TV Guidance

TV Guidance

Jaime Weinman writes about all kinds of television and other kinds of popular culture. He does not write Gossip Girl episode reviews. Follow Jaime on Twitter: @weinmanj

Show With the Best Titles?

by Jaime Weinman on Thursday, May 15, 2008 8:11pm - 0 Comments

Here’s a not-very-significant question: which current show do you think has the best episode titles?

The elaborateness (is that a word?) of episode titles seems to fluctuate a lot. A lot of shows used to have very elaborate titles for two reasons: a) Most dramas actually showed the title at the beginning, requiring the writers to come up with a cool title that summed up the episode, and b) Comedies, which didn’t usually show the title, would have punny in-joke titles based on the writers’ belief that nobody would ever see them. That’s how you got episode titles like “Dwarf in a Helium Hat” (my personal favourite, from The Rockford Files), and “Warning: Live Blueberries” (from the soon-to-be-released first season of Mannix) and another of my all-time favourites, “Bob Has to Have His Tonsils Out, So He Spends Christmas Eve in the Hospital” (The Bob Newhart Show — if the title had been shown onscreen, we wouldn’t have had to watch the episode).

There were always some shows that had simpler titles, like Dragnet, which called every episode “The Big _____” and later just “The ______.” But more shows started moving towards simpler titles as producers realized that writers were spending too much time coming up with titles that no one would ever see (especially once dramas stopped putting the title at the beginning). That’s why Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David, influenced by Dragnet, decreed that all Seinfeld episodes would just be “The _____,” because they said they didn’t want the writers wasting time on writing awesome titles. (If you look at the titles from the first season of Law and Order, they had crazy titles like “By Hooker, By Crook,” which they mostly dropped after the first season in favour of one or two-word titles.)

But then in the mid-’90s, with the rise of the internet, it became apparent that many if not most fans would, in fact, see the title and they’d want something interesting or funny. That’s how Dawson’s Creek gave us titles like “First Encounters of the Close Kind” or King of the Hill came up with “Little Horrors of Shop” (rule of thumb: taking a famous movie title and reversing it — title gold). The Sopranos, which started in the late ’90s, had some insane titles (“The Telltale Moozadell”).

And lately we’ve been moving back to simple titles, especially for comedies; most of today’s hit comedies, instead of having big titles, have simple titles that either echo something that was said in the episode (“The Chain of Screaming” from HIMYM, “Goodbye Toby” from tonight’s Office). Some shows like 24 don’t even bother to use individual episode titles. There are a few shows with well-known title gimmicks, like Desperate Housewives and its gimmick of naming all the episodes after Stephen Sondheim songs, but most shows just name the episodes after lines from the episode (Two and a Half Men) or after the case that’s being investigated (Bones) or use titles that are kind of generic (recent House episodes have been called “No More Mr. Nice Guy” and “Living the Dream”). Corner Gas has had some good title puns, though (“Bed and Brake Fast”).

So what are your choices for the shows today with the best episode titles? And do you prefer a funny/elaborate episode title or a simple one?

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  • KK

    I hate to admit it, but the Friends episode titles, which were “The One with the ______,” were pretty good.

    What I like about the Seinfeld titles is that the “________” was always something that wasn’t necessarily the focus of the show, but was always the silliest person/occurence/problem.

    Examples:

    “The Voice” (arguably one of the best episodes) Jerry pretends his gf’s belly speaks to him at night, George gets pressured to quit at Play Now, Elaine has a running bet with Jerry that she can quit her Puddy-habit and Kramer gets an NYU intern for Kramerica Industries.

    “The Serenity Now” George sells computers for his father, Jerry discovers he has feelings, Elaine has “shiksappeal” and Kramer gets a screen door.

    “The Little Kicks” George is the “bad boy” and Elaine loses the respect of her subordinates after dancing at the office party.

    I think One Tree Hill writers title each episode with the name of a song (or a pun from one), which is kinda cool. But certainly not worth watching the show for. ha!

  • Jon88

    “DH” names most of its episodes with Sondheim titles, but not all. “Running to Stand Still” is a U2 song, for instance. Skimming the list, “My Heart Belongs to Daddy” leaps out as well….

  • http://www.tv-eh.com Diane

    I can’t think of a show that has titles I consistently think are great, but Pushing Daisies is the winner for my favourite title ever: “Pie-lette” (for the Pilot, of course). Loved “Corpsicle” too but many of the rest were fairly generic.

    I like the House titles when they have a dual meaning that you pick up on only after seeing the episode, but that backfired with one (“Lines in the Sand”) because the title gave away the key to the medical case.

    Grey’s Anatomy uses song titles too, but unfortunately I like the titles (and songs) better than the episodes now.

  • http://burnstheair.blogspot.com Justin

    I was always partial to Freaks and Geeks’ episode titles, which echoed the title of the show. For example: “Beers and Weirs,” “Tests and Breasts,” “Chokin’ and Tokin’,” and “Discos and Dragons.”

  • moopot

    Arrested Development definitely had some of the funniest titles ever. ‘Best man for the Gob’ has about five different meanings, all of which are applicable to the episode. Brilliant.

  • Mike

    Don’t forget Scrubs, which names every episode “My ____,” unless the episode is told from the perspective of someone other than JD, in which case it’s labeled “His Story” or “Her Story” (or, as in the case of a couple years ago, “Their Story”).

    That 70s Show had an entire season of episode titles that were names of The Who songs.

    The Simpsons still does pun-ny episode titles. Although the only one that springs to mind is this season’s “The Debarted.”

    Mike

  • Chris

    Actually, the last 4 seasons of That 70s Show had episodes titles that were named after songs by specific groups: season 5 was Led Zeppelin, season 6 (as mentioned) was The Who, Season 7 was The Rolling Stones and Season 8 was Queen.

  • lance

    remember 3rd rock from the sun, had the name “dick” in most titles… referring to the main character… “The Dicks they are a changin”
    or the clever “Indickscretion”.

    Also to note, Friends titles… “the one with the____” to me that might be the most applicable for show titles.. because thats how you refer to most shows if you dont know the name…

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