Key & Peele: Season 2 Sketch of the Year

1 Comment

“East/West Bowl”

“East/West Bowl” has been continuously growing in popularity since its initial airing back in October, as it has been linked to and discussed (often as it were a real thing) on football fan forums.  This sketch takes one of the simplest, but also one of the most reliable, comedy premises around – a list of silly names – and makes it so much more brilliant than one would think such a thing could ever possibly be.  Clearly it is more than just a silly list.  It has caught on because there are a lot of actual football players whose names are hardly any less ridiculous than the ones in the sketch.  It was just a matter of time before they would be called out on their ridiculousness.  Unlike most silly list-based sketches, “East/West Bowl” is filled with details.  It is quite intricate despite how simple it appears to be on first viewing.  Not only are the names silly, but so are the hairstyles, the voices, and the background photos.  Each member of the silly list gets his own unique characterization.  You don’t get all that out of most silly lists.

Runner-Up: “LMFAO’s Non-Stop Party”

The lyrics of this parody LMFAO dance-pop ditty are hilarious (and rhythmic) enough on their own without the sketch needing anything more.  At one point, the song just becomes a list of random crap (iPad, Facebook, party time, skintight jeans…) and the roll call of cities where the party is taking place eventually grow to include more unusual options such as Newark, Plano, Lincoln, and Lubbock until ultimately it could be any destination as they simply repeat “city, city, city, city.”  That would all be good enough, but this sketch is also about the existential crisis that LMFAO face when they realize the party they are at is a Groundhog Day-style endless loop.  This is why we have Key and Peele – they give us scenes inspired by Sartre featuring today’s biggest pop stars.

Best Episode of the Season: Key & Peele Season 2

Leave a comment

Season Analysis: Key & Peele betrayed a little bit of exhaustion in its second batch of episodes – it’s hard to continually pull off the unexpected in comedy.  But it was never really bad, and the best of Season 2 reached even greater heights than that of Season 1.

eastwest

“Episode Two”
Most episodes of Key & Peele do not have an overarching theme (at least not one that is much different than the overall theme of the series), so one excellent sketch can make the difference in an episode being the best of the season. This was the case with Episode 2 of Season 2, which featured the already iconic “East/West Bowl” sketch.  I’ll get to my explanation of that bit’s greatness in my Best Sketch of the Season post, but for now I’ll mention Keegan and Jordan’s stand-up segment that immediately followed.  Keegan’s physical reaction to D’Brickashaw Ferguson’s mother’s explanation that “D’Brickashaw” is a family name was a thing of beauty.  Although the sketch seemed surreal, the actual people they mentioned with names like “L–a” underscored just how much it was in actuality too real.

Best Episode of the Season: Childrens Hospital Season 4

Leave a comment

Season Analysis: There were 14 episodes of Childrens Hospital in Season 4.  I liked all of them.  A few of them I really liked.  I wish there had been more Malin Åkerman.  I also wish there had been more David Wain in front of the camera (but of course that always goes without saying).

childrens-hospital-more-like-people

“The Boy with the Pancakes Tattoo”
Childrens Hospital exists to parody the tropes of over-the-top hospital dramas like Grey’s Anatomy, but it can get exhausting to constantly laugh at the same sort of medical ridiculousness.  Luckily, this show occasionally branches out into other genre parodies, such as this episode’s take on an amnesia suspense thriller.  Interestingly enough, considering all the intense circumstances that can befall a hospital drama, this bout of mass amnesia at Childrens does not feel out of place.  The fact that the amnesia was caused by a criminal act by Sy is a perfectly logical explanation, and the fact that the conclusion of the whole thing essentially makes no sense is also perfectly acceptable, considering that this is Childrens Hospital.

Fuse Top 20 Countdown – 5/14/13

Leave a comment

I’m fanning myself. As usual.

Original Version
1. Macklemore and Ryan Lewis ft. Ray Dalton – “Can’t Hold Us”
2. P!nk ft. Nate Ruess – “Just Give Me a Reason”
3. Justin Timberlake – “Mirrors”
4. Icona Pop – “I Love It”
5. Imagine Dragons – “Radioactive”
6. Rihanna ft. Mikky Ekko – “Stay”
7. Bruno Mars – “When I Was Your Man”
8. will.i.am ft. Justin Bieber – “#thatPOWER”
9. Fall Out Boy – “My Songs Know What You Did in the Dark (Light Em Up)”
10. Ariana Grande ft. Mac Miller – “The Way”
11. Taylor Swift – “22”
12. Demi Lovato – “Heart Attack”
13. Pitbull ft. Christina Aguilera – “Feel This Moment”
14. Emeli Sandé – “Next to Me”
15. J. Cole ft. Miguel – “Power Trip”
16. Drake – “Started From the Bottom”
17. Robin Thicke ft. T.I. and Pharrell – “Blurred Lines”
18. fun. – “Carry On”
19. Olly Murs ft. Flo Rida – “Troublemaker”
20. Ace Hood ft. Rick Ross and Future – “Bugatti”

Jmunney’s Revision
1. Radioactive
2. I Love It
3. Stay
4. Mirrors
5. Troublemaker
6. Blurred Lines
7. Heart Attack
8. Can’t Hold Us
9. Carry On
10. My Songs Know What You Did in the Dark (Light Em Up)
11. Next to Me
12. Just Give Me a Reason
13. Started From the Bottom
14. When I Was Your Man
15. Power Trip
16. Feel This Moment
17. #thatPOWER
18. Bugatti
19. The Way
20. 22

Best Episode of the Season: Animal Practice Season 1*

Leave a comment

(*-First and Only Season!)

Season Analysis: Animal Practice was never as stupid as it looked.  It was a perfectly pleasant, middle-of-the-road comedy that was actually surprisingly light on the wackiness.  And, yes, the monkey was the best part.  (Get Tyler Labine a show that lasts!)

animal_practice_rizzo

“Wingmen”
“Wingmen” – one of three Animal Practice episodes that were posted online after the show was cancelled – presented a version of the show that could have worked if it had survived.  It was finally starting to get a handle on all of its characters, most notably its two most problematic ones – Joanna García-Swisher’s Dorothy Crane and Bobby Lee’s Dr. Yamamoto – in a storyline in which the two start hanging out more and Dr. Yamamoto starts to think that they might be more than friends.  Dorothy had been too humorless in most episodes – she was supposed to be that way to an extent, but it got to be a tad unbearable.  The circumstances of this episode allowed her to show off a different side of her personality.  Meanwhile, Yamamoto was Animal Practice’s most unfortunately ridiculous character (oddly enough, that was a problem for this show).  This episode afforded him the best chance to be more grounded and act like an actual human being.  But the highlight of this episode was the team-up of the two best characters – Betsy Sodaro’s Nurse Angela and Crystal the Monkey’s Dr. Rizzo.  Their plot was typical sitcom hijinks: they call the cable guy to work on their TV, Angela falls for the cable guy, and then they pretend that there is still a problem so that they cable guy will keep showing up.  But it is okay to have typical sitcom hijinks when they are performed by the inimitable Betsy Sodaro and Crystal the capuchin monkey.

SNL Video Recap May 11, 2013: Kristen Wiig/Vampire Weekend

Leave a comment

SNL Recap May 11, 2013: Kristen Wiig/Vampire Weekend

Leave a comment

Who the hell this Chinese dude?

Cold Opening – Benghazi Hearing
This may have been the most esoteric SNL sketch ever.  Definitely the most esoteric in a good long while. B-

Kristen Wiig’s Monologue
I got the jokes, but I didn’t get the point. B-

More

Best Episode of the Season: Louie Season 3

Leave a comment

Season Analysis: Season 3 was my first taste of Louie.  It did not quite hit the individual highs that I heard Season 2 hit, but it remains true that each individual episode is its own fascinating experiment, straight from the mind of its creator at the height of his career.

louie-ramon-miami

“Miami”
More and more people are hating on the word “bromance.”  I do not think that is so much because of what a bromance is as much as how it is presented.  It is a word that should not have to exist.  But as much of the comedy of Louis C.K. and this particular episode of his show demonstrate, two straight men striking up a friendship can be a painfully awkward situation.  The end scene in which Louie attempts to explain to Ramon why he stayed a few extra days is indeed painfully awkward, but also poignant.  How do you explain yourself in a situation like that?  Maybe there are some people who are gifted enough to explain themselves, but Louis C.K. is definitely not one of those people.  The scene with Louie telling his ex-wife he is staying a few more days was a nice touch.  It was sweet of her to wish him well, despite making an incorrect assumption.  This episode is also about the desire to make vacations permament, which sounds like a nice idea, but often ends up being as awkward as Louie’s attempt to do so.

VH1 Top 20 Countdown – 5/11/13

Leave a comment

Does anybody write VH1 Top 20 fan fiction starring Alison Becker and Rachel Perry? (Also, VH1-FUSE #1 agreement alert.)

Original Version
1. P!nk ft. Nate Ruess – “Just Give Me a Reason”
2. Pitbull ft. Christina Aguilera – “Feel This Moment”
3. Olly Murs ft. Flo Rida – “Troublemaker”
4. Rihanna ft. Mikky Ekko – “Stay”
5. Emeli Sandé – “Next to Me”
6. Ed Sheeran – “Lego House”
7. Demi Lovato – “Heart Attack”
8. Phillip Phillips – “Gone Gone Gone”
9. Bruno Mars – “When I Was Your Man”
10. The Lumineers – “Stubborn Love”
11. Justin Timberlake – “Mirrors”
12. Fall Out Boy – “My Songs Know What You Did in the Dark (Light Em Up)”
13. Vicci Martinez ft. Cee-Lo Green – “Come Along”
14. Macklemore and Ryan Lewis ft. Ray Dolton – “Can’t Hold Us”
15. Taylor Swift – “22”
16. Icona Pop – “I Love It”
17. Goo Goo Dolls – “Rebel Beat”
18. fun. – “Carry On”
19. Jessie Ware – “Wildest Moments”
20. Jason Derulo – “The Other Side”

Jmunney’s Revision
1. I Love It
2. Mirrors
3. Stay
4. Wildest Moments
5. Come Along
6. Stubborn Love
7. Troublemaker
8. Heart Attack
9. Can’t Hold Us
10. Carry On
11. My Songs Know What You Did in the Dark (Light Em Up)
12. Next to Me
13. Just Give Me a Reason
14. When I Was Your Man
15. Gone Gone Gone
16. Feel This Moment
17. Lego House
18. Rebel Beat
19. The Other Side
20. 22

Community Episode Review 4.13: “Advanced Introduction to Finality”

Leave a comment

community_advanced_intro

“Remedial Chaos Theory” – still the high water mark of the series for me and many others – presented a series of alternate timelines that diverged from one seemingly minuscule moment.  Though the potential reality of alternate timelines may appeal to theoretical physicists, the argument has been made that the alternate timelines actually all only took place in Abed’s head.  At least as far back as “Debate 109” (Season 1, Episode 9), Abed has displayed such a deep understanding of the group as to practically be able to predict the future.  So it is a little odd that the timeline that has been revisited on occasion – the one in which Troy got the pizza, i.e., “the darkest timeline” – has become so decidedly unrealistic.  And each time it has been revisited – the tag of “RCT,” the Season 3 finale, the tag of “Intro to Knots” – it has been clear that it was in Abed’s head.  As demonstrated in “Virtual Systems Analysis,” Abed has become so close to his friends and therefore too emotionally invested to be able to always have the wherewithal to make the accurate predictions he has made before.

But the return of the darkest timeline in “Advanced Introduction to Finality” is not a look into the head of Abed Nadir, but that of Jeff Winger, he who has constantly repeated, “Abed, there are no other timelines.”  Jeff is finally set to graduate, he’s ready to get back to his old life, and his friends are supportive of him – but something doesn’t feel right.  The “It Was All Just a Dream” trope is one that should be used with great care, as it can come off as little more than a “get out of a jail free” card.  The just a dream reveal in this episode gets away with that by making it immediately clear that the darkest timeline plot is a dream, or, more specifically, a daydream (and therefore Jeff has more control over how the fantasy goes than he would if he were asleep).  Jeff indicates as much when he declares, “I just need to give Abed a chance” – for his own sake, he needs to examine his role within the group by considering an alternate timeline, the way Abed does so so readily.  Jeff has a nagging fear that going back to his old life will lead him to also go back to his old jerkass ways.  Thus, the alternate timeline that Jeff uses to work through this issue in his head is the darkest timeline.

Since Jeff is not as practiced as Abed at considering alternate timelines, the Evil versions of everyone in Jeff’s head are wildly cartoonish and huge exaggerations of each character’s trademark characteristics.  This would be a problem if this were all supposed to actually be taking place in reality (or the reality of Community, that is, a reality which is … not most of this episode).  Luckily, it is a fantasy, and we are allowed to laugh at it.  The repartee between Evil Jeff and Evil Annie – as previewed in the “Intro to Knots” tag – wins my vote for the funniest element of Season 4.  Their passion for each other is thrilling, while their deviousness towards everyone else is entertaining – it’s like a more insane version of “Conspiracy Theories and Interior Design.”  Actually, scratch that, “Conspiracy Theories” was already plenty insane – “less grounded” is a better description.  Evil Jeff wishing that Evil Annie were even younger really seems to get some people’s goats – too bad that their prudishness gets in the way of appreciating something so hilarious.  Seeing Evil Abed – who is not evil anymore – as a sci-fi shaman was also a treat.  True, Abed is already a shaman anyway, but it was nice to see him in the shamanistic beard and robe.  Unfortunately, all the other evil iterations of the study group amounted to little more than a few quick gags.  And Abed’s declaration that they finally made paintball cool again was a bit premature – if something is truly cool, it should not have to be announced so baldly.

As for reality, Jeff’s graduation ceremony was nicely understated but also a little oddly extravagant.  With the theme of “marriage,” Jeff being wed to the Human Being was certainly a memorable sight gag. The presence of Leonard, Quendra, Neil, Vicki, Todd, and Magnitude was a little strange, and strangely heartwarming.  And of course, the use of the “Greendale Is Where I Belong” musical cue is guaranteed to always tug at my heartstrings.  And finally, Pierce also graduates, which was was probably the most decent way possible to finish up Chevy Chase’s run on CommunityB+

Older Entries Newer Entries