I know things have changed and noteworthy series now debut
year-round rather than just during the “Premier Season” glut of mid-September
and “Midseason Replacement” early January.
(Says the man who has a collection of TV Guide Preview Editions going back to 1956. Except for four.)
Still, at least with the two shows I am highlighting today,
there is an insinuating sense that the network (NBC in this case) does not have enormous faith in these shows and
has deliberately dumped them onto the schedule at a time when a substantial
cohort of the audience is not watching TV, their concern being that during the
more competitive portions of the year, that audience would never choose watch these shows. These are the pants you wear only when
everything else is at the cleaners.
The two series in question, Welcome To Sweden and Working
the Engels are not exactly terrible.
(Note: I am not at all
comfortable engaging in such categorizations.
My “terrible” could be somebody else’s “You gotta see this show!” And,
more personally painfully, vice versa. Imagine hating something I think is great!)
Whatever the season, the networks generally air comedies in
hour blocks, matching two half-hour series for compatibility, hoping that with
the ideal pairing the audience will see them as one show that simply changes
actors half way through. And maybe moves
to Chicago.
Considering format
compatibility, networks do not air a raucous “Filmed before a live studio
audience” show back-to-back with a less punchline-driven, single-camera comedy. (Evidence: CBS’s
airing hour blocks of the former, NBC,
ditto with the latter, and ABC, which
offers examples of both formats but
never within the same scheduling hour.
He claimed, without thorough research.)
Underlying Rationale:
“Studio audience” series (The Big
Bang Theory, Last Man Standing)
and single-camera series (Modern Family,
The Middle) both fall under the
overarching umbrella of comedy, but it’s like a ballgame where they pitch
overhand and a ballgame where they pitch underhand. Both are fundamentally the same game, but it
is an entirely different “feel.”
“Series Compatibility”, however, proceeds considerably beyond
production format. There are also the issues
of sensibility, rhythm and style. It is
in this regard that Welcome To Sweden
and Playing the Engels are jarringly incompatible. It’s like caging a sheep and a tiger together
based on the understanding that they are both animals.
I will target a single incompatibility issue – pace. Compactly contrasted, Welcome To Sweden’s pace is languidly hypoglycemic, while Working The Engels’s is aggressively “A.D.D.”
In Welcome To Sweden,
an American male abandons the rat race of “Accountant To The Stars” to relocate
to Sweden to be with his homegrown Swedish girlfriend. It’s a “fish out of water” idea, except that
the “fish” playing the part is no high strung Ben Stiller type, but rather a laid
back kind of “fish”, suggesting that America was actually the “out of water” locale
and that moving to Sweden has returned him to the water he should have been
swimming in in the first place.
This seemingly miscast star’s selection is understandable
because the lead actor is also the show’s creator Greg Poehler, who is Amy
Poehler’s brother – enough said, I have already written “It’s Who You
Know.” (“I want my brother!” “You got
him!”)
The show’s relaxed ambiance appears compatible with at least
our stereotyped understanding of
Sweden as enjoying a less intensely driven lifestyle than America. Welcome
To Sweden’s stories – though “rom-com familiar” – the young couple,
bivouacking with the girl’s parents is continually interrupted during moments
of physical intimacy – play out at a comfortable, recognizable – from life, not
for sitcoms – rhythm. This naturalistic
pace makes the show, for me, difficult to resist. Though I admit sometimes shouting at the
screen,
“Come… ON!!!”
You will never hear “Come… ON!!!” shouted at a Working
The Engels screen. (About a family
named Engel working together. Get
it? This show is energetically “working the
angles” before they even get started.)
Working The Engels is a “reviving the late family patriarch’s law
firm” premise, penned by the apparently resuscitated writers from Laverne and Shirley. Working
The Engels’ relentless effort to elicit laughter borders on the
embarrassing. By the third episode, the
lead character is amasquerading as a stripper and dangling from a pole.
And she’s the shy one!
(By contrast, on The
Mary Tyler Moore Show, “Mary” did not “break character” until “Season
Five.”)
Understating things for mildly comedic effect, these shows
do not blend together too well. Nor,
individually, I believe, does either of them successfully “hit the spot.” One is too slow; the other, too fast. NBC should
at least run the faster one first, allowing
us to catch our breath during the slower
one.
Ah, well, it’s summer.
Nobody’s watching.
Except me.
You've convinced me to try WELCOME TO SWEDEN. :)
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Well, as it turned out, NBC has renewed SWEDEN and yanked ENGELS, so the republic still stands.
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