Podcast

Thursday, September 18, 2014

The Ironic Statement of Theme on "Community"

Last time we examined the brilliant opening speech of the “Community” pilot, so now let’s jump to the end for an equally great speech, which provides the show’s “statement of theme” in a way that is both ironic and unironic.
  • “You know what makes humans different from other animals? We are the only species on Earth that observes Shark Week. Sharks don’t even have Shark Week, but we do. For the same reason I can pick up this pencil, tell you its name is Steve, then go like this [snaps pencil] And part of you dies just a little inside. Because humans can connect to anything. We can sympathize with a pencil, we can forgive a shark, we can give Ben Affleck an Academy Award for screenwriting. People can find the good in just about anything but themselves.”
In some ways this show is the happy medium between two of the biggest hit sitcoms of the time. Both “Modern Family” and “The Office” are (unlike “Community”) shot in “mockumentary” style, with the characters occasionally narrating their lives to an off-screen cameraman, and both shows frequent end with a character giving a speech to the camera in which they try to sum up everything that’s happened and what it all means. On “Modern Family”, however, these speeches are usually dreadfully unironic, wrapping up that week’s theme in a tidy bow (until it strangles to death). On “The Office” at its best, however, the “meaningful” final summations given by Michael Scott miss the mark entirely...which generates more actual meaning, because it forces us to draw it for ourselves.
“Community” would consistently be a happy medium between the two: less earnest than “Modern Family” and moreso than “The Office”, but it would always find ways to deliver meaning in non-saccarine ways, and this speech is a great example

Jeff’s speech works on multiple levels. On the one hand, he’s bullshitting yet again, telling them the pablum they want to hear in order to get the meeting over with so that he can get in Britta’s pants, so he’s not being genuinely earnest about this and we know it…but in truth, he’s also inadvertently telling himself an actual truth he needs to hear.

We can tell that he’s giving this statement of theme sarcastically, which lowers our defenses, but both he and we realize only at the end that what he’s saying is actually true and accidentally-but-genuinely meaningful.

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