Fuse Top 20 Countdown – 4/22/14

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Each week, I check out FUSE’s Top 20 countdown, and then I rearrange the songs based on my estimation of their quality.

Original Version
1. Pharrell – “Happy”
2. John Legend – “All of Me”
3. Katy Perry ft. Juicy J – “Dark Horse”
4. Jason Derulo ft. 2 Chainz – “Talk Dirty”
5. Aloe Blacc – “The Man”
6. DJ Snake and Lil’ Jon – “Turn Down for What”
7. Bastille – “Pompeii”
8. American Authors – “Best Day of My Life”
9. Paramore – “Ain’t It Fun”
10. Avicii – “Hey Brother”
11. Christina Perri – “Human”
12. Lorde – “Team”
13. Iggy Azalea ft. Charli XCX – “Fancy”
14. Martin Garrix – “Animals”
15. Naughty Boy ft. Sam Smith – “La La La”
16. MKTO – “Classic”
17. Austin Mahone ft. Pitbull – “Mmm Yeah”
18. Coldplay – “Magic”
19. OneRepublic – “Counting Stars”
20. Pitbull ft. G.R.L. – “Wild Wild Love”

Jmunney’s Revision
1. Dark Horse
2. Happy
3. Team
4. Fancy
5. The Man
6. Pompeii
7. La La La
8. Turn Down for What
9. Animals
10. Hey Brother
11. Magic
12. Mmm Yeah
13. Ain’t It Fun
14. Wild Wild Love
15. Counting Stars
16. Talk Dirty
17. Best Day of My Life
18. Classic
19. All of Me
20. Human

What Won TV? – April 13-April 19, 2014

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In this feature, I look back at each day of the past week and determine what shows “won TV” for the night. That is, I consider every episode of television I watched that aired on a particular day and declare which was the best.

Sunday – Bob’s Burgers
Monday – Rick and Morty concluded one of the best debut seasons of all time.
Tuesday – Oh yah, Fargo
Wednesday – Billy on the Street! Boom!
Thursday – Review continues to impress, but Community wrapped up Season 5 brimming with energy.
Friday – Hannibal
Saturday – I got chills finally hearing the Orphan Black theme music on my TV again.  Oh, and the actual episode was great, too.

VH1 Top 20 Countdown – 4/19/14

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Each week, I check out VH1′s Top 20 countdown, and then I rearrange the songs based on my estimation of their quality.

Original Version
1. Pharrell – “Happy”
2. Jason Derulo ft. 2 Chainz – “Talk Dirty”
3. John Legend – “All of Me”
4. Katy Perry ft. Juicy J – “Dark Horse”
5. Demi Lovato – “Neon Lights”
6. Aloe Blacc – “The Man”
7. Avicii ft. Dan Tyminski – “Hey Brother”
8. Paramore – “Ain’t It Fun”
9. Bastille – “Pompeii”
10. Lorde – “Team”
11. Fitz and the Tantrums – “The Walker”
12. American Authors – “Best Day of My Life”
13. Phillip Phillips – “Raging Fire”
14. Neon Trees – “Sleeping With a Friend”
15. Ingrid Michaelson – “Girls Chase Boys”
16. Zedd ft. Matthew Koma and Miriam Bryant – “Find You”
17. Christina Perri – “Human”
18. Chvrches – “The Mother We Share”
19. One Direction – “Story of My Life”
20. Coldplay – “Magic”

Jmunney’s Revision
1. Dark Horse
2. The Mother We Share
3. Happy
4. Team
5. The Man
6. Pompeii
7. Hey Brother
8. Sleeping With a Friend
9. Magic
10. Find You
11. The Walker
12. Ain’t It Fun
13. Talk Dirty
14. Girls Chase Boys
15. Best Day of My Life
16. Neon Lights
17. Raging Fire
18. All of Me
19. Human
20. Story of My Life

Community Episode Review: 5.13 “Basic Sandwich”

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Community-Basic_Sandwich
This story is not over.  If it does stop here, it will be because a major catastrophe will have prevented the real ending from happening.  And THAT’S canon.

Community goes meta basically every episode, but it doesn’t generally break the fourth wall, though it does lean quite hard against it.  The distinction here is that the human beings of Greendale act like they are characters on a TV show, but they don’t know that they are characters on a TV show.  In “Basic Sandwich,” Dan Harmon got as close up against that wall as he possibly could, reassuring fans that there is still more to come, even though that decision isn’t entirely within his control.  (I think there will be at least one more season.  The ratings aren’t great, but not really any worse than they’ve been.  There are just too many people invested in making the #sixseasonsandamovie prophecy true at this point.  If NBC doesn’t bite, I’ve seen rumblings that Hulu or other channels may be interested.)  Creatively, though, this decision was in his control, and I think he is invested in seeing this journey continue to the point that an asteroid would have to fall on him for it to end now.

As a regular listener of Harmontown and a regular reader/viewer of any interviews with Harmon, I have gotten a strong sense of Harmon’s philosophy, and I recognized several lines in “Basic Sandwich” as moments when the characters speaking them were essentially mouthpieces for Harmon.  Not that Community hasn’t already presented the Tao of Harmon plenty of times, but in this episode it was especially obvious and particularly special, because the Harmon stand-ins were talking to characters who were being audience stand-ins.  Take this moment of reassurance between Abed and Annie:

“Annie, look, I don’t know people.  But I know TV.  When characters feel like the show they’re on is ending, their instinct is to spin off into something safer.  In Jeff and Britta’s case, something that would last six episodes and have a lot of bickering about tweezers and gluten, starring them and an equally WASP-y brunette couple, with a title like Better With My Worse Half, or Awfully Wedded, or Tying the Knot, but “knot” is spelled without a “k,” or #CouplePeopleProblems-”
“Abed.”
“-and every episode you get to decide-”
“Abed.”
“who wins the fight by going-”
“Abed! Stop developing.”
“Sorry. The point is, this show, Annie, it isn’t just their show.  This is our show, and it’s not over.  And the sooner we find that treasure, the faster the Jeff-Britta pilot falls apart.”
“Got it. Thank you, Abed.”

Abed sells himself short here, because he has shown before that he does know people, and he knew Annie well enough to be able to tell her exactly what she needed to hear in this moment.  Perhaps what Abed means is that he doesn’t know people by means of people-to-people interactions, but by the lessons he has learned through watching TV.  Abed’s rattling off of potential spin-off titles gives this moment away as one in which he is essentially being Dan Harmon (who can come up with fake titles at the drop of a hat), and he is speaking to Annie as the audience.  When some people began watching Community in Season 1, they were turned off by it, because they didn’t want another sitcom centered around a typical bickering couple.  With the potential of Jeff/Britta rekindled this season, it is time for the response to that reservation to be stated again: if you don’t like the focus on Jeff/Britta because you don’t think they’re a good pair, well, Jeff might actually end up paired off with somebody else.  Or if you don’t like it because you don’t want the show’s focus to be romantic, well, it’s really about the entire group, anyway.

Annie serves as an audience surrogate throughout the episode, in one instance practically repeating verbatim what Jeff/Annie shippers have been yelling over recent developments.  Her cry of “You guys are ridiculous together!” may have been partially motivated by her own feelings for Jeff, but it is also not an uncommon opinion among their friends and viewers that Jeff and Britta’s constant sniping isn’t exactly the hallmark of the most romantic of relationships.  Her insistence that nobody even acknowledge their announcement paired with the Dean’s comparison of it to an hour-long episode of The Office also make it resoundingly clear that Jeff and Britta are being a distraction to a crazy scheme that might actually save Greendale.

Apparently, not everybody is happy with Community returning to the well of that old sitcom standby, the love triangle.  But Community has taken on so many old sitcom standbys and given them its own spin.  And its take on the love triangle is not the typical one.  Annie wasn’t even a part of the triangle in Season 1.  In Season 2, the triangle kind of existed, but because of information that remained hidden for a while, it played out with a lot of dramatic irony.  And then it was essentially no longer a triangle in Seasons 3 and 4.

Season 5, romance-wise, has been the year of rekindled feelings, or the realization of feelings that never went away.  By my interpretation, Britta has always been the safe choice for Jeff, the type of girl he has always pursued, while Annie has been the one he feels more passionately towards, so passionately that it scares him a little (or a lot), and he has never directly admitted it to anyone (though scenes that have taken place in his head or his heart have made his feelings clear to the audience).  Jeff has always felt protective of Annie, to the point that he wants to protect her from himself.  He worries about the influence he would have on her if he were to act on his feelings.  But in “Basic Sandwich,” she gets to show him with a Winger Speech of her own how positively he has influenced her:

“We were driven down here by sellouts with crappy values.  Since when do human beings decide which dreams are worthwhile?  Look at him.  He’s one of us.  We have to respect each other enough to let each other want what we want, no matter how transparently self-destructive or empty our desires may be.”

Ostensibly, she is making the case that saving Greendale isn’t worth taking advantage of Russell Borchert, Greendale’s first Dean (a barely recognizable Chris Elliott, who, with a full beard, crazy curly hair, and thick glasses, looked more like Marc Maron than himself), and that they should just allow him to keep living underground with his beloved computer, Raquel.  It would only be right, seeing as how they’ve been living their lives indulging each other’s craziness.  With a preponderance of the reaction shots on Jeff during this speech, it is clear what else Annie is also talking about.  She loves Jeff, and she loves him enough to say that even though she thinks he and Britta are ridiculous for each other, she is willing to allow him to make that decision.  She is also talking to herself, allowing herself to still have the feelings that have brought her a lot of pain.

I have seen some people characterize Jeff’s proposal to Britta as a selfish move, which I don’t see.  I think in a moment of panic he really thought that decision was best not just for himself, but for everybody.  For much of this season, Jeff has been freaking out about the current state of his life.  I have wished that we could have seen more direct manifestations of this than we have gotten, but the past few episodes have made it clear just how scared he has been.  So, selfish? No. But cowardly? Absolutely.  Jeff finally reveals how much passion he has been bottling up when he offers a “blast of human passion” to shock Raquel’s mainframe into a cold start.

The passion that Jeff provides could have been that which he has for the entire group, or that which he has just for Annie.  I know I may be biased towards seeing it as the latter, but I think there were certain clues that make that the right interpretation.  I’m assuming that Jeff guesses what everyone is thinking (as opposed to actually reading their minds).  He doesn’t respond to what the Dean or Britta, but with Annie, he actually initiates their “conversation.”  The mainframe doesn’t start up gradually, but rather, it responds only after Jeff looks at Annie.  One could argue that the build of his love for each group member contributed even though it didn’t show right away.  Either way, Jeff thought it was his feelings for Annie, as he nervously looked away from her when everybody turned around.  Perhaps it was his passion for the whole group, but it was also his passion for Annie a little (or a lot) more than everybody else.  The perpetually noncommittal Community still didn’t commit to any romantic decision, but it did allow itself to say as much as it definitively could by indirect means.

With all this discussion of the romantic subtext, I haven’t really gotten around to discussing the actual plot, which was basically non-stop effervescence.  I must admit here, though, my one problem with this episode was its lack of Shirley, who really didn’t have much to do all season and remains the one main character Dan Harmon continues to struggle to figure out what to do with.  She did manage to make the most of her screentime this episode, getting in a good zinger at Hickey about fighting at City Hall, for one.

The whole Goonies idea of an adventure falling into the group’s lap, instead of having to go find one as usual, tracked well.  Although, it must be said that even though Abed usually has to impose a pop-culture framework on the plot, it’s not like Greendale is lacking in adventure.  But the point is made that with this story coming to them, it is clear that these stories are not going to stop coming.

Ultimately, the search for Russell Borchert allows Community the show to re-state its purpose.  Borchert disappeared underground because he worried that the rise of computers would lead to “emotionless eggheads” at the top of society doing their best to get rid of all feelings among the so-called “idiots” at the bottom.  Borchert strikes me as the hermetic version of Dan Harmon.  They both rail against the cold logic of the system, and even though they are both logical, they both know in their guts there has to something more than that.  A singular focus on logic leads to a soul-crushing standardized formula for everything.  Amazingly, though, after decades of computerization, it is the Russell Borchert’s of the world who have been proven right.  I actually teared up when Britta offered the cat video as proof that humanity isn’t hopeless.  Never before has a troll-filled comment section looked so beautiful.

With the re-emergence of Russell Borchert, and with the study groupers confronting some of their deepest feelings, Greendale is not only saved, but reinvigorated.  As a season finale, this was my favorite thus far.  As a series finale, it wouldn’t kill me, but there’s more to this story. #sixseasonsandamovie #BOOYAH A

And now, the bullet-point portion of the review:
-The tag was well-trod territory, of the sort we’ve seen more often on 30 Rock than Community.  Bu it was perfectly updated to 2014 levels, with “Depends On What Fails” serving as the perfect tagline.
-“Am I thinking what you’re thinking?”
-“Today’s now is yesterday’s soon.”
-Russell Borchert invented the 9-track cassette and was an anti-deodorant activist.
-“What the hell’s your penis look like?” “Obviously a cluster of buildings, so let’s all have a big laugh at the freak.”
-“Oh, look, it’s Jeff Winger, Fun Police, here to pull over our smiles, cause our mouths have tinted windows.”
-“Married?  We’re gonna need way more doves than this,” says a freshly electrocuted Duncan.
-“That’s right.  We got names.”
-“It’s only as dangerous as whoever invited you.”
-Alison Brie sounded like she slipped into a bit of a Valley Girl accent when Abed told Annie he thought she was about to start a kiss-lean.  “I was not.  That would be, like, so totally grody.”
-All the 70’s-era details were delightful (basketball cards with white people, “Open the Door” by the Secret Doors, Donald Sutherland vs. Elliott Gould).
-When Borchert is revealed, the music sounds like that from The Thing.
-Jeff loses track of how big he’s getting (meta).  The Dean doesn’t.
-“I think I’m just mentally ill.”
-“You know what? You guys can have my food and water.” Annie is awesome even when she sounds defeated.
-An example of true perfection: Chang dropping his sunglasses while interrogating Hickey and Shirley

Fuse Top 20 Countdown – 4/15/14

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Each week, I check out FUSE’s Top 20 countdown, and then I rearrange the songs based on my estimation of their quality.

Original Version
1. Pharrell – “Happy”
2. John Legend – “All of Me”
3. Katy Perry ft. Juicy J – “Dark Horse”
4. Aloe Blacc – “The Man”
5. DJ Snake and Lil’ Jon – “Turn Down for What”
6. Jason Derulo ft. 2 Chainz – “Talk Dirty”
7. Bastille – “Pompeii”
8. 5 Seconds of Summer – “She Looks So Perfect”
9. American Authors – “Best Day of My Life”
10. Christina Perri – “Human”
11. Naughty Boy ft. Sam Smith – “La La La”
12. Avicii ft. Dan Tyminski – “Hey Brother”
13. Lorde – “Team”
14. Pitbull ft. Ke$ha – “Timber”
15. OneRepublic – “Counting Stars”
16. Martin Garrix – “Animals”
17. Paramore – “Ain’t It Fun”
18. Austin Mahone ft. Pitbull – “Mmm Yeah”
19. MKTO – “Classic”
20. Beyoncé ft. Jay-Z – “Drunk in Love”

Jmunney’s Revision
1. Dark Horse
2. Happy
3. Team
4. The Man
5. Pompeii
6. La La La
7. Turn Down for What
8. Animals
9. Hey Brother
10. Drunk in Love
11. Mmm Yeah
12. Ain’t It Fun
13. Timber
14. Counting Stars
15. Talk Dirty
16. She Looks So Perfect
17. Best Day of My Life
18. Classic
19. All of Me
20. Human

What Won TV? – April 6-April 12, 2014

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In this feature, I look back at each day of the past week and determine what shows “won TV” for the night. That is, I consider every episode of television I watched that aired on a particular day and declare which was the best.

Sunday – Bob’s Burgers
Monday – Rick and Morty
Tuesday – Inside Amy Schumer, thanks to very realistic gameplay
Wednesday – The Americans, by default, but only because I didn’t have access to Billy on the Street.
Thursday – Community
Friday – A superlative season (series?) finale of The Neighbors somehow beats out Hannibal.
Saturday – A Very Smoky Saturday Night Live. DOOOOOOOOOP.

SNL Recap April 12, 2014: Seth Rogen/Ed Sheeran

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seth
Coachella
If the goal of this sketch was to be as bland as the Republican politicians it was portraying, then it succeeded all too well. C

Seth Rogen’s Monologue
What an absolute mess of a monologue.  There were some funny moments (writing the word “pizza” 400 times, punking James Franco, Jay Pharoah confusing Seth for Joe Rogan) and a whole lot of pointlessness, epitomized by the cameos stopping by to “support” Seth.  Franco’s presence was understandable, Taylor Swift was there for Ed Sheeran, I guess but she didn’t really do anything, and as for Zooey Deschanel – does anyone have any idea on that one? C+

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VH1 Top 20 Countdown – 4/12/14

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Each week, I check out VH1′s Top 20 countdown, and then I rearrange the songs based on my estimation of their quality.

Original Version
1. Pharrell – “Happy”
2. John Legend – “All of Me”
3. Jason Derulo ft. 2 Chainz – “Talk Dirty”
4. Demi Lovato – “Neon Lights”
5. Aloe Blacc – “The Man”
6. Bastille – “Pompeii”
7. Lorde – “Team”
8. Katy Perry ft. Juicy J – “Dark Horse”
9. Paramore – “Ain’t It Fun”
10. Avicii ft. Dan Tyminski – “Hey Brother”
11. American Authors – “Best Day of My Life”
12. Fitz and the Tantrums – “The Walker”
13. One Direction – “Story of My Life”
14. Beyoncé ft. Jay-Z – “Drunk in Love”
15. Neon Trees – “Sleeping with a Friend”
16. Ingrid Michaelson – “Girls Chase Boys”
17. Phillip Phillips – “Raging Fire”
18. Christina Perri – “Human”
19. Zedd ft. Matthew Koma and Miriam Bryant – “Find You”
20. Chvrches – “The Mother We Share”

Jmunney’s Revision
1. Dark Horse
2. The Mother We Share
3. Happy
4. Team
5. The Man
6. Pompeii
7. Hey Brother
8. Drunk in Love
9. Sleeping with a Friend
10. Find You
11. Ain’t It Fun
12. The Walker
13. Talk Dirty
14. Girls Chase Boys
15. Best Day of My Life
16. Neon Lights
17. Raging Fire
18. All of Me
19. Human
20. Story of My Life

Community Episode Review: 5.12 “Basic Story”

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Community - Season 5
The Save Greendale Committee has saved Greendale!

This is Greendale saved?

The work of the SGC has apparently actually made a difference, even though we haven’t really seen them in action that much this season.  In fact, episodes that have focused on improving Greendale seemed to emphasize the futility of that endeavor. “Analysis of Cork-Based Networking” portrayed the circuitous route of glad-handing that it apparently took to get a simple job done.  “VCR Maintenance and Educational Publishing” presented a Save Greendale task interrupted by a scheme on the side that ultimately amounted to nothing.  But I think it actually works to say that most of the committee’s duties were completed in the background.  The point is conveyed that most of the tasks must have been uneventful and become just a part of the committee’s routine.  It is not like this is the first season that these characters have cared about Greendale, but this year has represented the most practical – and least-story filled – manifestation of that care.

So, this episode begins in a way befitting its title.  It is a “basic story,” if it is even a story at all.  The most urgent matter on the board of to do stars is “Make more to do stars.”  The Save Greendale Committee spends a good portion of the first act playing games on their phones.  The Dean comes on over the P.A. system, but it turns out he just hit the button by accident, so he uses this opportunity to see how everyone is doing.

Abed doesn’t like all this contentment, because he thrives on a good story, and in a good story, people aren’t content all the time.  I feel that typically in this type of situation, Abed would just go off and start his own side adventure, but here the circumstances are a little different, thanks to the incoming visit from the insurance appraiser.  While that is supposedly the narrative reason why Abed should avoid making Greendale as shenanigan-filled as usual, thematically there is something more going on.  I don’t think what Abed is worried about here is contentment so much as the end of an era.  Even though everyone’s time at Greendale seems more or less indefinite at this point, there is a definite sense that the success of the Save Greendale Committee means it is time to move on, and moving on is not Abed’s forte.

In the face of adversity, Abed is not one to shut down; instead, he is one to go even crazier.  For a while, it is his crazy sensibility that seems to be driving the directing and editorial choices of the episode, especially with the cut to the teacher’s lounge, followed by the cut back to Abed running through the hallway, with the camera struggling to find him at first.  The close-up on the guy having some soup after Abed trails off with “Let the lack of story…” is one of the most brilliantly experimental tricks the very experimental Community has ever done.  I saw a comment of someone suggesting that the rest of this episode should have just followed Soup Guy, which I would have found incredible, but this may not have been the best time to go avant-garde, as this could be Community‘s penultimate episode, and it might be a good idea to tie up some narrative loose ends.  Also, it turns out that there ultimately is a story to be told here, because now that Greendale is actually functioning properly and thus has value as a property, Carl and Richie (the always welcome Jeremy Scott Johnson and Brady Novak) are ready to sell out to the first bidder.

The return of Subway isn’t as insidiously threatening as when it was employing corpo-humanoids.  The villain here that might be bringing about the demise of Greendale as we know it is really greed and opportunism, while Subway’s presence is more about delightfully goofy gags.  School locations are renamed with unimaginative Subway-based puns, Jared Fogle cameos, and Annie at her most badass zings to the Subway rep, “Great, thanks for making my joke accurate.  Now it’s hilarious.”  And the most brilliant goofy gag of them all is Abed asking for clarification of how Subway refers to its units of bread, a moment of genuine curiosity amidst the antagonism.

In my review of “G.I. Jeff” last week, I bemoaned the fact that Jeff’s troubles seem to have come out of nowhere.  This episode seems to imply that he is scared of how is life is as good as it is right now, or the way in which it is good.  He has settled down, and when Annie points this out to him and suggests that he loves Greendale, or Shirley tells him that his heart is his strength, he deflects these compliments, by insisting that all he loves are Scotch and himself or by telling Shirley she has something in her teeth.

This state of mind leads to his rash proposal to Britta.  I knew ahead of time that this scene was coming, and as a Jeff/Annie fan, I obviously wasn’t looking forward to it.  But, even though I thought it was a terrible decision for Jeff to propose at that moment, the scene worked for me.  Unlike a lot of Jeff/Annie shippers, I don’t think Jeff and Britta are that terrible for each other.  And I’ve been thinking lately about how I used to be a Jeff/Britta shipper.  When I start watching a new show, I tend to pull for the protagonist to end up with the love interest that he is nominally pursuing (so long as it is clear that they are not completely wrong for each other).  Community began with Jeff chasing Britta, so naturally, I wanted them to end up together.  Jeff’s motives were superficial at first, so I wanted him to have to work for her.  And he did.  They became friends, without any expectation on Jeff’s part that she would inevitably fall for him.  When Jeff started dating Slater, Britta was clearly jealous, whether or not she wanted to admit it.  When they hooked up during the paintball game, their sexual tension was resolved much sooner than that of any classic sitcom will they/won’t they relationship.  Community treated romance differently than other sitcoms, and it felt like it would be more satisfying, or at least satisfying in a different way, if Jeff and Britta eventually ended up together.  But then “Pascal’s Triangle Revisited” happened, and with it came my favorite kiss in television history, and I suddenly became a Jeff/Annie shipper with no looking back.

The sudden emergence of Jeff and Annie wasn’t the only thing that made me stop cheering on Jeff and Britta.  In season 2, the latter pair were fuckbuddies, but nothing happened beyond that, and they have both made it clear that the sex wasn’t all that great for either of them.  By Season 3, they were old friends, but the kind of friends who are kind of mean to each other, and not in the pleasantly teasing sort of way.  By this point, I was like, “Yeah, no way,” regarding Jeff/Britta.  And, really, I felt that way up through most of this season.  But looking back, in Season 4, Britta did help Jeff get back in touch with his dad.  And this season, they really haven’t been as combative as they used to be.  This whole series kicked into gear because Jeff was trying to sleep with the hot blonde in Spanish class.  It would actually be kind of cool if they could manage to successfully bring it all the way back around to the beginning and make them a legitimate couple … except for the fact that there is someone else who is much more compatible with Jeff.

I have seen Jeff/Britta shippers make their case by saying that Jeff can just be himself when he’s with Britta.  And you know what?  They’re right.  But he can also be himself when he’s with Annie.  Annie accepts Jeff for who he is, but also pushes him to be his best self.  It all comes back to “Pascal’s Triangle Revisited” again.  Jeff at that moment wished that part of him – the part that wanted to evolve – could be with Slater and that another part of him – the part that wanted to be himself – could be with Britta.  The implication was that with Annie, he could be both of those parts, and I have always found that that remains to be true.  I wouldn’t hate it if Jeff and Britta ultimately ended up together (and I never thought I would have said that just a few weeks ago).  But the difference is, while I think Jeff and Britta could work, I think Jeff and Annie already have been working.  They’ve never officially been a couple, but they already act like one in so many ways.  Even though Jeff and Britta had a great intimate moment in the proposal scene, I was more struck by this episode’s subtle Jeff/Annie moments.  When Shirley told Jeff, “you got something in your chest,” I immediately thought of this.  During the conversation about settling down, Annie’s eye roll at Jeff struck me as meaning, “I know you care more than you’re willing to admit, but I’ll let you come to realize that on your own time.”  Admittedly, I have conditioned myself to see things this way more than most Community fans, but these little moments with Jeff and Annie happen a lot, whether or not you interpret them romantically.

Ultimately, though, Jeff and Britta probably aren’t going to actually go through with getting married, at least not any time soon.  They have a history of spontaneously deciding to get hitched, and they didn’t actually go through with it those other times either.  There are clearly some new wrinkles that the second part will add to this next week.  There was a reason they were interrupted as they were about to christen the new table.  The buried treasure plot will also have plenty more to do before any thing can be said about it definitively.  The Dean, Annie, and Abed were infectious in their enthusiasm, but buried treasure sounds almost too much like a deus ex machina solution at this point.  We shall see how this all wraps up next week, but wow, we are left hanging more than any other Community episode has left us hanging before.

And now, the bullet-point portion of the review:
So, uh, Alison Brie danced in this episode.  Apparently Danny Pudi and Jim Rash danced as well, but it’s hard to be sure, because my eyes were otherwise occupied.
-On the whiteboard: “This may be your last chance for a screen capture.”
-“The information you requested- is on the Internet.”
-“I wrote a paper on those dogs.” (A few seconds of silence)
-Insurance appraiser Ronald Muhammed was played by Michael McDonald, and that me laugh.  His routine about the city’s definitions may have been the funniest part of the episode. “The city defines a dog as any living entity with four legs and a tail.”
-Leonard chooses to “unsubscribe” from Abed, and it is hilarious because it is said by Leonard.
-TOMATO

Fuse Top 20 Countdown – 4/8/14

Leave a comment

Each week, I check out FUSE’s Top 20 countdown, and then I rearrange the songs based on my estimation of their quality.

Original Version
1. Pharrell – “Happy”
2. John Legend – “All of Me”
3. Aloe Blacc – “The Man”
4. Jason Derulo ft. 2 Chainz – “Talk Dirty”
5. Katy Perry ft. Juicy J – “Dark Horse”
6. Bastille – “Pompeii”
7. Avicii ft. Dan Tyminski – “Hey Brother”
8. DJ Snake and Lil’ Jon – “Turn Down for What”
9. Naughty Boy ft. Sam Smith – “La La La”
10. Lorde – “Team”
11. American Authors – “Best Day of My Life”
12. Martin Garrix – “Animals”
13. Pitbull ft. Ke$ha – “Timber”
14. Beyoncé ft. Jay-Z – “Drunk in Love”
15. Paramore – “Ain’t It Fun”
16. A Great Big World and Christina Aguilera – “Say Something”
17. OneRepublic – “Counting Stars”
18. Shakira ft. Rihanna – “Can’t Remember to Forget You”
19. Kid Ink ft. Chris Brown – “Show Me”
20. One Direction – “Story of My Life”

Jmunney’s Revision
1. Dark Horse
2. Happy
3. Team
4. The Man
5. Pompeii
6. La La La
7. Animals
8. Hey Brother
9. Drunk in Love
10. Turn Down for What
11. Can’t Remember to Forget You
12. Ain’t It Fun
13. Timber
14. Counting Stars
15. Talk Dirty
16. Best Day of My Life
17. Say Something
18. All of Me
19. Show Me
20. Story of My Life

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