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So without further ado I'll step aside and get on with the article proper, this time about what is arguably my favourite show currently on TV and sadly, if you live in the UK, one that you might never have heard of: Parks and Recreation.
Set in the fictional small town of Pawnee, Parks and Rec (as it is
commonly known) focuses on the life and work of the employees of the Parks
department. It initially started in a similar vein to the US Office (and was
created by some of that show’s writers) with Leslie Knope, the head of the
department played by Amy Poehler, portayed as a Michael Scott type character,
disillusioned and with ambitions way above her abilities and station. The early
laughs coming from the seriousness and venerability with which she approached
small town problems, and whilst there was something there, the show did little
to distinguish itself. As a figure of fun Leslie was not very sympathetic and
the awkward laughs very much fitted into the mould of The Office. But as the
show’s short first season progressed (it was only 6 episodes due to the writers’
strike) things improved, the supporting cast were sketched out in more detail
and the writers seemed to have a clearer vision of the show’s true identity.
Looking back now I can’t think of an occasion when the jump in quality
from the early episodes to the later had such a steep increase, and that’s not
to say that the first season is bad, because it’s not, and I would absolutely recommend
starting there if you have never seen the show before. It sets up the world and
characters, and as it’s so short as well there isn’t long before you see the
changes start to happen. So much so that by the time we got into the middle of
the 24 episode season 2 the show was transformed. Whilst it kept the mock
documentary aesthetic its slightly sneering tone had gone, to be replaced with
the show’s secret weapon: heart. Real affection and love for these characters
and an understanding that what makes Leslie Knope great, and interesting and
one of my favourite TV characters, is not her dilusion, but her ability. By
turned Leslie from a figure of fun into someone actually good at her job, very
good in fact, yet maintaining her sense of naiveté and ability to get carried
away, they made her feel so much more real and endearing. It can be so easy in
comedy to fall back on incompetence as the joke, to mock and ridicule. What I
love so much about Parks and Rec, and what it came to figure out, was that it
is much harder, but much more rewarding to make a comedy about people who are
actually good at their jobs (for the most part) and warm and likeable people.
Which brings me neatly to the show’s second secret weapon, its world building.
As well as Leslie you have a wonderful cast of characters just
within the Parks Department, including arguably another candidate for best TV
character in the departments’s stalwart, government-hating, all-American Ron
Swanson, played to perfection by Nick Offerman. Again a character that started
as a bit of a joke, a Government manager who hates the idea of government, has
been fleshed out into so much more and one of the consistently funniest people
on TV. And the office is full of people like this, from Aziz Ansari’s wannabe entrepreneur
Tom Haverford to Aubrey Plaza’s wonderfully deadpan April to another of the
funniest characters on TV in Chris Pratt’s Andy, another character who
underwent major changes from the start of the series to become a surprise
favourite. It is remarkable how well the show not only figured out its message
and tone, but also its characters. It treats them with respect and as well as
being silly, absurd and very funny it makes you care about them too. It is
common in sitcoms to have an ‘emotional’ bit at the end of an episode to round
things off and add some weight to the proceedings, but here, as with Scrubs (the
only other show to really do this as effectively), it always feels genuine and
earned, and not just a template that has to be adhered to.
This attention to character even extends to the wider town of
Pawnee as well, over the course of the show’s four seasons they have built up a
fantastic cast of bit-characters and references that make it all feel bigger
than just the Parks office. Some have compared it to the Simpsons in this
regard and I can fully understand that comparison, and the fact that long time
Simpsons vet Mike Scully has been heavily involved in the show is no coincidence
I’m sure.
Ultimately though, none of these elements, on their own or
together, are truly unique to Parks and Rec, and they don’t guarantee success
either. But the show is more than the sum of its parts, it manages a tricky
balancing act of all these elements whilst still remaining laugh out loud funny
on such a consistent basis. It is a show that I can watch each week with a big
stupid grin on my face and no other program I can think of at the moment, even
Community or 30 Rock, can match Parks and Rec for the mix of heart, character
and laughs. Those other shows may have bigger laughs sometimes, or stronger
set-pieces, but ultimately if I was presented with a brand new episode of any
show right now, it’s Parks and Rec I’d want to watch.
How well it works for you though is certainly a subjective thing,
I have a real affection for anything that celebrates the good, and best in
people and I think it’s this optimism that truly sets Parks and Rec aside, and
what endears it to me in particular. It may have taken a little while to settle
into its groove but it stands as a wonderful example of a show finding its
voice and having the conviction to stick to it.
So that’s it for this entry, I thank you for indulging me, but as
I mentioned I think it’s good sometimes to celebrate those things we love, and
try to understand why they provoke the reaction they do. I have a few ideas
about what I could next in this series so I hope to be back and posting again
soon so I guess I’ll see you then.
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