Monday, November 29, 2021

My 2 Cents: Community



Somewhere in the blur of the four-plus years of my tenure as sports editor at SVM, I stumbled upon the sitcom “Community” in syndication in late night (probably more like early morning) programming. The time slot, which didn’t seem fixed in a spot for very long, was the same sort of treatment the show received during its original run on NBC. I am pretty sure the syndication time for at least a little while was like 1 AM on Monday morning. I worked every Sunday night, so I have clear memories of getting home after deadline and this show being on.

The issue I initially found with Community, as I always seemed to catch the same handful of episodes and, at the time, I had little knowledge of the show or how many seasons it was on, was that it was a “hit-or-miss” kind of show. The season three episode entitled “Chaos Theory,” where various scenarios play out depending on the roll of a dice, was a gem while the Claymation Christmas episode where Abed (Dani Pudi) sinks into a delusion due to the dissolution of he and his mother’s seasonal traditions seemed to lack the humor and punch of other episodes.

Even in the misses, I could tell there was more going on with this show than the average sitcom. While it often presented the familiar tropes found in other shows, the characters – usually Abed – identified the scenarios as the tropes they were and thus bent them away from the expected outcomes – or in other instances played right into the tropes and thus concluded that sometimes tropes are manifestations of reality.

The show required a more thorough and linear exploration.

The setup is of students of various backgrounds and ages forming a study group for a Spanish class at Greendale Community College. The shows initial hook was of Jeff Winger (Joel McHale), who has been disbarred after it was discovered he was practicing law without a legitimate bachelor’s degree, enrolling at Greendale to quickly earn said degree and return to his swarmy and shallow existence. In an attempt to woo an attractive, but also world-savvy (she had once lived in New York, after all) classmate, Britta Perry, he sets up a study date with her. When he arrives that evening, he finds she’s invited a bevy of classmates to make it a study group.

The first season revolves around Jeff’s pursuit of Britta, his flirtation with younger group member, Annie (Alison Brie), along with Annie’s infatuation with Troy (Donald Glover), Abed’s reliance on television and movies to relate to the real world, Shirley’s (Yvette Nicole Brown) pushing of Christian beliefs on the group while also dealing with her divorce, and Pierce Hawthorne’s (Chevy Chase) relentless desire to prove that he’s still relevant and hip enough to hang with his younger peers.

The backbone of the series comes from a classic Winger pep talk where he says “we are no longer a study group, but a community.” The lesson for Winger, a perpetual loner, being that the individual thrives in a community.

For the last five or six years, Jodi and I have been watching the series from beginning to end, and on Sunday night, we watched the finale of season six bringing this chapter to a close for me (us). While we have several shows we are watching like this, this is probably the first one that I’ve ever watched from beginning to end, so it was a little bit of a lesson on storytelling, but more a trip for me where I’ve grown along with the characters. It started when I was at a very different place in my life, coming home late at night, often overwhelmed and exhausted and sometimes feeling lost to the place I am now, more stable, more attentive to the important things in life (family, etc.), and focused on new goals and hobbies. While I am not going to say the finale was anything earth shattering, watching it was a little hard, because it did feel like a door closing for me.

By the sixth season, half of the original cast had moved on. Chevy Chase left after three seasons and much feuding with show creator Dan Harmon and other castmates, Donald Glover left to become a bigger star in music and television, and Yvette Nicole Brown left for various reasons including getting a spot on another short-lived show. The dynamic of the show never truly recovered to the magic of the first three seasons and original cast, but it also was a better reflection of the real world – particularly one at a community college where students usually change every two years or so. The show’s final season aired on the short-lived Yahoo TV (the show is blamed for the internet station’s demise), and while there’s occasionally talk of a movie (a running callback within the show was six seasons and a movie), it seems likely the show is destined to slip further into obscurity.

I can’t recommend checking this one out enough if you like shows that break the mold a bit. If meta isn’t your thing, then you might want to pass. As someone into writing, it’s also worth a study on how to juggle an ensemble cast along with complex themes and breakneck-paced wit. Most of all it is fun, often individual episodes feel like mini-movies and the paintball episodes in seasons one and two are epic.

Cool, cool, cool.


No comments:

Post a Comment

My Music Journal 2025: April 15, 2025

  Tuesday, April 15, 2025 Time: 4:22 PM Song: Everybody Knows Artist: Leonard Cohen Mode of Consumption: Playing on the trailer for tra...