Monday, November 2, 2009

Sheesh, simmer down, crybaby—the rest of us middle American die-hards have been dealing with our own squads of AAA losers for decades, so join the club. But of course it’s not just Mets fans who get a bruised ego and have self-righteous hissy fits after a disappointing season—Cubs fans are downright scary when the subject of entitlement comes up. And don’t they still burn Kenesaw Mountain Landis effigies on Chicago’s Southside every October? Nobody holds a grudge like a real baseball fan.

My old pal Katie, a diehard Reds fan, writing over at Mercy Missiles on the subject of postseason baseball misery in flyover country. 

If you’re not following Mercy Missiles, you’re missing out on the best of pro baseball, Louisville politics, old television shows, mixed drinks and other very important subjects also dear to our hearts over here at S. 12th.

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Neil Simon, rendered obsolete by powerful historical forces!

“Mr. Simon was a forefather of situation comedy writers, and his scripts for stage and screen were embraced by actors like Robert Redford, Jane Fonda, Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau. But sitcoms have given way to reality shows like “American Idol,” one-liners to the sardonic humor of “The Office,” and the heavily plotted comedy of Mr. Simon’s film “California Suite” to the animated wit of “Up” and the fratty banter of “The Hangover,” two of the summer’s biggest hits.”

From Sunday’s article in The New York Times about Simon’s Brighton Beach Memoirs closing on Broadway so quickly.

I realize it’s just a tossed-off line, not meant to be a serious diagnosis of the state of American comedy, but I still find it to be a strange statement nonetheless. I suppose I can see where ”sardonic humor” has replaced “one-liners” (though I’m not sure Jack Donaghy and Liz Lemon would agree), but I’m not sure how “animated wit” might have replaced “heavily plotted comedy”; I mean, wasn’t Up about as traditional a piece of heartstring-tugging comic narrative cinema as one could imagine? It even starred Ed Asner, who’s actually acted in a Neil Simon production! The road from The Goodbye Girl to Up is not a long one.

Comedy, like any form of popular art, is a continuum — there’s never clean breaks from the past. For example, can it be said that Woody Allen’s neurotic brand of sophisticated urban comedy made Bob Hope’s schtickier brand of self-deprecating comedy obsolete? I guess so, but that statement is negated by the fact that Woody Allen stole a ton from Bob Hope, a fact Allen happily admits. That doesn’t take anything away from Hope or Allen.

I think it’s too pat to say “audiences don’t like that scripted stuff anymore — they prefer fratty banter.” The reality is always more complex, and it’s a lot more interesting to poke and see where those fault lines have formed, and just how these changes in taste have manifested themselves. 

Questions for discussion:

  1. Who are the transitional figures between Felix & Oscar and Harold & Kumar?  
  2. If Walter Matthau were still alive, would he ever be cast as Will Ferrell’s father? Zach Galifinakis’s? Why does it make sense that he might have appeared in a cameo on 30 Rock, and not on The Office?
  3. What does Chevy Chase’s presence in the new comedy show Community suggest?
  4. Should Neil Simon begin writing videos for Funny or Die? Should Robert Redford start appearing in them?
  5. What will future generations make of Cougartown’s slow, inevitable transformation into a Larry Gelbart sitcom?
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