drew-related stories
Posted Jan 27th 2009 3:33PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Celebrities, 30 Rock, Casting, Reality-Free

If you haven't been excited about
Mad Men's Jon Hamm appearing on several episodes of 30 Rock this season, playing a guy who lives in Liz Lemon's building that she dates, then
this exclusive clip over at The TV Addict might get you in the mood.
The clip shows Liz Lemon bringing some mail that was accidentally dropped in her mailbox to the rightful owner. Someone else answers the door which leads to a very funny line about nails, and then we see Hamm's character Drew. He seems like the perfect guy for Liz because he's not only good-looking but he loves to bake. It's Liz's dream guy, basically. Maybe some enterprising
30 Rock/
Mad Men fan can put a recipe together celebrating this episode. <Homer Simpson drool>
lemon ham</Homer Simpson drool>. I guess we'll have to wait to find out what makes them eventually break up, because you know they're going to.
This little clip alone has two laugh-out-loud lines, which is one or two more than most sitcoms have. This looks like it's going to be a good one. Hamm's run starts on February 5.
Posted Feb 12th 2007 10:46PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Everybody Hates Chris, The CW
(S02E12) In this review I mentioned that the character of Ms. Morello seemed to be switching from a dimwitted woman misinformed about black culture to your basic run-of-the-mill racist, and in this episode she wasn't much better, returning to a trip from Africa with a tiny bone for Chris he could put in his nose.
Now, if that's merely a choice on the part of the writers to have Ms. Morello completely oblivious to her own actions as a means of comic relief, that's their prerogative, but what I loved about her character from the early episodes is how she demonstrated that not all racism is blatant: sometimes you can have what seems like the best of intentions and still be completely wrong in your approach. Now, she's just another idiot.
Continue reading Everybody Hates Chris: Everybody Hates the Substitute
Posted Jan 30th 2007 11:22AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Everybody Hates Chris, The CW
(S02E14) I don't think this episode had as many laugh-out-loud moments as other episodes, but what really struck me was how tenacious Chris is when it comes to his social situation. Clearly, no one at his school likes him, but Chris still makes an effort to be respected and fit in.
Most of the students want nothing to do with Chris because he's black, but it's also because Chris has no interest in going along with the group-think that's prevalent in most schools. There are essentially two ways to go for any adolescent: you can take the path of least resistance and do what everyone else does, or you can forge your own path and earn the respect of your peers that way. The famous adult Chris is obviously a product of the latter, but what Everybody Hates Chris shows is how difficult it can be to constantly swim against the current.
I said there weren't as many laugh-out-loud moments, but the montage showing Chris giving a beat down to anyone who disrespected his role as hall monitor almost had me on the floor. Chris eventually learns that "fear" and "respect" aren't the same thing, but even he would have to admit that giving his antagonists a taste of justice felt pretty damn good.
Posted Jan 22nd 2007 8:05PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Everybody Hates Chris, Celebrities, The CW
(S02E11)
As a change of pace, I asked TV know-it-all Paul Goebel to write a rebuttal to today's review. Goebel is an actor and comedian who appeared as the "TV Geek" on the short-lived Comedy Central quiz show Beat the Geeks and has appeared on Curb Your Enthusiasm, Ally McBeal, Will and Grace and other shows. He currently hosts a show at the UCB Theater in Los Angeles, and does a weekly podcast with his pal Jim Bruce called "The Paul Goebel Show." If you like TV, you should check it out. His response is after my review.
Ever since Linda Lavin helmed the CBS Schoolbreak Special "Flour Babies" in 1990, the idea of students being assigned fake babies has been spoofed numerous times. The winner for best spoof goes to the Strangers with Candy episode "A Burden's Burden" in which Jerri and her classmates are assigned actually babies. There's also the South Park episode "Follow That Egg" that manages to tackle both gay marriage and child custody battles when the kids are given eggs and told to treat them like real babies.
Continue reading Everybody Hates Chris: Everybody Hates Eggs
Posted Nov 28th 2006 9:47AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Everybody Hates Chris, The CW
(S02E09) It seems the shows I review have been somewhat light in the plot department this week. Sunday's episode of The Simpsons felt like it could have been stronger, and this most recent episode of Everybody Hates Chris centered around Chris and a pair of ugly (but lucky) socks.
Continue reading Everybody Hates Chris: Everybody Hates Superstition
Posted Oct 23rd 2006 10:10PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Everybody Hates Chris, The CW
(S02E04)
Chris Rock: Who knew the secret for a guy getting girls was for a guy to get a girl?
I have a friend who came up with the somewhat gauche term "girlfriend stink" to describe that air of confidence a guy has when he's in a relationship that suddenly makes him attractive to women who normally would want nothing to do with him. Chris finds out what that's all about when rumors start to circulate around the neighborhood that he and Tasha, the new girl next door, are dating. Chris figures as long as he responds to every query with "hey, well, you know..." he's safe, since it's a noncommittal answer, but really he just doesn't want anyone to think he's a loser who can't get any girls. Apparently he doesn't realize he's the star of a sitcom about how much it sucks to be a teenager.
Continue reading Everybody Hates Chris: Everybody Hates a Liar
Posted Oct 17th 2006 10:45AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Everybody Hates Chris, The CW
(S02E03) This episode, in which Chris runs for class president, borrowed plenty of quotes from famous speeches about race and race relations. Chris tells his best friend and campaign manager Greg he plans to beat Joey Caruso "by any means necessary," a clever nod to Malcolm X. Later, during a Q&A with the school body Caruso answers every question with a variation of Alabama governor George Wallace's infamous "segregation today, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever" line from his 1963 inaugural speech. When asked what flavor of Jello should be in the cafeteria, he answers: "grape today, grape tomorrow, grape forever." When asked about handicap access, he just repeats the quote with "ramps" in place of "grapes." After swiping the speech Greg wrote for Chris and presenting it as his own at a school assembly, Caruso rattles off quotes from both Martin Luther King and Jesse Jackson, a stark contrast to his own racist outlook.
Continue reading Everybody Hates Chris: Everybody Hates Elections
Posted Apr 21st 2006 9:48AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, UPN, Everybody Hates Chris
Last night's episode of Everybody Hates Chris focused on a
sibling rivalry between Chris and his younger brother Drew, who is better than Chris in everything that matters to
young teenage boys, especially fighting and getting girls. Jealous, Chris decides to enroll in a karate class,
where his instructor informs the class that karate is about learning ways to kill people, and then not doing
it.
I grew up with two siblings, an older sister and a younger brother, and all three of us were so radically different
in our personalities and interests that there was never any real jealously between us. I couldn't really empathize with
Chris' desire to do something better than his little brother, but I do remember wanting to take karate at a young age.
My reason for wanting this, as is the case for most boys, was so I could beat the living crap out of anyone who tried
to beat me up at school. I never did take lessons, but I did develop my own form of karate which involved placing one
foot in front of the other, and using this motion to propel myself quickly in the opposite direction of my
assailant.
Continue reading Everybody Hates Chris: Everybody Hates Drew