“Whither the sitcom?”
is that question, for those intermittent visitors who missed
yesterday.
Television will always make comedies. That’s where the money is. The thing is, more than ever maybe,
television does not know what comedies to make, and, albeit less importantly,
they are less than confident about the most commercially viable format for
making them.
When we left off
yesterday…
I was mentioning how television half-hour comedy evolved
directly from radio – sometimes literally, as many hit radio comedies were transferred
intact to the new medium – The Great
Gildersleeve, Fibber McGee and Molly,
and radio’s perennial favorite comedy, Amos
‘n Andy, although in that one, black actors were required to replace the
white actors who played the Amos ‘n Andy
characters on radio because now you could see them, leading nitpicky questions,
such as,
“Why are they white?”
Many radio comedies were recorded in front of a live studio
audience. Eventually – after filmed
situation comedies such as Father Knows
Best and The Donna Reed Show
ultimately succumbed due to terminal tepidness – television comedies began being filmed
and later videotaped in front of live studio audiences as well.
Faced with the prospect of performing before an actual assemblage
of humanity, the actors became advantageously adrenalized. By contrast, Robert Young, the star of Father Knows Best, often looked like he
could barely keep himself awake.
So here’s the deal.
And, like everything in life – asserts the writer because he is seventy
and now speaks with the Wisdom of the Ages – it’s a tradeoff.
When facing a live audience, the indisputable Test of Success
is,
“Are they laughing?”
With that single objective clearly in mind, the writers
write in a style that will insure the greatest likelihood of eliciting the “ha-ha.”
Which sometimes – no, more
than sometimes, almost always – generated a greater level of exaggeration in
both word and behavior, meaning that the characters would say and do things that,
almost without exception, would neither be said nor done in actual everyday
life. That’s why we watch television instead of actual everyday life.
There are more guaranteed laughs.
That’s the tradeoff – belly laughs at the price of
contrivance. (Which a lot of viewers
don’t mind, because, unlike verisimilitudinous purists and curmudgeonly former TV
writers – or TV writers with immutable standards – those viewers readily accept
the fact that, “It doesn’t have to be
real. It’s a show!”)
But time matzas on, and as the audience tires of one format, another inevitably takes its
place. And in truth, it is not just the audience that finds the traditional style
of presentation formulaically predictable, the writers get tired of it themselves. And they start hunting around for something
fresher.
“Fresher”, over the last fifteen or so years, is the –
technically labeled “single-camera” comedy, or – expressed less technically but
equally accurately – comedies shot without
a live studio audience.
I know. You only care
if it’s funny. But I am telling you,
despite your disinterest, that the choice of formats delivering the comedy makes a thesis-length describable world of
difference.
This is my only point today – although I could write about
this till the cows come home but I won’t because if I did the cows would roll their eyes and immediately
go out again and who wants to be responsible
for wandering cows?
Watch a half-hour comedy filmed in front of an live studio audience,
like, say, Mike and Molly or Two Broke Girls, and then watch a sitcom
that isn’t, like Parks and Recreation or
Portlandia. Then ask yourself this question:
Is there any joke that can be extracted from Mike and Molly or Two Broke Girls and seamlessly inserted into Parks and Recreation or Portlandia? I am not talking about content; I am
referring to the structuring of the dialogue.
Conversely, is there a line in Parks and Recreation or Portlandia
that you can imagine being performed in front of a live studio audience and
eliciting a certifiable belly laugh rather than a (barely recordable) registration
of amusement?
There you have it.
Two systems of laugh elicitation that are incompatibly
different.
Right now, the non-studio audience format is dominating the
airwaves. I personally prefer at least
its possibilities because it requires
the writers to put clever, naturalistic interplay before the obligatory
punchline-every-ten-seconds.
But that’s me.
Though I believe that, generally, the non-audience format
will prevail because it seems more compatible with the sensibilities of today’s
show creators, it is stylistically consistent with the inexorable progression
of realism in entertainment – all the way to “reality” shows themselves – and
because creatively, you do not, as a rule, go backwards.
RADIO WRITER: Isn’t it more satisfying to imagine what the characters look like
than actually seeing them on
television? The audience will be
back. I’m sure of it.”
That radio writer does not have a job.
Unlike the Beatles,
at least in the context in question, I do not
believe in “Yesterday.”
But I do believe in talent.
That’s where my money is. Somebody out there, who is intensely in the
tune with the times and can deliver a relatable situation and identifiable
characters (played by consummately gifted comedy performers) is going to touch
a Zeitgeistual nerve and ignite a
response from, not a sliver, but a
substantial portion of the television-viewing audience and the next landmark situation
comedy will have arrived.
I hope it’s soon.
Because at the current moment, I have very little to watch.
1 comment:
Good analysis of different styles in live audience shows, and one-camera shows. The problem with bringing reality TV into the discussion is that most reality shows look like bad versions of television in its infancy. Reality shows are as over-the-top, and the people even louder and wilder, than Milton Berle was at the advent of the medium.
Maybe one-camera shows are the antidote to the unreality of reality TV (which is usually taped).
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