Monday, November 29, 2010

Arrested Development

Years: 2003 - 2006
Seasons: 3
Episodes: 53
Created By: Mitchell Hurwitz

Main Cast:

Jason Bateman as Michael Bluth
Portia de Rossi as Lindsay Fünke
Will Arnett as Gob Bluth
Tony Hale as Buster Bluth
Michael Cera as George Michael Bluth
David Cross as Tobias Fünke
Alia Shawkat as Maeby Fünke
Jeffrey Tambor as George Bluth
Jessica Walter as Lucille Bluth

It’s really hard to do smart, Simpsons-style humor in a live-action format. It’s even harder when you don’t have a LOL SPIDERPIG ROFLMAO character like Homer Simpson leading the action. Add to that a story arc which makes it harder to enjoy episodes unless you’ve seen each one before it, and you have a show that’s going to have a very short lifespan. Regardless of how brilliantly funny Arrested Development was, it’s amazing that it managed to survive long enough to reach three seasons and wrap up in a satisfactory manner. And fans, you need to bow down and start kissing Fox’s hairy beanbags for keeping the show on for as long as they did, because instead of botching a brilliant show with network bumbling, Fox actually kept it alive longer than any other sane network would have. As much as fans would like to argue this point, the show’s ratings were godawful, and it was consistently the lowest-rated comedy on TV. Even putting it in a coveted time slot following The Simpsons didn’t help, as viewers switched channels even before the Gracie Films lady could go “shush.” Fox was losing money by keeping this show alive. You should thank them for it.

For the millions upon millions of you who skipped it, the show is about the wealthy Bluth family, who’s patriarch (George Bluth) is the CEO of the Bluth Company, a company that builds mini-mansions. After making his wife Lucille the CEO, George Sr. gets arrested by the SEC for blowing money on ridiculous “personal expenses” and other potentially illegal activities. Their son Michael is then asked to run the company, and thus the show begins, with Michael acting as the responsible one looking after his son (George Michael, who wants to fuck his cousin) his mom, his two brothers (the shitty magician and Segway enthusiast Gob and the borderline retarded Buster) his sister (the attention-starved and materialistic Lindsay), her husband (the closeted never-nude Tobias), and his niece (the rebellious Maeby). After that, the story starts getting complicated, and the story attempts to remedy this by a series of flashbacks that occur during the show that attempt to bring viewers up-to-speed whenever a previous plot point gets mentioned. The show deals with the family coming to grips with George Sr. being in jail, Michael’s attempts to run the company smoothly, his siblings constantly sucking money away from the company and spending it on bullshit, his son trying to deal with lusting after his cousin, Tobias wanting to become an actor, and many other smaller plot points that are a hell of a lot funnier when you’re watching them than just seeing them described.

When this show first came out, I remember hearing a lot about how great it was. I decided to give it a shot, and what I saw was annoying and unfunny. Therefore, I never bothered tuning back in, making me part of the reason why the show failed (I had a Nielson box, so fuck you, my viewership was important!). Years later some coworkers started telling me that I had to give the show another chance, swearing that if I watched it from the beginning, I would enjoy it more. Someone even went so far as to leave their copies of seasons one and two in my box at work, so I relented. I watched the first episode, then the second, and I kept going for several episodes. And I found out that they were right, that this was an amazing show that deserved all the praise it got. I’ve only gone through the show once, but the episodes were so densely packed that I have the urge to start rewatching them, just to catch the jokes that I missed the first time around. And that episode I saw that sucked ass? When I saw it the second time it was great.

Of course, this is exactly why people stayed away from the show in droves. You just can’t have a show like this on a major network and expect it to be a hit. The most successful shows have something for everyone, and there just wasn’t enough simple, dumb humor in this show for it to be a success. The casual viewer needs to be able to dip into it at any point and immediately have enough information to enjoy it, and as funny as they were, the flashbacks just weren’t effective in conveying the information you needed to know. Without seeing the pilot episode where George Michael gets kissed by Maeby as a way to freak out their parents, his attraction to her just comes off as creepy. I mean, even after seeing the pilot it’s still creepy, but at least there’s a grounding to some previous experience the two had. It also didn’t help that the main characters were a bunch of unlikeable assholes. Once again, without following the whole story, Michael comes off as a selfish prick that doesn’t want to help his family, and the family comes off as a bunch of greedy cocksuckers who can’t stand him or each other. Also, because many jokes rely on the audience’s previous knowledge of past episodes, they fall flat for viewers tuning in for the first time. It’s like shooting a baby in the kneecaps and expecting it to walk. It’s ain’t gonna happen, son.

Finally, the show was remarkably consistent, with the exception of a couple repeated jokes near the end that didn’t work. I wasn’t wild about Buster’s hook hand, but that may have been dealt with further as the series progressed (maybe I’ll love it when I rewatch the series. Who knows?). Everyone seemed to be on fire during all three seasons, and it’s hard to tell when it would have started to lose steam. If the show was a hit then the season three finale would clearly have ended differently, as everyone involved seemed to know that the end was coming and that they’d have to wrap things up. And considering that no other networks bothered to pick the show up, and that no one can even pull everything together to get the movie made, it seems safe to say that the story ended with the finale.

Recommended for: elitists, people who watch The Daily Show/Colbert Report, fans of The Office, Simpsons fans that didn’t piss their pants laughing over “Spiderpig,” people who say “quite” a lot.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Five Canceled Shows I Really Want to See on DVD

There are a ton of shows that probably will never make it to DVD, and this is especially true of canceled shows. Unless there is a strong cult demanding it, why should time and money be spent on something that was a failure to begin with? Anyhow, with instant view and internet streaming being increasingly popular ways to get shows, it may be easier for some of the more oddball and unloved shows to come back in some form. Here are some shows that I’d like to see:

Babes

A short-lived sitcom about three fat sisters living together. I don’t expect that this show went far beyond fat jokes and the typical sitcom emotionalism that you get when trying to make characters sympathetic, but I’ve been wanting to see this show ever since I missed its first run on Fox years ago. It was apparently produced by Dolly Parton, which makes me want to see it even more because I fucking love Dolly Parton. It also stars Wendie Jo Sperber, who played Linda McFly in the Back to the Future films and has one of the greatest fat girl names I’ve ever heard. Unfortunately, Sperber died of breast cancer a few years ago, and was the subject of a documentary. Hopefully this bit of exposure will lead to this show eventually getting aired on Hulu or Netflix. I mean, how hard can it be to digitize 22 half hour episodes?

Hardcore TV

A dumb, nudity-heavy sketch comedy show that ran on HBO for awhile. I saw it when I was a kid and laughed my ass off, though, much like MTV’s The State, I highly doubt that the humor is going to hold up when I watch it as an adult. It had such skits as Fairy Tales From the Darkside and a painfully unfunny bit where a guy with a shitty Jamaican accent recounts TV shows. As with all sketch comedy shows, it was hit and miss, but I remember enough funny bits to want to rewatch it, such as Raging Bullwinkle and Cindy’s Sex Talk. One skit of Sex Talk had a man happily discussing his relationship with an inflatable doll, but becomes disgusted when a caller asks for his opinion on inflatable sheep. He ends the skit by describing his future as being “very happy, but very chaffed.” See, that’s the kind of stupid joke that makes me miss the show.

Woops!

A notorious and stupid sitcom about the survivors of a nuclear holocaust. This was another travesty from the Fox network, and while most of its short-lived run was typically lame sitcom jokes, there was allegedly one episode where the find Santa Claus and discover that he’s a serial killer. There were only 13 episodes, but I’d be willing to sit through that just to see this murderous Santa episode. Another thing about the show that intrigues me is the typo in the title. There’s supposed to be an “h” in there. I know that I’m a linguist and should therefore not be bothered by such trivialities as orthography, but it still grates on me for some reason.

You’re in the Picture

A classic show that aired once, and was so shitty that host Jackie Gleason spent the entire next episode apologizing for the show and going into detail about why this piece of shit got aired in the first place. I’ve seen a bit of the second episode and loved it, and I’m increasingly coming to the opinion that Jackie Gleason was one of the funniest mother fuckers that ever lived. In fact, if there is a heaven and I get to go there, I want to see Jackie Gleason describe in detail why EVERY show that ever got canceled was a failure. Anyhow, this is a show that I want to see both for the shitty game that takes up the first (and only) episode of the show, and the half-hour apology Gleason gives the audience in the second. There ought to be a rule where the stars of every canceled show does the same in front of a studio audience, effectively apologizing for wasting their time with this crap.

The Ripping Friends

John K.’s unsuccessful follow-up to Ren & Stimpy, this one focuses on the somewhat homo-erotic adventures of a group of muscular supermen who go around and fight crime. I’ve seen a couple episodes, and the humor is every bit as disgusting and suggestive as Ren & Stimpy, which makes me scream in frustration at the fact that it is still only available in its entirety in Australia. If his short-lived gay sex version of Ren & Stimpy can get a DVD release, then surely the same can be done for The Ripping Friends.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Police Squad!

Years: 1982
Seasons: 1
Episodes: 6
Created by: Jim Abrahams, David & Jerry Zucker

Main Cast:

Leslie Nielsen as Detective Frank Drebin
Alan North as Captain Ed Hocken
Peter Lupus as Officer Norberg

A long time ago, spoof movies actually had jokes in them. What counts as “funny” changes all the time, of course, but this genre seems to have changed a lot in recent years. The way the genre has narrowed in focus happens all the time in different formats. For example: punk rock, in it’s inception, used to include such diverse bands as The Ramones, Patti Smith, X, The Clash, Wire, Blondie, The Dead Kennedys, and Television. Now, bands that are identified as “punk” all sound like bratty versions of The Ramones. It just happens. Spoof movies now seem to have narrowed into films that shoot rapid-fire pop culture references at the audience, punctuated by various “funny” acts of violence against certain popular figures and the inclusion of gross-out visuals. As you can tell, I don’t like this development, but I’m not going to hop on the bandwagon and say that people who love Friedberg and Seltzer films (or Family Guy, which is similar in approach) are all idiots. Humor changes, and I haven’t changed with it. Such is life.

So what does this have to do with Police Squad!, the short-lived show that later turned into the successful Naked Gun film series? Well, it reminded me of why I used to really love spoof movies: they had jokes. Recurring jokes that worked even through six episodes. Clever jokes that sometimes took a minute to fully process. Lots and lots of jokes, packed in as densely as those classic Simpsons episodes. It’s rare for me to laugh audibly while watching something alone, but that happened a lot more than I expected while watching this series, and for the life of me I can’t understand why this show wasn’t a hit.

The show follows the adventures of Detective Frank Drebin, who’s shockingly less idiotic here than he is in the Naked Gun films. Each episode follows him solving different cases, usually helped by his partners Ed and Norberg. He follows the typical procedures of interviewing suspects and gathering evidence, and everything is neatly tied up at the end of each episode. Less ambitious in scope than the Naked Gun films, the crimes dealt with usually involve murder and bribery, the topics typically covered in cop shows. What’s great about Police Squad! is that Frank Drebin is such a memorable character, and the recurring gags are so funny that the show gets a lot of milage out of this familiar genre, and not once in this short, six episode run does anything feel stale.

Some of the recurring gags include a celebrity guest star being murdered in the opening credits, Frank’s inside source/shoe shine guy being an expert on pretty much everything (provided you pay him), the scientist Ted demonstrating something disturbing or dangerous to a child before Drebin checks up on him, and the “freeze frame” during the final credits, which is usually just Frank and Ed standing perfectly still while a bunch of other crap goes on in the background. The problem with describing these gags, and with describing humor in general, is that you actually need to see the show in order to understand why it’s funny. The whole show is played deadpan, which is crucial to the humor in it. If everyone played each scene with a smirk on their face and a “I know this is funny” expression, it would destroy the humor and cause each joke to fall flat on it’s face. Granted, not every joke works in this show, but far more succeed than don’t.

What I loved about this show was the amount of talent involved. The creators of this show knew their shit, coming from such spoof hits as The Kentucky Fried Movie and Airplane!, so this was one of those cases where you could be fairly certain that you’d be watching a high-quality show. Also, while watching the show I noticed that Joe Dante directed a couple of episodes. For those who don’t know, Joe Dante is a fantastic and sadly underrated director, responsible for the two Gremlins films and the brilliant Matinee (he also did Looney Tunes: Back in Action, which is strangely hated by a lot of people who probably never even watched the fucking thing). While this show would be different from something like Get Smart, there’s no reason why a genre spoof show shouldn’t have been a success, even if these kind of shows typically don’t last long.

I hate the expression “too good to last” because of the snobbishness that it implies, but that does seem to be the case with this show. Apparently the rapid-fire pace of the jokes just didn’t connect with the audience. One reason given for the show’s cancelation was that in order to enjoy the show, the viewer had to pay close attention to it. In a way, that’s true. This is not a show that you can watch while doing other things, since there’s always something going on in the background, or a visual gag that doesn’t have dialog specifically pointing at it. Even now, if you’re watching the show and surfing the web, it’s a guarantee that you’re going to miss half the jokes. This goes a long way toward explaining why a TV show that demands your attention may fail, but a movie version of the exact same thing can be a huge success, since you can’t multitask in a movie theater (unless you’re a douche on their cellphone). Therefore, Police Squad! was a failure that was yanked off the air after a mere four episodes, and the Naked Gun was a big hit that spawned two sequels and both brought on a revival of the spoof genre and made Leslie Nielsen a star. I may be wrong, but aside from Star Trek, I can’t think of another TV failure that went on to have such a huge impact when adapted into a film.

Recommended for: comedy fans, people who love spoof movies with jokes, Naked Gun fans, people who would have liked the Naked Gun movies if OJ wasn’t in them

Monday, November 8, 2010

Twin Peaks

Years: 1990-1991
Seasons: 2
Episodes: 30
Created by: David Lynch and Mark Frost

Main Cast:

Kyle MacLachlan as Special Agent Dale Cooper
Michael Ontkean as Sheriff Harry S. Truman
Sheryl Lee as Laura Palmer and Maddy Ferguson
Ray Wise as Leland Palmer
Richard Beymer as Benjamin Horne
Sherilynn Fenn as Audrey Horne
Lara Flynn Boyle as Donna Hayward
James Marshall as James Hurley
Dana Ashbrook as Bobby Briggs

Every once in awhile the planets line up in a certain way and something really strange becomes a national phenomenon. When this happens, The Singing Nun prevents Louie Louie from being a number one hit song, Tiny Tim’s wedding becomes one of the highest rated TV events of all time, and the director of Eraserhead has a show where housewives discuss how dancing midgets, bald giants, and a woman who speaks to a log are connected in the murder of a local high school girl. For one glorious moment in the early 90s, David Lynch became a mainstream success with his murder mystery show Twin Peaks, doing the impossible by bringing his art house stylings into middle America through prime time TV. In the process, he only compromised on one important point, but even that compromise helped create one of the most powerful and disturbing episodes in TV history. But more on that in a bit.

Twin Peaks has Lynch’s fingerprints all over it, but it wasn’t his alone. The co-creator was Mark Frost, a writer who previously wrote and directed several episodes of 80s phenomenon Hill Street Blues. Frost cowrote several episodes of Twin Peaks and even directed the season one finale, and it’s been suggested that Frost was responsible for keeping the show progressing in an orderly fashion, while Lynch packed on the stranger elements and imagery. As someone familiar with Lynch’s work, this makes perfect sense, since telling a story via traditional means has never seemed to hold much interest for Lynch.

The story behind the show is as simple as they get. A teen (Lara Palmer) living in the small town of Twin Peaks is found dead one day, and an FBI agent and the town sheriff get to work trying to solve the crime and find the killer. In the double-length pilot episode, we get introduced to pretty much every important figure in the show. The groundwork is also laid for some of the other, less interesting plot developments, such as the burning down of the sawmill and such. The FBI agent is Dale Cooper, who uses a number of unconventional means to try to find the killer. This includes throwing rocks at bottles and dream interpretation. While the investigation goes on, the rest of the town tries to cope with the murder, and everything from Lara’s dad jumping on her casket during the funeral to local “bad girl” Audrey trying to help Cooper out by going undercover at a whorehouse in Canada are part of the “moving on” process.



I know I’m in the minority by saying this, but the pilot episode blows. The acting in it is atrocious, and the interesting moments don’t help make it a more enjoyable experience. Some actors got better, but a couple (especially Andy and ugh, Bobby) stay bad throughout the show. It’s only when the series proper kicks off and Agent Cooper begins the investigation that the show turns great. There’s something about Cooper’s wide-eyed enthusiasm for pretty much everything that makes his character so entertaining to watch, and almost everyone else gets a moment to shine. Apparently, because TV viewers are impatient dickheads, the network demanded that Lynch reveal the killer sooner than he wanted. The problem here is that Lynch never intended on doing such a thing, and in fact stated that if he were to reveal the killer at all, it would be in the final episode of the series.

Let’s stop for a moment here and think about this for a minute. The network had a hit show on their hands, but viewers were starting to leave. In their infinite wisdom, they decided to switch its timeslot to Saturday night at 10, when hardly anyone watches TV in the first place. Then, instead of slowly building to the reveal, they forced the revelation seven episodes into the second season, effectively destroying a show that used the murder mystery as its reason for being. Before discussing that reveal episode, I’d like to state that Lynch was absolutely right for being pissed off about this, and if I wasn’t already so jaded by watching all these canceled shows, I’d say that I was shocked that they’d sabotage it so quickly. Also, if you have any intention of watching the show and would like to stay in the dark about who the killer is, stop reading now.



Throughout the show, references have been made to a certain man named “Bob,” though they have always been sorta cryptic and unclear. As it turns out, “Bob” is an evil spirit that lives in the woods, and he possessed the body of Lara Palmer’s father Leland and used him to rape and murder her and, in the reveal episode, murder her identical cousin Maddy as well. As lame as this sounds, it leads to one of the most shocking moments I’ve ever seen in a TV show, and an episode that counts as one of the best things Lynch has ever filmed. The entire episode, except for an awkward, unfunny diner scene, leads up to Benjamin Horn being arrested for Lara’s murder, and everyone meeting at the local bar The Roadhouse. Julie Cruise sings one of her strangely out-of-place atmospheric ballads and Cooper watches with the Log Lady. Suddenly Cooper gets a message from The Giant, who tells him “It is happening again.” The scene cuts to the Palmer residence, with Leland straightening his tie in the mirror and seeing Bob in the reflection. Maddy comes down and Leland runs at her, punching her in the face and strangling her. Lynch films it mostly in slow motion with Leland and Bob alternating, with his demonic laughter mixing with Maddy’s screams. The effect is extremely unsettling, and it’s something that really needs to be seen rather than described.

And then it all falls apart. Two episodes later Leland is arrested, dies, and the mystery is solved. Then what? Remember in Lost when the Oceanic Six got off the island, and the writers came up with the lamest possible bullshit imaginable just to get them back? This is what happens with the main premise of your show is yanked away. Twin Peaks WAS the Lara Palmer story, and without that, everything fell to pieces immediately. The show started relying on dumb humor, pushed Cooper to the background, and came up with some of the worst shit imaginable. The most boring character on the show (James) had several episodes dedicated to some bullshit plot outside of the town. Andy kept going on about his sperms, and decided to buddy up with some guy who fucked and possibly impregnated his girlfriend. Both Cooper and Audrey, instead of hooking up with each other, hooked up with some randomlove interests, played by Billy Zane and Heather Graham. I have seriously never seen less romantic chemistry than each of these characters had with their boring-ass love interests. The show got so fucking atrocious so fast that it actually took some doing for me to finish this goddamn thing.

The show did start to pick up near the end, and that is probably the most tragic thing about Twin Peaks. Cooper’s former partner Windom Earle turns up as an insane, chess-obsessed murderer. Even though his character was handled poorly, it was still better than what was going on beforehand. There’s a beauty pageant in Twin Peaks, and Earle kidnaps Cooper’s boring girlfriend. Everything culminates with Cooper going into the woods and once again turning up in the strange “red room,” where everyone talks strangely and nothing makes sense. Lara’s there. Bob’s there. Earle’s there. Bob apparently kills Earle and everything goes batshit insane until Cooper finally comes out. The episode ends with Cooper looking into the mirror and seeing Bob’s reflection after smashing his head into it. He starts laughing maniacally while asking “Where’s Annie?” The end.

If the show ended with the resolution of the Lara Palmer plot, it would be remembered as one of the greatest shows of all time. However, because of the network forcing a quick resolution and the writers having no idea what to do next, the show is now one of the most famous instances of jumping the shark in existence. That the show could reach the highs it did and then turn into a boring, unfunny piece of shit so quickly is pretty damn sad. I have no idea if the show’s quality would have held up had Lynch and Frost got what they wanted and left the murder of Lara unsolved until the very end. Finding out new things about how fucked up she was made the show great, and made her a fascinating character. As it is, everyone has moved on, and there will never be anymore stories in the town of Twin Peaks.

Recommended for: Lynch fans, fans of bizarre mysteries, adventurous TV viewers, midget acting aficionados, men who refer to their sperm as “sperms”, people who like logs.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Ren & Stimpy “Adult Party Cartoon”



Years: 2003 - 2004
Seasons: 1
Episodes: 9
Created by: John Kricfalusi (John K.)

Main Cast:

John Kricfalusi as Ren
Eric Bauza as Stimpy

As a fan of animation, there was probably no revival that I looked forward to more than Ren & Stimpy. I loved the show during its first run, and always wished that it would somehow find its way back on TV, with creator John K. at the helm again and free to do all the weird, gross-out stuff that Nickelodeon chopped out of the show. My dreams were answered, somewhat, when Spike TV approached John K. to do an “adult-oriented” version of the show, and to go wild. Well, he did, and the results were mixed, to be charitable. But first, a brief history.

Ren & Stimpy was a classic cartoon that attempted to bring back the beauty of the old Looney Tunes cartoons and classic animation in general. Not only that, but it also added the kind of gross-out humor that kids adore, and the show was a phenomenon. Part of what made the original Ren & Stimpy so great was all of the crazy shit that was slipped under the radar. It was definitely a kid’s show, but one so bizarre and scary that there was something thrilling about watching it. It was loud, gross, strange, and most of all, joyous. The giddy enthusiasm that ran through those original shows was a “lightening in a bottle” moment, one that was effectively destroyed when Nickelodeon fired the creator of the show, dumped Spumco (the company he founded to create the show), and created a brand-new studio just for the series called Games. The shows that followed tried hard to duplicate those first two magic seasons, but they were either gross without being funny, or just plain idiotic. The show was canceled, John K. went on to create his only other show (the doomed Ripping Friends, still unavailable in its entirety on DVD), and Ren and Stimpy just faded away.

A full ten years after he was shit-canned from the show, along comes Spike TV with the proposal for a new Ren & Stimpy show. Now he had all the freedom he wanted to make the show as gross and out there as possible. He approached Billy West to come back and voice Stimpy again, but was turned down because West didn’t think the new shows were funny, and due to his extensive work in cartoons, thought that this decidedly adult offering would harm his career (not that this prevented him from frequently appearing on the Howard Stern show). A new guy named Eric Bauza came in to do Stimpy, and all was in place for the glorious revival.

The results were a lot different than many fans expected. Although it was always hinted at, now the show flat-on states that the duo are gay lovers. This revelation comes to a head in the two-parter called Stimpy’s Pregnant, which actually seems like a logical extension from the classic Son of Stimpy episode. Ren’s psychotic nature goes completely off the rails into serial-killer territory, as evidenced by the frog torture scene in the Ren Seeks Help episode. John K. also created a two-part sequel to the classic Fire Dogs episode which serves as an hour-long unfunny in-joke about his friend Ralph Bakshi. Things finally completely fell apart with the Naked Beach Frenzy episode, which was so chock full of bouncing tits and erections that advertisers left the show in droves, and Spike immediately gave the show the ax.

All that said, was the show funny? Well, here’s a test to see if this show is right for you. In Naked Beach Frenzy, there’s a scene where Ren & Stimpy pose as bathroom attendants in order for Ren to see (and grope) two naked girls. While they’re stripping, one of the braindead girls mentions how fancy the bathroom is and then chucks her panties to Ren. They hit him in the face, and with a shit-eating grin on his face he says “nothing but class here, sister,” and then takes a huge sniff of her panties. If you found that funny, then you may like the show. It goes that low, and stays there. It wallows in being the most disgusting and childish thing you’ll see on TV, and the fact that it does this so gleefully actually has some charm to it. There are also some fucking terrifyingly creepy moments, like the frog torture I mentioned earlier. John K.’s sense of humor is somewhat difficult to warm up to at times. There’s an extended make-out session between Ren’s parents that goes on much, much longer than it needs to, going from funny to uncomfortable because of how long that scene lingers. The marriage of creepy episodes like Ren Seeks Help with joyously stupid episodes like Naked Beach Frenzy makes this an unfortunately uneven series. If someone’s first exposure to the new Ren & Stimpy was the Fire Dogs sequel, they would be completely justified in switching it off and not bothering to tune back in.



Fire Dogs 2 brings me to another issue: this show lasted for only nine episodes, with three of those being two-parters. I don’t understand why John K. felt the need to make two-part episodes when so much was riding on this. Fire Dogs 2 was worse than even the post-Spumco Nickelodeon shows, and this story was stretched out to over two episodes. Also, and this is probably going to go into uncomfortable territory, but let’s consider the network’s audience. Spike TV is the unabashed network of bros, mooks, and douchebags. They’re proud of this label and wear it with honor. John K. knew this and thus created an episode chock-full of gigantic bouncing tits and borderline-retarded bimbos called Naked Beach Frenzy. This is something that bros would laugh at, so it makes sense. You know what else is a trademark of bros? Intense homophobia. Therefore, it was a shocking lack of insight on John K.’s part to blatantly make Ren & Stimpy gay lovers in both the Onward and Upward and Stimpy’s Pregnant episodes. All the gross out humor in the world isn’t going to make a homophobe warm up to a cartoon where the stars are gay lovers, even if one of them still lusts after women. A lame defense was offered saying that they are characters in the same vein as the Three Stooges, who weren’t “really” plumbers but played them in certain episodes. That doesn’t work here, because sexuality and rotating jobs are completely different ideas, and as far as I know, nobody has ever advocated the murder of plumbers.

So we have two episodes that probably turned off the bro audience (Onward and Upward and Stimpy’s Pregnant), an episode that was more creepy than funny (Ren Seeks Help), an unfunny two-parter (Fire Dogs 2), and an episode that couldn’t even be aired on cable (Naked Beach Frenzy). There was also another two-parter called Altruists, which was a tribute to the Three Stooges and probably fit the best with the classic older episodes. Another factor that probably doomed this show from the start was that successful adult-oriented cartoons seem to be overly-reliant on pop culture references, timeliness, and having some kind of political stance. Absolutely none of that belongs in Ren & Stimpy, so the adults tuning in to this show would have to be exceptionally comfortable with laughing at dumb, gross-out humor without giving the justification that the humor is actually “smart.” It would have taken a huge amount of patience on Spike TV’s part to continue putting money into this series, so it’s hardly a surprise that it got canceled so quickly. Really, the only audience I can think of for this show is die-hard John K./Spumco fans (like myself), and there’s really not enough of them to keep a show like this on the air. Therefore, short of a major revival of interest, this was probably the last chance for these two characters to get on the air again.

If another network ever decides to give them another chance, for god’s sake, keep it as a demented kid’s show. I’ve seen what John K. is capable of when he’s working with no restrictions, and it isn’t pretty.

Recommended for: John K. fans, deviants, fans of funny-looking drawings, the gloriously immature, people who thought Ren & Stimpy needed more gay sex.