Archive for the 'TV Comedy' Category

Pushing Daisies, Back in Good Taste as Always.

Pushing Daisies was my favorite new show last year and after a long hiatus it is finally back on the air!  Bryan Fuller, the creator and writer of the show, is also responsible for the wonder that was Wonderfalls (before Fox canceled it, like they do to anything good FORTHELOVEOFDOG), another favorite show of mine.

Pushing Daisies has the same sort of clever, fearless whimsy that made Wonderfalls so great, and the talented cast and amazing art direction don’t hurt too much, either.

Wonderfalls alumnus Lee Pace plays the main character, Ned, aka The Piemaker. Here he is pictured in his pie shop:

The Piemaker

The Piemaker

The pie shop’s red and green decor is just one example of the overall red-and-green color palette favored by Fuller and the art direction team - it’s a bold look for the show and it pleasantly reminds me of a lot of the Jean-Pierre Jeunet / Marc Caro movies.  Most excellent!

Here’s the outside of the pie shop:

The Pie Hole

The Pie Hole

The name of the shop, The Pie Hole, is just one of the show’s many puns.  The narration voiced over by Jim Dale is rife with clever wordplay every week, and that same sense of fun and playfulness shows up in a lot of the design of the show, too.

Here’s Emerson Cod, a private investigator with whom Ned works, solving mysteries with his supernatural gifts:

Emerson Cod Points the Finger

Emerson Cod Points the Finger

In the season two premiere, it was revealed that Emerson, an avid knitter, has also recently authored a pop-up detective book for children, entitled Lil Gumshoe.  (And you were wondering why I love this show?!)

Here are Emerson and Ned doing some spying with their clearly state-of-the-art spy gadgets:

Ned and Emerson Listen In

Ned and Emerson Listen In

This is another interesting aspect of the look of the show: while it is apparently set in modern times, there are very few traces of 21st-Century technology to be seen.  For the most part, it’s quite difficult to date the show at all based on props, set, or wardrobe.

Here we see Ned’s love-interest, Chuck, going undercover at the offices of Betty’s Bees, a cosmetic company:

Chuck Goes Undercover at Betty's Bees

Chuck Goes Undercover at Betty's Bees

The cheeky set design may admittedly be over the top, but I love the repeated hexagonal motif in the walls, flooring, architecture, and even the tufting of the chair.  Honey-like colors seal the deal.

The visual excesses pervade the show.  Here for example, is a moment where Ned is able to bring Chuck’s deceased bees back to life with the power of touch.  As Chuck dumps the contents of the hive over him, the bees come back to life in a sparkling, swirling display:

Ned Brings Bees Back to Life

Ned Brings Bees Back to Life

Oh, and Lee Pace is without a shirt, so there’s that, too.

Basically, Ned the Piemaker is pretty fucking dreamy.  Not only does he bake pies (I LOVE PIES), but he also does things like this:

Ned Builds a Wall of Books for Chuck

Ned Builds a Wall of Books for Chuck

Who would not want to come home to find this guy building a wall of books for you? A WALL OF BOOKS, I ASK YOU.

More from Tina Fey and SNL

Here’s the latest skit featuring Tina Fey as Sarah Palin. It’s a great spoof of the debate, and Jason Sudeikis and Queen Latifah are both hilarious, too.

Baby Mama Stank, but I Still Love Tina.

I feel obligated to share my general love for Tina Fey after having called 30 Rock overrated recently.  I did actually watch the rest of the first season, and it did get better (although they eventually did away with the Liz-says-something-hilarious bit in the last ten seconds of the show, which was something I loved about the first few episodes).  Anyway, I guess I will reluctantly admit that 30 Rock is a quality comedy.  (I still don’t think it’s better than The Office or How I Met Your Mother, though, and I stand by that.)

But!  Moving on!  I do love Tina Fey and have ever since her days on Saturday Night Live’s “Weekend Update.”  That was some quality fake news right there!  You know what I love even better?  Tina’s Sarah Palin impression!  It’s fucking uncanny, y’all.  Check it out:

Tina Fey and Amy Poehler as Sarah Palin and Hillary Clinton:

Tina Fey and Amy Poehler as Sarah Palin and Katie Couric:

Recently, CNN aired both Tina’s parody of the Couric - Palin interview along with a clip from the real interview, showing that SNL had actually used Palin’s own responses word for word:

While I’m no longer sure that what SNL is doing counts as parody (they’re arguably not exaggerating anything, are they?), I am for DAMN sure certain that Sarah Palin is a blood-curdlingly terrifying idiot.

The Emmys: Mad Men and 30 Rock

Although I am a shameless TV junkie, I have to say I’m not always a fan of the Emmys. They usually wind up awarding the same actors and the same shows over and over again — if you saw last year’s seemingly endless fellation of The Sopranos, you know what I am talking about.  Nonetheless, I watched this year’s show because, hey, I was home and on the couch, and making a midterm study guide for my literature classes was only taking up 20% of my brainpower, so I needed something else to do.

It was another unremarkable show, made interesting only by the occasional glimpses of my favorite nominees: Hugh Laurie, Neil Patrick Harris, and the whole Mad Men posse.

Mad Men win Best Drama

Mad Men win Best Drama

I was predictably psyched to see Mad Men win for best drama, especially after they failed to pick up any acting awards.  Congratulations, you clever, attractive people!

30 Rock, of course, picked up the award for best comedy (after Tina Fey was awarded for her acting and writing and Alec Baldwin for his acting):

30 Rock wins Best Comedy

30 Rock wins Best Comedy

I have to say, 30 Rock is not a show I have been watching.  Out of a mix of boredom and curiosity spwaned by hearing so much about the show in the week leading up to the Emmys, I had decided to download the first season so I could check it out.  Fortuitously enough, it finished downloading just minutes after the Emmy broadcast, and I was able to watch a few episodes.  And, um, I guess I am really not sure what the big deal is.  While it’s certainly better than comedies like Two and a Half Men or Everybody Loves Raymond — which have both, utterly inexplicably, also been nominated and awarded consistently over the years — it’s just nowhere near as good as The Office or (the totally underappreciated but AWESOME) How I Met Your Mother.  I’ll probably try to watch a few more episodes just in case something magically sinks in, but for now, my verdict is: OVERRATED.

TV Top Fives: Gilmore Girls

I’ve recently finished re-watching all seven seasons of Gilmore Girls on DVD, and I love it just as much now as I always did before.  Damn, that is a really excellent show.

Rory and Lorelai Need Coffee!

Most of my TV Top Fives are all about the action and intrigue (Buffy, Alias, Veronica Mars, etc), but this quirky family comedy-drama ranks right up there with the excellent writing, acting, and storytelling on any of those shows.

Lauren Graham and Alexis Bledel are both extremely lovely and talented, and the huge case of supporting characters is full of talent, too.  Let us not forget that this is where one of my favorite TV boyfriends, Milo Ventimiglia, got his start.

Jess: So Bad, So Cute.

And isn’t it adorable to think of him and Alexis Bledel dating in real life?  Let’s all issue a collective awwwww.

The best on-screen couple, of course, was always Luke and Lorelai.  In this case, though, audiences have to try to forget the unpleasant rumors that Lauren Graham and Scott Patterson actually couldn’t stand each other in real life.  I’ll never believe it!

Best TV Couple EVER.

While everyone always mentions the faced-paced, razor-sharp dialogue peppered with witty cultural references from Howl, Dinosaur Jr, and Tom Waits to Kafka, P.G. Wodehouse, and Proust, the success of the show doesn’t depend on it’s being literate and clever.  It is, as all things must inevitably be, about family, relationships, and community.

Lauren Graham & Kelly Bishop: Effing Brilliant

Emily and Richard, Lorelai’s parents, are one of the best parts of the show.  She’s constantly at odds with them, and their weekly Friday Night Dinners provide some of the best scenes on the show.  Tension, comedy, and outrageously bad but perfectly polite behavior — and let’s not forget the food!  Remember the quail Mazatlan? or the time Emily actually seved pudding?

The show is the perfect blend of comedy and drama.  Stars Hollow is populated by an unusually witty group of citizens, to be sure, but the connections between/among them all are what probably had people tuning in every week — and what have me reaching for a tissue at least once an episode.

If you don’t believe me, just watch the episode “Lorelai? Lorelai?” from the seventh season.  Toward the end, Lauren Graham sings a classic Dolly Parton tune in a karaoke scene.  In addition to believably dialing back her singing talent enough to sound like a regular-but-tuneful person singing in a bar, she executes an incredible acting performance.  The series of emotions Lorelai goes through as she sings and the way Graham brings them to life — it’s amazing.  I’ve seen that episode several times by now, and I cry like a baby every time.  If you can bear to watch that scene without shedding a tear, you may as well give up on being human.

If you missed this show the first time around, Netflix up those DVDs with a quickness.  Highly recommended.