Do NOT Air This Sitcom
| By contributing writer Charlie Hatton |
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In an effort to stem the tide of inane, sugary pap gushing down our satellite feeds, here are a dozen ways to improve the average—and significantly below-average; I'm looking at you, Yes, Dear—situational comedy. Call it my, "Twelve Simple Rules for Sucking Less Than Eight Simple Rules" 1. Do NOT include a laugh track. If I can't figure out where the funny parts are on my own, then you're not doing your job. If I want yuks in a can, then I'll buy a tin of cocktail weenies. I hear 2. Do NOT air an episode, ever, concerning a mixup of identical twins, and the shenanigans that ensue. As a matter of fact, forget twins altogether. Creepy little buggers, what with the "we know something you don't know" nonsense. Save
3. Do NOT use your show as a vehicle to tug on our heart strings, or to teach us a "life lesson." If I want drama, I'll watch Masterpiece Theatre. If I want to learn, I'll tune into Nova. Or, I would, if I could 4. Do NOT set your sitcom in the '70s, or the '80s, or any other time besides the present. No one wants to see That 1770s Show, Battlestar Hilaria, or How I Met Your Great-Great-Great-Great-Great Grandmother. If a guy walks onto your set wearing bellbottom pants, I will personally fly to the studio and kick him in the crotch. 5. Do NOT include a crusty-but-sympathetic "tough" character on the show, whose gruff exterior belies a tender, fluffy heart of gold. That's nonsense. I've been around long enough to know: a gruff exterior is simply evidence of a gruff interior. A gruff, shriveled, impotent, crusty interior. Put it away. 6. Do NOT give the show a title with more than three words. 7. Do NOT include a random elderly character, like a grandparent or senile old neighbor, just to pique the interest of the aging general population. Honestly, if the old folks can't relate to a "regular" 8. Do NOT employ any sort of ridiculous gimmick like dream sequences, flashbacks, or other fantasy bizarro world shenanigans. If I see wavy shimmer lines on my screen at any time, I will personally fly to the
9. Do NOT cast a bubbly hot young actress who can't act on the show. If she's got nice boobs and huge tracts of comedic talent, that's just peachy. Otherwise, leave the eye candy to the girlie mags, please. Brainless 10. Do NOT include the same tired, obvious stereotypes that have been used on every show since All in the Caveman Family. If you have a gay male character, let him do more than wear all pink all the time and chitter about show 11. Do NOT include product endorsements during the show. I see you, sneaking in a can of Sprite, or an iPod, or a box of jumbo-wing Tampax pads "accidentally" left in the camera shot, labels perfectly 12. Finally, do NOT let the series linger on any longer than it has to. This isn't soap opera—you're not obligated to pair up every possible couple combo, shoot "onsite" episodes in every major city in the world, or have the characters face every financial and personal crisis known to mankind. Just let it go. If you're writing in a new baby, a retirement fund fiasco, or a Tim Conway cameo, then it's too late. You've jumped the shark, backed up, and run over it again. Game over. I hope you sitcom writers and producers out there can use these suggestions to create a few new shows that don't make me want to give my television thirty lashes with a rabbit-ear antenna. Because if you don't, I will personally fly to your studio. And I think you know what's coming next. |
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17 Comments
I agree with most of your take on the current state of sitcoms. It's basically the crappiness of scripted television that has allowed the crappiness of reality television to emerge.
One question though: Without old people and vapid hot chicks, who do we have left to laugh and look at?
I already miss Arrested Development
Good article...the only ones I would say don't always apply are #8 (Saved by the Bell had them, and is an obvious classic sit-com) and #1 (Seinfeld had a laugh track). Funny stuff though, enjoyable article.
i didnt laugh once
This articles touches on everything that has dissapointed me about TV. I think producing sitcoms should be you calling.
Loved the article. The only problem is that you (im guessing here) dont like brooke burke. I think she's the reason why i went from masturbating three times a week to twice a day when they started showing that wild on E! thing. She can be in any show she wants if she's in a bikini. Damnit.
People who complain about product placement make NO sense.
I would MUCH rather have a character pull out a can of Coke and drink it than a Generic red can of COLA. Makes it more realistic. People drink Coke. They DON'T drink cola out of cans that look exactly LIKE Coke but with COLA on it instead.
Seriously...everyone do me a favor. Look around your room right now. IF a camera was filming you, how many brands would be on the screen? I bet at least DOZENS. I'll do it right now. Just from my computer chair I see the follow brands, prominently displayed: Dell, Wrigley's Winterfresh Gum, Lay's Potato Chips, Tostito's Corn Chips, Coca Cola, Panasonic, Toshiba, Nike, Champion, Wilson Athletics, CVS, Rayovac Batteries, Trek Bicycles, Purina Pro Plan Cat Food, Winmau Dart Boards, M&Ms, Old Navy, Altoids, Snapple, Killian's Irish Red.
That is 20 right there, and I assure you my place is not a mess. These are everyday items that can be seen from my living room where I can also see into parts of my kitchen.
It is called REALISM. Deal with it.
Do NOT make another unfunny, boring article again. Give me back my 7 minutes or I'll go over there and "kick [you] in the crotch"
I smirked once....
1. Agree unless there is NO real studio audience.
2. Agree
3. If it's relevant to a recent event...why not?
4. You're an idiot. That 70's Show is freakin hilarious...oops....was.
5. Frank Barone (Everybody Loves Ray)...CLASSIC...and pretty true to life. You should get out more and meet "crusty old men"
6. After reading this, i agree....you can't after the third word.
7. Whatever....it's kinda real. My neighbor is 89. She "appears" in my sit com at random.
8. Agree
9. Agree. They should at the very least be able to act.
10.Agree...keep the .00005% of the nation off my TV. Put them back in the closet. The NASCAR chicky though can stay.
11. What? I EAT and DRINK and USE real items. Why shouldn't the actors be able to eat Tostitos instead of "Chips" or drink "Beer"...idiot...
12. Agree 100%
Personally, I'd like to see you "Fly into the studio" and get your ass kicked by the gay actor. ROFLMMFAO
I disagree with #3, MASH was teaching you a lesson about war all the time, and it was always pulling your heart strings. I strongly agree with #1, and the only reason MASH had a laughtrack was because the network forced it on them, which was just plain stupid.
What about, "Do not make a sitcom about a lovable loser, fat, balding or otherwise, with a hot wife." Since nowadays that is what EVERY sitcom is about.
Great list, the only one I disagree with is the one about dream sequences & flashbacks, since Scrubs & Arrested Development make great use of both.
one word...Seinfeld.
It had a laugh track.
It had an episode featuring twins.
It made fun of stereotypes, ie. the indian episode.
Seriously that might have been the worst attempt at humor ever.
Every good sitcom ever broke at least 3 of your "rules," probably even more.
The worst was your attempt at making fun of the show "Life According to Jim" as a show that has a more than 3 word title. It has 4 words, and your attempt at making a joke about it was very lame.
seinfeld also had a "ridiculous gimmick" episode where things ran backwards Memento-style in a series of flashbacks. It's actually one of the funniest episodes ever.
Does the author of this article even watch sitcoms?
to the douche that said Seinfeld had a laugh track-- you're an idiot!!!
It was a live audience laughing, not a laugh track.
Brilliant list. Couldn't agree more. I hate every sitcom on a network.
Rule 13: No network comedy made after the year 2000 or so [excluding animated shows] was actually funny. They all suck now.
wait... Arrested Development was funny. I'll make an exception there. But "That 70's show" was awful.
I gotta disagree with #8.
<i>Scrubs</i> and <i>Family Guy</i> are two of the best sitcoms on right now, and they both liberally use "flashbacks and bizarro world shenanigans."
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