any other step.” “What are you, my final?”
“Oh, because his sideburns were shaped like stars.
I just got it.”
“Our school flag is an anus.” “Well, you guys drew
it.”
“That doesn’t change the fact that we are all Ted
Danson at Whoop Goldberg’s roast.”
“I regret giving you that adult backrub you didn’t
ask for when you were asleep.”
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