A blog about television by TIME’s TV critic James Poniewozik.

30 Rock Watch: Excuuuuse Me

Nicole Rivelli

NBC Photo: Nicole Rivelli

Spoilers for 30 Rock coming up after the jump:

I am about to tell you that I didn't think last night's episode of 30 Rock was that good. Now, here is the problem with telling someone you didn't think last night's episode of 30 Rock was that good. They can immediately disprove you, with a long list of examples. What about that scene? And that line? And this reaction shot? It was funny! You know it was funny! Don't you try to tell me you didn't laugh!

And they're right, from one perspective. 30 Rock is so professionally written, each opportunity for a gag so microtargeted, that it is rarely without a lot of laughs. Nothing wrong with laughs. But there is a difference between a good episode of 30 Rock and an episode of 30 Rock with several good scenes. It's the difference—and I'm going to offend more people here, what the hell—between an episode of Arrested Development and an episode of Family Guy. One is a fast-paced blitz of insanely ingenious gags that hang together to develop themes and illustrate larger stories about the characters, and the other is a blitz of insanely ingenious gags for their own sake. 

That's what last night's 30 Rock seemed like to me. I've got a whole list of funny jokes from it in my notes, but many—like John McEnroe's appearance—seemed thrown in for the sake of funny cutaways. The one grounding character element to the story was Liz and her nerdy impatience with relationships—"What's the upside? It works and you have to have a bunch of sex?"—but even there, Tina Fey seemed to be playing an exaggerated version of her. I don't want to blame this on Steve Martin, who I thought did a good job as secret felon Gavin Volure ("Oh, dammit, I have a serious case of the Mondays!"), but I'm kind of looking forward to the end of the string of special guest stars. 

Mind you, I don't mind 30 Rock being cartoony, because it is cartoony, in the best way (the way The Simpsons is cartoony). But as I think I wrote before, in a good 30 Rock, one character is required to be relatively real, to tether the rest of the cartoon balloons together. 

OK, go ahead: Kenneth street dancing to "Rockit," the Japanese sex doll, "I thought I was helping him when I let him hold my boob while we watched Top Chef!" I laughed, too, I admit it. Forget I said anything.

  • Print
  • Comment
Comments (4)
Post a Comment »
  • 1

    It seems that 30 Rock is still trying to find its footing. It's trying to shove EVERYTHING into 20 something minutes while not really developing any characters at all. The only character that had some development in this episode was Tracy Jordan Morgan. He has kids? He loves his kids? They don't want to kill him? The show has the ability to become sweet with the 'awww' moments that break up the craziness of the Office. But I fear for it. Just hook up Liz and Jack up already. It's going to happen sometime!

  • 2

    I agree, JP, lots of funny parts, but as a whole, it just didn't flow all that well. I heart Steve Martin. And I definitely laughed plenty during the episode ("If anything happens to me, you and your brother are going to jail!") but I agree that the overall feel wasn't "good episode" worthy.

    I also agree with alekshy a little about them trying to find their footing.

  • 3

    I agree it didn't exactly zing to begin with, but as soon as Steve Martin turned out to be a criminal, he gave his best comedy performance in years; shh, we're supposed to be quiet during rehersal etc. Give the man good material and he's still got the skills to turn in a performance.

  • 4

    Sorry would have enjoyed the episode more had I not saw "Pink Panther" recently. Steve Martin, I love you, but the eccentricity of Gavin Volure kept on reminding me of Inspector Clouseau and that is NOT a good thing.

Add Your Comment:

You must be logged in to post a comment.
Tuned In Daily E-mail

Get e-mail updates from TIME's Tuned In in your inbox and never miss a day.

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
VICKI ESCARRA, head of food bank network Feeding America, which is logging record donations amid the recession. An estimated 1 in 6 Americans went without enough food at some point last year