TV Guidance

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

This Clip Defines the Term "Time-Waster"

by Jaime Weinman on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 5:11pm - 0 Comments

After I used the Going Places theme song for my “30 Rock Retooled” video,  I was asked by TGIF nostalgia types whether there were any clips of this one-season bomb available online. At the time, the answer was no, but now it turns out that there is a clip. And it shows in graphic detail why this show was too crummy even for an all Miller/Boyett lineup, and why Heather Locklear and Alan Ruck needed to wait a few more years to become successful again. However, it does allow one to play a game of “spot the terrible sitcom clichés.” These include the “gypsy curse” plot, which used to happen on a lot of shows and fortunately seems to be dead now, and such hacky jokes as:

- “Are you [name]?” “No, I’m [insert name of celebrity]”
- Wacky incorrect pronunciations of words and names
- Jokes about “will this be cash, charge or credit card?”
- The rhythmic rhymed chant, with dancing and clapping

The point being, you’ll never get far through this clip, but at least it will remind you that whatever struggles the multi-camera sitcom is going through now, it had its own problems in 1990, too.

Oh, and a thing I’ll never get a chance to mention anywhere else is that whereas a lot of people in the industry think of film as classy and tape as cheesy, in the ’80s and early ’90s it was probably the other way around: filmed sitcoms, with their distant look, bellow-y sound recording and over-use of music, were generally much cheesier-looking than their taped counterparts (with some exceptions like Cheers). This may have been simply that some of the hackiest producers, like M-B, preferred to work on film, but it was not until the early ’90s boom in sophisticated filmed sitcoms — Seinfeld, Frasier, Friends – that filmed comedy once again seemed truly “classy.”

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