It is weird to write
this, given both its ubiquity and the extent to which I appreciate it, but I have only considered myself a
“fan” of television for the past few years. While television did play an important part of my
childhood – the three- to nine-year-old me was a huge fan of both the DC Comics
Animated Universe and, disturbingly in retrospect, the X-Files – I never
really considered it as a valuable platform for art or serious entertainment.
As a young teenager I actually gave up on television for a few years. Outside
of a brief period right beforehand where I obsessed over various shows
indiscriminately, my viewership was confined to my parents’ weekly affair with the Sopranos. In high school, as I
became more of a film buff, more shows started to come into my periphery; I
quickly abandoned Dexter and the A-Team, but found a great love of
two comedies: Arrested Development
and the American adaptation of the Office, both of which helped me see the different forms into which television could mold
themselves. Increasingly in college, I became invested in various shows of
vastly different tones, styles, and themes, and I became more and more
cognizant of the diversity of stories that could be told in the medium.
More recently, I have
been realizing that my love for “entertainment miscellanea” is, if not boundless,
then at least extensive, and I desperately want to satiate it (as well as my need for attention). This blog is designed for this: I am going to look
through a variety of works that interest me, and look to see what I can draw
from it. I recognize that this kind of broad focus is not necessarily conductive for good writing, but I
imagine that as I continue my focus will become more acute.
On this site, I plan to
review a myriad of entertainment and pop cultural ephemera, but with the primary focus on focus on television. I am not trained in this discipline – I was a
film and history undergraduate, but that was essentially the extent of my
expertise of these fields – and my historical or developmental knowledge of the
medium is woefully underdeveloped. Almost all of my preexisting knowledge is on
shows of this and the last decade, and there is a steep drop-off in my
familiarity for shows made or airing before the 2000s (rectifying this in particular is one of my goals). I am in no way an
expert, and I do not want to pass myself off as such. However, while my focus
is going to be centered more on shows with which I have some knowledge, I plan
to discuss a number of shows past and present. So please bear with my growing
pains, and hopefully we’ll be able to come up with some interesting takes on
these various upcoming episodes.
I should also make a note
that the nature of some of these shows, as well as my retrospective discussion
of them, means that some plot points may inadvertently get spoiled. I am going
to try to be judicious about this – at the very least, I will be oblique about
upcoming plot in reviews – but I can only do so much. Additionally, I am very much a procrastinator, but I am going to try to
be more proactive in managing this. I don’t want to give a false estimate and
subsequently abandon it, but I will try to put out regular material.
Because I am focusing
less on currently airing shows (or at least their episodes), I feel that having
a thematic connection between groups articles is helpful. So to hide the fact that I’m
just looking at essentially random works, I’m going to try to organize my
articles in sets, with the based based around vaguely-defined themes. I’ll come up with which groups to use as I go on
(It’s an obvious choice, but expect a Halloween theme come October). Since
starting this feels so exciting and new, I feel that it makes sense to start with
post-pilot season premieres, and to see how shows have tried to bridge their old and
new trajectories.
Schedule (season
premieres)
- The Office 3.01, “Gay Witch Hunt”
- Mystery Science Theatre 3000 8.01, “Revenge of the Creature”
- Chuck
2.01, “Chuck Versus the First Date”
- Game of Thrones 2.01, “The North Remembers”
- The Wire
4.01, “Boys of Summer”
I appreciate your visit, and
I hope that you find my intensely wordy articles entertaining, helpful, and interesting.
Thanks,
Wolfman Jew