I love Community and I loved this episode, and I even loved that Harmon went with a cheap, dirty pun in the title rather than “Intro to Forensics” or something. It’s also one of Community‘s funniest episodes in a long time, coming off a string of the more sobering character studies that the show sometimes does, and pretty clever, fitting Law & Order‘s murder-investigation template into the relatively grounded and insipid daily life at Greendale. It’s bittersweet… I just… I wish Jerry Orbach were around to deliver a cheesy one-liner to the smushed yam on the biology lab floor. As awesome as Troy and Abed are, only Detective Briscoe can say things like, “On the floor and stepped on — looks like my second wife’s cooking.” Rim shot.

Plus I never much cared for Starburns anyway.

But as much as I like Community, I like the moral integrity of society’s institutions more, which is why this bothered me:

I sympathize with David Simon’s frustration over television society’s incredibly superficial interpretation of The Wire. Simon’s entire point in the fifth season is that the role of the media institution as part of the social structure is to focus our attention on inane, pointless, harmless bullshit and away from our slowly eroding dignity by the government-industrial complex. Mission accomplished, person who uploaded the above clip to Youtube and titled it, all in caps, “OMAR ON COMMUNITY!!!” three exclamation points. Because it’s not Omar on Community, it’s Michael K. Williams saying that thing that he said while playing Omar on The Wire.

In fact, I’m calling for a moratorium on all out-of-context Wire references from now on. Once they’re getting particularly tepid laughs on iCarly, the joke is over. And now I’m just saddened by the thought of those kids still young enough to find iCarly bearable watching The Wire and getting that reference.

 

If I recall correctly, the problem with “Basic Rocket Science” when it first aired was that its Apollo 13 parody elements weren’t woven into the story well. The show hadn’t gotten too far down its rabbit hole of genre deconstruction yet, and the few parody episodes — the chicken fingers episode and “Modern Warfare” in season one — essentially transposed Goodfellas and some war movie, a movie I’ve seen but can’t put my finger on and a part of my brain keeps insisting is Battle Royale except that doesn’t make sense, the writers transposed those movies effortlessly to the Greendale campus. But the resonance in those movies comes from their character aspects, the corrupting effects of power or stress and competition, magnified versions of the study group’s everyday relations. Apollo 13 was about a space mission and its intrusion into Greendale required a few contrivances.

But I never understood the reaction to “Basic Rocket Science” because contrivance is one thing Community excels at. I took half an hour out of my evening for a repeat because I remember the contrivances in this episode being a great collection of jokes highlighting Greendale’s inherent cheapness and loserdom, and the worst, most outdated corporate shilling in higher education ever. The KFC space-simulator could be kind of trite, the simulation’s pretense of space travel as balancing herbs and spices — or, more precisely, pushing them both into hyperdrive — was great, both funny on its own and also when it pops into your head, “Well, what else could KFC bring the experience of space travel?” Finally, the simulation runs itself into Greendale-style reductivism — space travel isn’t about space travel, it’s about the simple, stupid, inoffensive idea of working together, even though you’re in a Winnebago and only need one driver.

“Basic Rocket Science” also introduced Greendale rival City College, and the two schools have a kind of King of Kong style animosity based around their pathetic games of one-upsmanship — Greendale’s best selling point is the foosball table on their catalog’s cover, so City College, the cackling, aggressive Billy Mitchell of the relationship counters with a space simulator. City’s dean recruits Annie — “Ann” — by offering her the appearance of grown-up respect and a school without an anus on its flag. He shows up and plays mind games, completely oblivious to the idea that there’s no winner between Greendale and City, and that trying to win just makes you a bigger loser.

So it wasn’t an Apollo 13 parody, but it lived up to my expectations of what Community is — a strong ensemble comedy about a family coming together to overcome the lameness of their community.

 

Remember that thing that happened in that show and how funny it was?

What little hope I ever had in the clip show format — “it’s not a repeat, they’re just repeating old material” — died with the ill-conceived Seinfeld finale and the pointless retrospective that preceded it. Entertainment Weekly tried to justify that “Office” clip show like a top-ten list, validating your taste and sense of humor, their biggest concession is that the experience could’ve been more of a waste of time. “Luckily, Office clips are still hilarious, even upon multiple viewings.” That they are, which is why The Office is syndicated about fifty times a day.

The clips in “The Banker” episode of The Office, and the dull, expository framing device, added up to nothing more than examples of what a morass of ineffectualness Dunder-Mifflin is, which most of the audience already grasps. It’s as much to do with the context — here, some financial bureaucrat is examining the viability of Dunder-Mifflin Scranton, asking questions that most of us have already asked and dismissed: How does DM Scranton make any money, since no one’s ever working? And how has Michael not been sued for sexual harassment yet? And the episode doesn’t even answer them.

I guess that’s what makes it a clip show: clips we’ve already seen, plus a reason to be showing those clips. The 30 Rock plot gave a couple of pretty compelling ones. Family man Kabletown CEO Hank Hooper threatens to cancel TGS, an ever-mediocre sinkhole that probably deserves it, except that our protagonist Liz has devoted her life to this dreck of fart machines and werewolf bar mitzvahs, and Jack has hitched himself to a co-dependent relationship with Liz and is falling farther and farther away from the corporate titanhood Don Geiss groomed him for. Reason enough to reminisce, but the show is a bit smarter than that — even taking the opportunity to show a montage of 30 Rock’s famous guests and nixing the idea. The Jack and Liz clips, in quick succession, add up to a picture of their relationship that’s usually more obscured among the shenanigans at TGS — there have been a couple of suggestions that, deep down, Jack doesn’t think Liz is worthy of his mentorship, but the implication that she’s dragging him down is both completely new and completely obvious, now.

Arrested Development used to repackage old clips that way, too, sometimes just in place of the previouslies that might start an hour-long serialized drama, but usually to drive home a point about a character with a quick collection of examples. Because people do have memories and recall events from their pasts, but unless the framing story fits the clips in organically, they come off as selfish and solipsistic, the characters re-living an experience that we the audience had to sit through and enjoy vicariously. It’s like looking at someone else’s vacation photos, a second time.

I believe I’d have loved 30 Rock‘s meta approach to the clip show except that it had the misfortune of airing after Community did a brilliant clip show — only in its second season — of “clips” we’ve never seen, some from episodes we’ve never seen. It feels like a clip show, with the characters announcing their intent to reminisce then cut to a scene that (looks like something) we’ve seen before. The clip from “Epidemiology 101,” for instance, re-contextualized the Jeff and Britta relationship in the episode — they’re the mom and dad of the group who respond to stress by turning away from the group and hooking up with each other. Which motivates “Paradigms of Human Memory,” instead of the other way around.

I especially like the clips of the study group’s adventures that we haven’t seen — the western ghost town, the mental institution, the Scooby-Doo haunted house, and the meta-suggestion that Community is always the same show in different locations, as if that’s not true of every show. Glee — I thought the parody was great — is always Lea Michele emoting about her need to be a star. Scooby-Doo is always the gang solving the mystery and realizing that it’s not a ghost but some old farmer guy in a mask. At least Community is clever enough to tell the story differently every time, to look at the group dynamic through funhouse mirrors: as a conspiracy thriller, as a zombie movie, as a bottle episode. Each of the genres sees the group differently even as they’re the same disparate people who’d otherwise have nothing to do with each other.

© 2012 Television Yak Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha