Wednesday, March 16, 2011
It struck us last night while watching this episode that this season, much more so than last season, we find ourselves thinking "Well, this one's for the kids," meaning, we're just going to have to accept songs and storytelling conventions that, well, might not resonate as strongly with those of us well past our teen years. The show's always straddled that line in order to appeal to the widest audience, combining teenage angst with middle-aged cynicism; Top 40 with Broadway and classic pop. But we definitely feel this season's slow turn toward fully embracing (and openly selling to) its teenage audience.
So our cynicism was in full bloom before the episode even started because this episode's conceit of using original songs keeps the money in the family, so to speak. And it's a high-earning family as it is. Glee has become not only a television juggernaut, but a recording one as well. Why waste that opportunity only on cover songs, which have to be paid for, when you can write and own your own? In a lot of ways, it was inevitable. Still, they did a decent enough job making the reasons for it plausible and had some fun with the idea. After all, no one can deny that "Trouty Mouth" was a hilarious moment. "You can suck a baby's head" had us roaring.
Here's where our grownup cynicism reared its head. Darren and Chris' voices don't actually blend that well, unfortunately. The number was sold solely through their acting and we admit, it was ridiculously sweet. The last two closeups as they sing the final notes to each other was powerful and romantic. We totally buy the couple and we're a little breathlessly thrilled to see something like this given center stage on a hit network television show geared towards the young. Our real world experience had us squirming in our seats, however, because as romantic and beautiful as it was to see two cute boys sing a love song to each other, we knew it was going to cost the team a win. In a way, we're glad the show made that point. It would have been naive and a bit dangerously false to sell the idea that two gay boys acting like that (i.e., the way every other kid is allowed to act) on stage isn't going to get some sort of backlash.
We also want to make a sideways shoutout to the scene between Rachel and Quinn, where the writers deftly made the latter seem like a real person with insecurities and fears and disappointments rather than just a bitch cheerleader. Her rather - dare we say it? - cynical view of the life she and Finn will have vs. the life Rachel will was, sadly, probably very accurate.
Pretty much a perfect hour of Glee, we have to say. It only makes us wish the show could be like this every week, but we're a bit too ... wait for it ... cynical for that.
[Video Credit: hulu.com - Screencap: tomandlorenzo.com]
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Labels: Glee, Glee Season 2, Television
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