shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
Was brilliant and true to form. Also it cut off the final minute of the show...so if anyone knows what happened in that final sixty seconds...please tell. It may have been thirty seconds. Stupid DVR.

Other than that...I laughed throughout (which rarely happens with American Sitcoms). I adore Chidi (who yes, bears a shocking resemblance to Lando Take 2 at work, who hereinafter will be called Chidi in discussions about work.) I honestly think the Chidi and Eleanor and Michael sequences were comic gold.

[Tahani and Jason continue to grate on my nerves. But this may change...and there wasn't too much of them in the episode.]

Perfect cure. Laughter.



* Where have I seen the Doorman before, he looked familiar, anyone know?

* Loved Michael fiendishly sneaking in and out of Earth.

* The theme of the episode seemed to be, are we eternally doomed to revert back to our old bad habits or form? Is this ingrained in our DNA? Is it escapable? Can you become a better person? Can you change?

I know of a few behavioral psychologists who think it is possible. But can behavioral patterns truly change?

I'm thinking the addition of Simone, the neurology professor, may mean we're going to start delving into the psychological philosophical theorems. The frustrated philosophy/psychology major in me is leaping up and down with joy.

* Speaking of Simone, adored her comment about Chidi..."yes, the tendency philosophy majors have to endlessly argue the same question for eternity is what drives the rest of us crazy".

And in regards to Eleanor and Chidi:

"What do you two have in common besides a total disregard of office hours?"

* Janet: Is Jason still really cute?
Michael: Eh, he looks about the same.
Janet: Cute then.

Also dumb as toast.

I mean they've really taken Jason and Tahani to extremes regarding complete lack of self-awareness.

* Eleanor: I was going to offer for you to stay with me in my Motel Room, since I have a pull-out bed but with everything you got going on there...I'm thinking you might be happier finding your own place.
Tahani: Quite right. Thank you though.

* Michael: Don't worry about the Judge, she's busy binge-watching NCIS in her quarters. There's 308 episodes...it will take her a while.


Poor Michael -- he has to keep tinkering. Now they are all in a psychology/philosophy experiment regarding the effect of near death experiences on behavior and if you can change and become a better person after almost dying.

Snicker.

* Meanwhile in the Bad Place -- the demon boss cocoons whoever pisses him off. (Hmmm...nifty talent that, wish I could cocoon people. Make life so much easier.) OR he just does it for fun.

Glenn: Cocooning underlings again, I see. You really need to give me more warning before you do that.
Demon Boss: Cocoons her. "Yeah, I'll think about it."

They hack into the Judge's records by using a back door left open when Michael jumped to Earth to talk to Jason.

* Jason: And then I met this guy names Spaz Mataz and we started talking about my life and then..
Michael: That's me, I'm Spaz.
Jason flustered: Oh.
Michael decides with Jason, you have to be direct and obvious, otherwise he won't get it. HE's too clueless to take a hint.: Hey, want to met people who went through something similar? A near death experience just like you did? And learn from them?
Jason: Uhm okay. Maybe.
Michael: Go to Australia -- I'll show you where. And you can participate in a cool study.

So far so good. It surprised me again, it showed last year's ending from Michael's perspective, which made it clever and hilarious. Watching Michael jump back in time and save each of these people on Earth.



Cheered me up greatly. Now, see, you television writers can be funny without making me want to smack them upside the head with a bat. It is possible.

Date: 2018-09-29 05:57 am (UTC)
cjlasky7: (Default)
From: [personal profile] cjlasky7
Okay, bear with me--I'm going to go to bat for Tahani and (to some extent) Jason.

Tahani's plotline in "Everything is Bonzer!" follows the pattern of the others: near-death experience, reformation, backslide, join the group. If Tahani's journey is more cartoonishly extreme than the others', let's not forget that she's an incredibly wealthy woman with near unlimited resources; she can go places the others can't because she can afford it. So we get the wild swings in her storyline: opulent self-indulgence, followed by a sincere attempt at spiritual cleansing and asceticism... followed by a relapse of monumental proportions.

When Michael steps in the second time, she has disappeared so far up her own ass that Michael feels only drastic measures will shock her back to sanity. He takes the form of the ugliest, money-grubbing charlatan he can imagine, stares Tahani in the face, and says: THIS IS YOU.

And it works.

Tahani sees herself in "Gordon" and recoils. She's still a work in progress, but she sees the damage her vanity can do the world. So she goes to Australia to help--genuinely help. It's a start.

As for Jason, I have to disagree that he's only in it for the fun. When Michael released him from the safe, Jason was determined to make Dance Dance Resolution a success. He kicked out the stoners, the thugs and the slackers until he had a dance squad willing to put in the work. They trained long and hard until....

Okay, they still sucked. But he tried! He did! Yes, he was too dumb to follow dance competition rules, but he honestly put in the effort. And when he didn't win anything he followed the pattern of backsliding--in his case, petty crime.

I didn't care for his conversation with Michael at the pier, because I don't think Danson and Jacinto could find a rhythm with their characters. Michael's deviousness and Jason's density just didn't mesh. But the one part of that talk I did like--and would like explored--is that Jason is finally beginning to wonder if he needs a new dream. A better dream.

You said that Jason is pathetic and sad in his stupidity. I agree with you. But maybe the writers should lean into that a little more. Imagine this conversation with Eleanor in a future episode:

E: Saw the performance last night.
J: Before or after the fire?
E: Before. Maybe fireworks weren't the way to go.
J: They were kind of a last minute thing.
E: You didn't need 'em. Dance moves were pretty righteous.
J: You really think so?
(Beat)
I-I don't know anymore, man. I've been doing this so long. It's been my dream since I was a kid.
E: Burning down an outdoor stadium?
J: No, man! Dancing for the people! I remember...I was, like, six years old, and I was living out near the docks. And every night around 7, this dude would come out near the boats and do a breakdancing routine for the crowds at the pier. The people would gather 'round and laugh and throw some money, and I thought that would be the coolest thing in the world to make people happy.
(Beat)
'Course, I would go around and pick their pockets, but that didn't mean I didn't love the dancing.
E: Hey, a man's gotta eat.
J: 'Zactly.
E: Any other dreams as a kid?
J: Not freezing to death. That was a big one.
E: You nailed that.
J: I used to see those boats tied up on the docks, and I wanted to just take one of 'em and sail away to someplace cool.
E: Like Australia?
J: Yeah. Like Australia.
Edited Date: 2018-09-29 06:02 am (UTC)

Date: 2018-09-30 03:29 am (UTC)
dlgood: (Default)
From: [personal profile] dlgood
I will followup that we have to both acknowledge peoples' flaws but also not discard them.

Our group is looking out and trying to help improve each other - it's why they've grown - and it can't merely be doing so because they like each other. If it helps start that process, and they need a hook fine. But it can't be the sole or primary reason.

Maybe we need to see more, but Jason seems like someone who no one in his life has ever 'put the work in' on to teach or mentor.

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