So, being a film major at [Rich, White Hipster College], I get to take awesome classes and write papers on awesome topics. How awesome? you ask. Well, let's just say that I wrote my final paper for my TV History and Criticism class on Community. Yeah, the brilliant and hilarious NBC show.
Since most of my friends are also huge Community fans, I posted my paper on Facebook and one of my friends suggested that I show this paper to Dan Harmon because "he would appreciate it in these trying times." While I didn't want to post it in my real blog I did agree that putting this paper out there would be nice in the wake of this stupid hiatus thing.
One thing I'd like to point out is that I was in the middle of writing this when the last episode, "Regional Holiday Music" a.k.a. "Ripping Glee a New One," aired and never went back to change things like "[Abed's autism] is only ever specifically addressed in the pilot
episode" so don't crucify me for statements like that.
Anyway, here it is:
When John Hughes wrote and directed The Breakfast Club in
1985, a “motley crew” meant five white teenagers with varying
socio-economic backgrounds from different rungs on the social ladder.
We have grown slightly more inclusive with our narratives since then,
something the NBC comedy Community, a show which (appropriately) dedicates its pilot episode to The Breakfast Club, exemplifies. Community
follows the relationship of seven strangers at Greendale Community
College when they form a study group to improve their Spanish. Though
the principle character of the show is still a straight, white male from
a middle-class background, the show promotes diversity by making the
six other members of the group complex, 3-dimensional characters who are
equally important. For years, people from minority groups have been
demanding more media representation and, slowly but surely, it is
becoming a reality. In an age where the average viewer actually has
platforms such as YouTube and Twitter from which to speak, it is much
easier for the producers of media content to give them what they want
and it seems fitting that this is the very thing that might save the
show from being cancelled forever. The relationship between Community and its fanbase is a great illustration of how the line between producer and consumer is blurred in the post-modern world.
Post-modernism
is a term that can only be understood through the explanation of
modernism, since the former is a direct reaction to the latter.
According to Jim Collins, those who are opposed to modernism tend to see
it as “a period of profound elitism, in which case postmodernism
signals a move away from the self-enclosed world of the avant-garde back
into the realm of day-to-day life.” (“Television and Postmodernism,”
pg. 328) Essentially, modernism endorses concepts like “the artist as
genius” wherein art is created by a single auteur and will not
necessarily be understood by the masses. In fact, the ideal is actually
to be incomprehensible to most people, as the goal is to appeal only to
the highest in high culture. Post-modernism, on the other hand, aims
to make art more accessible, which is one of the main reasons Collins
argues that television is an inherently post-modern medium. Because
television shows are episodic, they are affected by audience response;
they need to find people who will consume their product in order to have
a product.
Another aspect about TV which makes it
post-modern is the collaborative effort that goes into making a
television show. Unlike modernism where one artist is heralded for
their work, post-modernism embraces the idea that it takes a community
and the Community community is made up of more than just the
cast and crew, since fan reaction on the web contributes as well. The
public displays of affection for Community are comparable to that of the Rocky Horror Picture Show,
when you consider that the internet has replaced the physical gathering
in this definition of “public.” The main difference is that Rocky Horror
is a movie which has a set script and was filmed long ago. Even the
call backs and live performances which supplement or act in place of the
film are running through the same script. Audience participation
merely creates atmosphere. Community, on the other hand, is a
running television show. More importantly, it is a running television
show in the internet age where the voice of the viewer is more easily
heard by the producers.
One major example of how audience
response has a hand in molding the outcome of the content is found in
the love lives of the characters. Because television shows are not
wrapped up in a neat two-hour package like films are, the stories become
more complicated- especially the love stories. In the pilot episode of
Community, we are made blatantly aware of Jeff’s attraction to
Britta. The entirety of the show hinges on his desire to have sex with
her; he organizes the study group as a way to get in her pants. He
does not get her at the end of the pilot episode because then there
would be nowhere to go from that point and the show would be over before
it began. The audience needs delayed satisfaction where sexual
chemistry is concerned and romantic cliffhangers are the only way to
build support for the “ship.” Jeff continues to fail at seducing Britta
for the next few episodes, but two very important things happen to
affect the pairing as season one progresses: Britta’s popularity with
audiences suffers and little throwaway moments throughout the season
plant the seeds of a Jeff/Annie pairing.
In the audio
commentary for the episode “Science of Illusion,” creator Dan Harmon
reveals the reason behind Britta’s character evolution into “the one we
all love to hate.” He explains that an audience resists when they are
told to like a character but when you make that character the one
everybody picks on, the audience begins to warm up to them. Having all
the other members of the study group make fun of Britta and establishing
the recurring line “You’re the worst” which haunts her through all
three seasons are ways of putting audience sympathy in the bank so that
in the season finale, when she confesses to Jeff that she loves him in
front of the entire school and his ex-girlfriend, there is something
real to draw from. Any good storyteller would agree that the audience
will not be entertained unless they are invested in the plot. In fact,
many writers work very hard to make their characters likeable so that
the audience will approve of them and care about their actions. On Community,
the main challenge was Britta since she was introduced as the love (or
at least lust) interest, so it is important for us to see her in that
vein. And, although he is the main character, it is not as difficult to
make Jeff likeable because his charm stems almost exclusively from the
fact that he is a slick bastard. His appeal is based on his
unlikeability which, in itself, as quite post-modern since the show
calls attention to its own deviation from the television show convention
of providing a likeable main character. Britta, on the other hand,
depends on the audience’s reaction so viewers need to understand why
Jeff is not only initially but continuously drawn to her.
This is not the only way in which the audience has contributed to the course of a storyline on Community.
Treatment of the Jeff/Annie ship has been directly influenced by the
audience, as evidenced in the season two episode, “Paradigms of Human
Memory.” Subtle hints of the relationship began to spring up throughout
the first season of the show, erupting in a season finale, cliffhanger
kiss. This relationship is diffused in the first episode of season two
but there is more tension to play with as the season plays out and the
relationship is brought up again, and even ridiculed, in this “Human
Memory” episode. This particular episode is a “clip show” which
incorporates a multitude of flashbacks. The flashback sequence meant to
support Annie’s claim that she and Jeff have had a “general atmosphere
of ‘would they? might they?’” all year plays in slow motion and is set
to the song “Gravity” by Sara Bareilles.
The significance
of the song relates back to fan reactions to the show. Harmon credits
his discovery of the song to a Jeff/Annie fanvideo he found on YouTube.
Making a fanvideo (a fan-made tribute to a previously created worked,
often a montage of pictures and/or clips set to music) is just one of
the many things that one can do on the internet to feel as though they
are part of the narrative process. The audiovisual variation on the
standard written fanfiction is an outlet for fans to express their
feelings, which ultimately blends the roles of consumer and producer-
just as YouTube intended. It was when Harmon saw this video set to
“Gravity” that he realized how much audiences care about the show and he
went beyond the show’s budget by going into his own pocket to pay the
copyright for use of the song as a tribute to the tribute. This is an
extremely Meta example of Community giving back to the
community, but then, this show is no stranger to the self-referential.
In fact, not since the opening credits of Mystery Science Theater 3000
(“If you’re wondering how he eats and breathes and other science
facts/just repeat to yourself ‘it’s just a show, I should really just
relax’”) has a television show been as eager to point out its own
“showness” as Community is when it takes a step back and evaluates itself in front of the audience.
Another
noteworthy example of how self-referential this particular sequence is
is the way Annie describes the chemistry that she and Jeff are supposed
to share. By saying that their tension is of the “will they? might
they?” variety, she assumes the attitude and vocabulary of a fan
reacting to the show in a way you would not expect from an actual
character on the show. This level of self-awareness is part of Community’s
foundation but it is the kind of thing we expect more from Abed. Jeff
occasionally launches clever attacks on the fourth wall but Abed is
usually the one responsible for its ultimate destruction. Abed’s autism
(something which is only ever specifically addressed in the pilot
episode- curiously intended as an insult- but which is consistently
hinted at throughout the later episodes) allows him to make the
observations and comments that make us hyper-aware of what we are watching. And when a character on the show is doing it, the show itself is really doing it.
This
self-awareness violates the idea of immediacy; an attempt to present
such a flawlessly structured fantasy that it lulls the audience into
forgetting that what they are watching is not real. Whenever costume
designers spend millions of dollars dressing the actors in
period-appropriate clothes or set decorators fuss over how real the snow
looks, they are doing it on behalf of immediacy, something that Bolter
and Grusin address in Remediation. One of their more elaborate examples comes in their exploration of Vertigo
when they illustrate how Hitchcock’s use of “a peculiar camera
technique to represent the sensation” (pg. 150) of Scottie’s vertigo is a
case of immediacy and, its complement, hypermediacy. When the camera
assumes Scottie’s perspective and distorts the image for our benefit,
the intention is to put us even deeper into the movie than mere
spectators. However, the moment we notice that the camera is doing
something unusual, “we suddenly become aware of the film as medium in
precisely the way that the Hollywood style tries to prevent.” (pg. 150)
They go on to explain how, because hypermediacy is so unusual, it needs
to be justified in the diegesis.
In Vertigo, as in other Hollywood films such as Spellbound
(1945), hypermediacy is equated with dreams, mental disorder, or
insanity. When characters are in mental balance, the camera is a
transparent lens on the world; when something is wrong (when they are
drunk or physically or mentally ill) the subjective camera offers a
distorted view that makes us aware of the film as medium and often
incorporates or refers to other media. Even today we can find films
that follow the same practice (in which transparency is mental balance,
while hypermediacy is mental dysfunction), although with less assurance
and consistency than was possible in the 1950s.[1]
[1] Bolter and Grusin. Remediation. pg. 152
I
would argue that, because autism is often seen as a mental illness,
most of the hypermediacy is acceptable when Abed is the character who
brings it to the table, albeit in a less technical way.
The
examples I cite do not present themselves in the manner in which the
show is filmed but, rather, in the actual content. The dialogue lends
itself to hypermediacy and, occasionally, the plot of an entire episode
does as well. For example, the season one episode “Contemporary
American Poultry” is a Mafia movie spoof which serves a dual purpose:
they get to do a Mafia movie spoof for fun while exploring the depths of
Abed’s disability. The study group embarks on a Goodfellas-inspired
journey when they control the cafeteria’s supply of chicken fingers
placing Abed in the role of our narrator. His obsession with pop
culture justifies the spoof in the eyes of the audience, but Community does
not let itself off the hook that easily. We have learned something
about Abed and the difficulties he has connecting to people in this
episode, so now we need to peel back a layer and acknowledge that this
episode has been spoofing something, which Jeff does when he says “Abed,
the mafia movie is over.” Yet another layer is peeled back, though,
when Abed recognizes the implications of highlighting his disability and
focusing on how he uses movies to connect with people, he turns to Jeff
and says “Please don’t do a special episode about me.” By saying this,
he reminds the audience that we are getting dangerously close to making
this a corny, sentimental episode with an after-school-special type of
message.
The writers of Community know that
audience responds favourably to the show’s Meta humour and in season
two, they upped the ante when they legitimately shifted mediums to
present their entirely stop motion Christmas episode, “Abed’s
Uncontrollable Christmas.” This episode has little to do with Abed’s
autism but it is the plainest example of how mental instability can
affect the medium and excuse the hypermediacy at the same time. In this
episode, Abed suffers from an emotionally traumatic experience before
the plot begins and, as a coping mechanism, imagines that everyone is a
stop motion version of themselves. The audience sees the entire episode
in stop motion too. When we are introduced to this episode’s
extraordinary new format, there is no explanation for the stop motion
animation and a full minute of the episode passes before Abed calls
attention to it. He tells them that they have “clearly entered a whole
new medium” and proceeds to analyze the new medium, suggesting that the
rest of the study group move around more because there is “not much
point to being animated if you don’t.” After the initial exchange about
the stop motion, Abed insists that everyone commit to the regular
format, “starting with a song.” He is, of course, referring to the
show’s theme song (“At Least It Was Here” by The 88’s) which starts
playing moments later. He sings a holiday-themed parody of the song
while dancing and frolicking around campus as Jeff and Britta stare on
in amazement.
Perhaps the most obvious thing to point out
here is that, by virtue of Abed being a character within the show, he
should not know about the show being a show. He should not acknowledge
or even be aware of the show’s format and he certainly should not know
about the theme song. This is simply unheard of! There have been shows
that feature the cast breaking the fourth wall and dancing for the
audience while looking into the camera- The Cosby Show is the best example of this- but rare is the occasion when they will break into song for this. On The Cosby Show,
the dance segment is pre-recorded and the same credit sequence is
played for the entire season. It is also important to note that the
characters never address this opening credit sequence at all during the
show itself. This disrupts the distinction between the characters and
the actors; we cannot tell who is dancing for us but we do not have to
think about it very much. In this episode of Community, Abed announces that he will do this and then jumps right into the song and dance while the others watch, concerned.
Though
the stop motion animation is eventually explained in the story (and
therefore excused) it is something that only Abed and the audience
experience. This is not unusual. Abed is the bridge between the
diegesis and the audience because his autism distances him from the
characters he interacts with making him more like the audience anyway.
For instance, the moment Shirley and Annie decide to become campus
security in “Science of Illusion,” Abed considers what their dynamic
would be like in a “buddy cop movie.” By stating that one of them would
be by-the-book and the other one would be the badass, he creates a
competition between them, as they both want to be the badass. He
continues to follow them throughout the episode, mincing no words about
his role as the audience. When asked what he is doing he explains that
his cable has gone out and, because he accepts this storyline as
entertainment, we not only become hyper-aware that we are watching a
television show, we become hyper-aware of the potential television show
within that television show. He goes out of his way to play the role of
their audience by bringing refreshments and asking a random passerby to
hold his spot for him while he goes to the bathroom. In real life,
people joke about bringing popcorn to actual events because it describes
the amusement of the drama that unfolds before their eyes; Abed
actually does it.
While it would be enough of a twist for him to remain an audience member throughout the rest of the episode, Community
is notorious for taking things a step or two further than anyone
anticipates. He takes a picture of the girls and declares it their
buddy cop movie’s poster and proceeds to direct their shenanigans so
they will stick closer to a cop movie formula, even intervening by
pretending to be a character in the buddy cop movie. He is constantly
reminding us that what we are watching is not real by remaining critical
and unaffected at all times. Even in the stop motion episode, when we
have reached the most fantastical layer (i.e. Abed’s imagination) the
façade is a very flimsy one because doors are constantly being opened by
Professor Duncan who walks in and out of the fantasy at will, revealing
the normal setting of the study room in the background.
At
this point the remediation is piled on at least three layers thick. We
have a television show, which is a remediation of what is performed
with real people, forming the first layer. This is not counting the
original medium, the written word. The next remediation of this is the
stop motion animation. It is a different medium from the usual live
action television show, making it a remediation of the original format.
Yet another remediation occurs when the characters enter the admittedly
Willy Wonka-esque fantasy world within Abed’s imagination called Winter
Wonderland. The imagination is a remediation because Abed is conveying
the story as he sees it through oral story-telling, which is a medium
as well. In other words, we are viewing the remediation of a television
show through the remediation of stop motion animation through the
remediation of Abed’s imagination as described through spoken word.
The
peculiarity of operating within Abed’s mind is accentuated by Abed’s
creative flourishes. He reimagines his friends as “Christmas versions”
of themselves, such as a teddy bear and a toy soldier, in order to
enrich his fantasy and to take full advantage of the medium. The
Christmas characters are reflections on the regular characters we are
used to and offer a commentary on their personalities. Abed’s tendency
to analyze and evaluate the other members of the study group has been a
motif throughout the show’s three seasons. Because he studies both
people and plot conventions, he is great at predicting the course of
action his friends will take and how things will eventually turn out.
His analyses of other characters often make their way into his dialogue-
for example, he describes Jeff as “10% Dick van Dyke, 20% Sam Malone,
30% Zach Braff on Scrubs, 40% Hillary Swank in Boys Don’t Cry”
(“Physical Education”) or in “Social Psychology” when he tells Annie
that their relationship resembles that of Chandler and Phoebe on Friends. However, since nothing is safe on Community- not even Community itself- it does not take long for other characters (namely Jeff) to view Abed’s critical lens through a critical lens.
In
the first episode of the second season, Jeff confronts him about his
“gimmick” by calling it “a little season one,” which is both an attack
on the Abed character (in his own area of expertise) and a very Meta
comment on Community as a show. The same thing happens again
in “Paradigms of Human Memory” when Jeff says “Abed, stop being Meta!
Why do you always have to take whatever happens to us and shove it up
its own ass?” This is clearly a comment that can be made about Community but when the comment comes from within the walls of Greendale, it is most effective when directed at Abed. Abed is Community,
for all intents and purposes. He is multiple layers of Meta,
self-aware, hyper-critical, makes pop culture references a mile a
minute, and, perhaps the most important similarity, he is too big for
his current medium.
In the third episode of the first
season, “Introduction to Film,” we learn that Abed has trouble
expressing himself in real life and requires a different medium to do it
in. Just as Abed finds his niche in the world of film, Community
comes to full bloom on the internet as opposed to on television. This
show was created for the internet generation, by the internet
generation, about the internet age- its success on the internet was
inevitable. The trouble with TV in the internet age, though, is that
people no longer need a television to consume media and actually rely on
it very rarely. Episodes are up on Hulu.com and YouTube the next day
and, while that is great for the consumer who finds this more compatible
with their schedule, it has a negative effect on the ratings. The
system is outdated and the network has no way to interpret data beyond
the realm of who watches the show when it airs.
NBC’s failure to comprehend that Community is an extremely successful show is largely dependent on the fact that most of the Community
community does not tune in at 8pm on Thursdays. If the network took
the internet into account at all, it would realize that all the
fanfiction, tribute videos, animated gifs, Twitter trends, and internet
memes that can be traced back to some of the show’s one-liners (i.e. “I
have the weirdest boner right now.”) show that people want this show to
continue. Its lack of both ratings and awards is a poor indication of
how people really feel; Community thrives on the web, and the
people behind the show know it. They cater to their massive fanbase by
creating Twitter accounts for the Community characters (which
are updated whenever the characters tweet on the show) so it makes sense
that they would turn to Twitter to rally up support in the face of
permanent cancellation. The general idea is that if there is enough
online support, if enough of the Community community comes out
to prove that the show is just fine the way it is, the network will
reconsider cutting it from the line-up. Community is the Abed
of television programming, and if the people at NBC just took some time
to re-evaluate it, they would find that there is nothing wrong with its
social interaction; there is merely a problem with the system, and if
ever there was a time when audience persuasion could make a network take
notice, now is it.
No comments:
Post a Comment