Categories: TV

Episodes

With Episodes, David Crane and Jeffrey Klarick, of Friends and Mad About You respectively, bring us a comedy that highlights the frenetic, flashy absurdity of Tinsel Town by juxtaposing it with the comparatively sober culture of English television. The jury is still out on the new half-hour Showtime series, which tenderly pokes fun at Hollywood’s phoniness with a kind of cutesiness typical of this self-conscious type of comedy. So far the show’s greatest asset – presumably Friends and Joey star Matt LeBlanc – has yet to truly emerge, an unusual and perhaps unwise tactic for an otherwise formulaic series premiere.

The first episode of Episodes introduces Beverly and Sean Lincoln (Tamsin Greig and Stephen Mangan), a married British couple who are the creators and writers of a popular, award-winning show in the UK. After an awards ceremony at which they reign supreme, the happy couple is approached by a smooth-talking, smarmy caricature of a Hollywood executive (John Pankow), who showers the duo with mindless flattery, telling them he loves their show so much that he “wants to have sex with it.” He then invites them to Los Angeles to work on making an American version of their program.

Uncertain and skeptical about the offer for fear of uncovering all the Hollywood clichés that are so gleefully exploited in this show, they decide to risk a temporary move just to see how the whole thing will pan out. They arrive in L.A. to find everything just as phony as they expected it to be, including the house in which the studio puts them up, which appears beautiful on the outside but is flimsy, hollow, and synthetic like a movie set. To make matters worse, the Lincolns soon find out that the American producers are trying to push out the loyal star of their high-brow comedy to insert a television star of their own – namely, LeBlanc. The Brits are flabbergasted, appalled and furious over the dismissal of their star, and they have little faith in LeBlanc’s talents, but they inexplicably continue to wait it out even before any contracts are signed.

LeBlanc is set to play himself playing someone else, in another of the show’s tiresome commentaries on the bizarre authenticity and meta quality of Hollywood. “Clever” writing gimmicks aside (which include the overused methods of backward storytelling and flashback), the one scene that features LeBlanc suggests that he might have enough charm needed to save the otherwise lukewarm cast and trite motifs. This scene, which falls early in the episode and therefore occurs chronologically later, is the only genuinely funny one so far, and it lasts all of 15 seconds, but it serves to introduce the remote possibility that the ol’ Friends scene-stealer can pull this one off if he’s prepared to do all the heavy lifting.

Kimberly Steele

Recent Posts

Billionaire Jeff Bezos’ Fianceé, Lauren Sánchez, Reveals Her Real First Name Is ‘Wendy’ During Hometown Book Event

In the post, she also shared a photo of old school yearbook portraits and added…

2 hours ago

Imagine Dragons Ramp Up Their 2024 World Tour – Setlist & Ticket Deals

Rock band Imagine Dragons is midway through their 2024 Loom World Tour. The tour was…

2 hours ago

Judge Aileen Cannon Accused Of Violating Judicial Rules By Not Disclosing Attendance Of Right-Wing Junket

In May 2023, Cannon attended a lecture and banquet dinner hosted by George Mason University’s…

3 hours ago

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Under Investigation By Feds For Beheading A Dead Whale

Former independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. revealed that the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) is…

4 hours ago

Kim Kardashian Takes Kids Back To School After Emergency Meeting With Ex Kanye West About Wife Bianca Censori’s Revealing Outfits

Since Kardashian and West split in 2021, Kardashian has been extremely candid about how “f---ing…

11 hours ago

50 Cent Mocks Sean Combs After FBI Finds 1,000 Bottles Of Lube During Raid On His Mansion

50 Cent, whose real name is Curtis Jackson, has a long history of beef with…

12 hours ago