Community

An interview with the dean of “Community”

Dan Harmon, the hit sitcom's creator, talks to Salon about comedy, agony, paintball, "The Simpsons" and "Glee"

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An interview with the dean of "Community" creator Dan Harmon (l) and castmembers Alison Brie and Danny Pudi(Credit: AP/Matt Sayles, NBC)

NBC’s “Community” (Thursdays, 8 p.m./7 Central) is one of the most deceptively light shows on network television — a seeming spoof of pop culture and pop obsessives that’s as densely imagined as the world of “The Simpsons,” and that has a lot more on its mind than movie and TV quotes and self-referential devices. 

Last week I interviewed the show’s creator, Dan Harmon. Our wide-ranging conversation covered many of the expected areas: his sense of humor, his influences, behind-the-scenes production anecdotes, and hints of episodes to come. But it also delved into more elusive and heady issues: the role of pain and humiliation in comedy; the question of how self-referential a show can get without destroying our ability to sympathize with its characters; and the influence of “The Simpsons” and — yes, really — “Gilligan’s Island” on “Community.” It’s also the only interview I’ve ever done with a TV showrunner who casually dropped the word “vestigial.”

Now that we’ve waded into the show’s third season, I wanted to ask you what sort of reaction Season 2 got from the show’s fans. This series is closely watched and obsessively scrutinized.

I guess my perspective on fan reaction is distorted because I don’t scour the Internet for objective appraisals of the show. I pretty much sit on Twitter, which is about 99 percent positive emotional energy slung at you by fans in 140-character bursts. That’s why it feels secure to me, because it balances my self-loathing and fear. I can kind of work in a vacuum. To me the reaction to the second season is about the same as [Season 1], which is people saying “It’s great,” mainly, and one guy per month going, “You’re fat!” and “Your show is stupid!”

If you were asked, “How much of a spoof is this show, or how serious is it?” would you even have an answer?

I don’t suppose I would. It’s not really a spoof of the sitcom format, I guess, because the sitcom format is being as much honored and appreciated by the show as it is sometimes rattled by the show’s energy. If there is a consciousness drawn to the frame around the show, it’s never to suggest that the frame shouldn’t be there. It’s always just making use of the medium. There are a lot of nice things that the format can do for you as a storyteller. I don’t know — the canvas, its paint swirls outward, and then sort of blends with the the frame, and makes it easier for me to accept that this is a two-dimensional thing hanging on the wall.

You guessed it correctly — my answer is boring and pretentious!

Well, not necessarily, though. While rewatching Season 2 in preparation for this interview, I was struck by how in the second season, you seemed to push further and further and further into a kind of self-conscious, metafictional, at times almost abstract kind of direction. And yet it still seemed very sincere. There were moments where I thought, “There is no possible way I can feel anything for these people, because what’s happening has no weight,” then I found myself getting a little choked up at times. It’s strange, that dynamic.

That’s exactly — well, I shouldn’t say the intention, but it’s certainly what I hope will be the case when I’m driving to work. I am constantly assuring people that that can be the case, so they’ll trust me and stuff.

I grew up watching TV. Saying something is TV is like saying it’s a sonnet or a haiku. It’s got its rules, and those rules, when obeyed, are part of what makes the thing beautiful. You use it to communicate to someone. If you say, “This is a sonnet I wrote for you,” then you better not give them a limerick. If you say, “This is a limerick that I wrote for you,” you’re using that medium. This is a sitcom for everybody, and it’s through that medium, the sitcom, that I’m saying, “This is what humanity has been to me, for 38 years.” So yeah, you’re seeing something that is supposed to be kind of alienating and snarky, yet there’s this weird guy behind it all who is saying, “This is how I am communicating with you.” That’s why the show is neither spoof nor humble servant to its medium.

I did “Heat Vision and Jack” in 1999 with Rob Schrab, and that was us going, “We love ‘Knight Rider.’” But a spoof? That’s why we have that word “homage.” Homage means you’re actually worshiping something and obeying it. It can easily be taken as satire, but it’s not satirical.

There’s also a sense in which nothing that happens on this show is quote-unquote “real.” The community college where the action takes place obviously doesn’t bear any relation to any community college that has ever existed. A friend of mine was trying to explain to somebody who didn’t like or get the show and found the whole thing totally ridiculous what he believed the show was. And he said, “It’s really science fiction.” This college is real in the way that the island was real on “Gilligan’s Island.”

Right!

Which is to say, it’s not.

That’s a perfect example, “Gilligan’s Island.” Because here’s the thing: We could talk about whether or not the “Cheers” bar was a realistic depiction of a bar, and everybody would understand the difference between TV and reality in that respect, because even the characters’ hair looks nice, and a bar seems like a nice place to be. But then you talk about “Gilligan’s Island” versus reality, and people are turning invisible, and people are swimming in fast motion because they’re trying to get off the island, and reality itself is kind of being disregarded because they’re on Gilligan’s island.

That’s one of the greatest examples of a show that had to create its own system of physics to tether the audience to. The key to its success is the cleanliness [of the writing of] the characters. Mr. Howell was always Mr. Howell, and he was always Mr. Howell in relation to the Skipper, and the Skipper was always the Skipper in relation to Gilligan. So this crystalline pattern is there that you can always, always rely on, just as you could always rely on Charles Schulz’s “Peanuts” characters and Jim Henson’s Muppet characters.

There was a “Cheers” board game that I saw in a Toys R Us once. It made me realize, “Holy shit — if your characters are really, really clean, if you start with cartoons, with icons, the relationships between them become so real, through the dependable cause/effect science of, ‘If I say something mean to you, your feelings are hurt.’”

Yes.

Ginger can hurt Gilligan’s feelings, she can make him feel like a terrible person, and those can be the stakes of an episode. And not only can you do real stories then, in a wacky environment, it makes a statement if you do it in such profound contrast. You find yourself thinking, as you said earlier, “I know I’m not supposed to believe this, and yet I do.” You’re not supposed to believe that Peter Pan is coming in this window and saying, “Come to this place,” but you do. The emotional gravity can tether you, and reality can be a balloon. It’s pretty nuts.

What you’re talking about reminds me of when I was a kid and I would play with stuffed animals or action figures or Tonka Trucks, and imbue them with personalities and have them talk.

Yes.

I might have them be really, strongly at odds with one another, and I would really be feeling it, to the point where it almost became like my own little kid version of acting. That quality of almost-anthropomorphism is there in these characters from “Community.” There are times when I almost feel like you could be doing it as an animated show. It strongly reminds me of early “Simpsons” episodes. That running gag on “The Simpsons” where they won’t tell you where Springfield is. It somehow has mountains and a beach. There’s a canyon there, too. And you just accept it.

That’s exactly the case with Greendale, by the way. It is technically part of the canon that they’re in Colorado somewhere, if I’m not mistaken. The reason for that is, sometimes on-screen you’ll see like, a driver’s license, and because it has to be from a state, we decided to use the state of Colorado, which is just my code for “in the middle of somewhere.”

But I learned from “The Simpsons” to keep that kind of thing somewhat vague. Where is Greendale? It’s down the street from your house. Why put it anywhere more specific? That’s from “The Simpsons.” And those characters being dependable, growing the universe outward from a simple family … and of course, the timing of the comedy! You had these really great Harvard Lampoon writers who were suddenly unshackled to write setups and punch lines and deliver them with scientific precision, because the characters were being drawn for them. There’s a whole generation of comedy writers that’s basing its sense of timing on that one animated show.

There were times in the second season when it seemed as though you were pushing into more serious territory. Philosophical and at times almost cosmological territory. My favorite was probably the “Pulp Fiction” episode. But I was rewatching the two paintball episodes — “A Fistful of Paintballs” and “For a Few Paintballs More” — that ended Season 2, and those seemed to have some of those qualities, too.

A ll the other flights of fancy on the other somewhat experimental episodes are anchored to something tangible — it’s a fantasy, it’s a reflection of one character’s internal state, what have you. But there is no rational, scientific explanation for why, in those two episodes, the “Community” universe has totally changed and the show has suddenly become a hard-edged action movie, or why there’s a super-villain in an ice cream cone costume giving the orders to attack the heroes. And at a certain point you’re like, “Why is he still wearing the suit?” It started out as a disguise, but after a certain point he doesn’t have to wear a disguise anymore. But he’s still wearing it!

[Laughs] Right! He chooses to keep wearing the suit. That’s the funny thing about people on TV — they can kind of choose to be insane, because it helps them to create an insane reality.

You almost got into Luigi Pirandello territory with the “Pulp Fiction” episode. And in the paintball episodes, there were some pretty profound personal issues being worked out between Chevy Chase’s character, Pierce Hawthorne, and the other characters in the study group, and the working-out just happened to occur in this kind of skewed universe that was like a spaghetti western in the first episode and a sci-fi war movie in the second.

Well, it’s definitely not that way because I ever come to work in the morning thinking, “I want to do an episode of television that changes the way people think or feel about everything!” I take my job as a pacifier of an existing society very seriously. I first want to make people comfortable and entertained. I don’t want to subvert their consciousness at all.

But then what happens is, stories are about people changing. They are about people realizing things and revealing things to each other. That has to feel a little profound, relative to the characters. So what we end up doing is taking our job as storytellers seriously, and saying [to each other], “This should feel as if something new is happening to this character.”

In order to do that with a character like Abed, who is so smart — and so on-the-same-level as the writers, and perhaps in some ways above them — now you have to become cosmological, because it’s the only way to tell a story in which a character like Abed becomes revelatory.

It’s just us trying to mine our salt. Sometimes it takes on an artistic air by definition.

Role-playing seems to be a very important aspect of all the episodes to some degree. Oftentimes, during the regular course of business in any given episode, the characters will be asked to pretend to be something that they would not otherwise think of themselves as being. And the upshot of that is, you get to see the actors try on different personas. In the “Pulp Fiction” episode, there were a couple of points where Danny Pudi actually seemed to be channeling Andre Gregory’s performance in “My Dinner With Andre,” while at the same time remaining recognizably Abed.

Yeah! And that’s really interesting to see.

That’s the one Emmy snub that hurt the hardest. I’m pretty sure we submitted that episode hoping that Danny would be considered for supporting actor.

You’d probably have to be a pretty hardcore fan of the show to even know this, but that performance is not just about Abed putting on a mask and being good at doing an imitation for the length of an episode. In that episode, you can actually track, by percentages, the changes, and see that by the middle of the episode he’s starting to be about 50 percent Abed and 50 percent Andre Gregory. And then you see him be 70 percent, and then 90 percent, and then suddenly 0 percent Andre Gregory! That’s pretty astounding to watch.

It is. And I think viewers are so knocked out by what’s happening with Abed that they may not notice that something similarly deep is happening to Joel McHale’s character, Jeff Winger, at that dinner. He discloses a level of insecurity and self-loathing to Abed that’s rather alarming.

We agonized over that. Well, I shouldn’t say agonized, because that’s the wonderful thing about story structure — you know there’s always an answer to any problem you have, and once you find it, it kind of relieves the pressure from you. But it could be backbreaking work, trying to figure out the criss-cross at that dinner table. I think we did a good job of finding that [moment for Jeff].

But more important, we were sending [pages] down to that set, and I don’t know how [the director] Richard Ayoade and Joel McHale and Danny Pudi — the three-member team that was at the center of that episode — managed to operate almost completely independently of the writers who were writing Abed’s “Cougar Town” monologue a thousand yards away in a stinky room.

Richard and I communicated a lot before he started shooting, and a little bit afterward. But during, he was just making one piece of this thing. He and Joel and Danny Pudi really saved my bacon on that episode.

Are there any rules that absolutely have to be observed during the writing of an episode, or any lines that cannot be crossed? Or is anything fair game?

In point of fact, we often stumble across things. We will realize all of a sudden that we’ve been thinking in terms of rules, and we take that opportunity to stop, during that moment, and ask ourselves why those things are rules.

I hope the statute of limitations on offending people has run out on this, because I need to give a particular example, which is that the first season’s paintball episode was the end result of a conversation that began with a thought experiment asking the very question that you just asked me.

I said, “Take the top no-no. Is it possible to do a Columbine episode? Is it possible to have shootings in a school? Is there a way to get away with that without offending anybody?” And then somebody said, “Well, paintball would be an example.” The thought experiment ended there, but that’s where the question led us. That conversation led there.

I think those conversations are important from a Norman Lear perspective, too, because a lot of the stuff you’re not allowed to do, doing maybe 20 percent of it might lead to some kind of social revelation or something, I don’t know.

Again, that’s not our job. But, I think that you have to ask yourself what the rules are, and why they’re there, in order to shore the ones up that are important, and get rid of the ones that have become vestigial.

Might one of those rules be that characters in a comedy cannot suffer too much real, extreme physical pain?

I don’t think that’s an unbreakable rule.

There is a school of thought that says that agony is the enemy of light comedy.

There is something behind the statement you’re suggesting that is absolutely true. We don’t want to just watch pain and feel like we’re just watching it. But the fact that we don’t want to watch pain means that we need to turn away from it, which in turn means that energy could be tapped into, and somehow manipulated to make you believe that a character is real.

When Dick van Dyke comes into his living room and flips over the ottoman, we don’t call that pain anymore. But there was a time when people tripping on shit and falling down was an easy way to make people laugh. They’re falling down and scraping their knee and stuff — it became a comedic device. It became slapstick. You can make the audience like a character by having them be clumsy, because we have all been in situations beyond our control, and you can identify with a character who’s hurting, who’s getting dumped for no reason, or smacking their head on a doorway, or tripping in front of the president.

But if you’re talking about waterboarding, or having a character have nails driven through his skin, how can you turn that into comic gold? I’m not sure that you can. But you never know.

Have there been any ideas for episodes that were abandoned because they were either too complicated in terms of their imagining, or too expensive to stage?

That’s a good question. I’ve never been asked that before.

I thought of this while watching the paintball episodes, where it looked as though you covered your whole existing set in these Jackson Pollock paint splatters. Also the “Abed’s Uncontrollable Christmas” episode, which was stop-motion animated, a very different type of production from what you usually do.

Yeah — that kind of stuff is totally expensive.

I’m trying to think of something we thought of, only to realize, “We can’t do that until we have more resources.” The only thing I can think of is to do a “Glee” type of episode, and be able to do it sufficiently, including doing these outrageously expensive, real pop music covers. We could never get that done. They have a machine over there [at "Glee"] that is designed to succeed at that. And we could never do it. If I thought I could wave a magic wand and do an episode that was kind of like what they do on “Glee,” I’m one of the many people in this town that would immediately do it.

Have you ever considered something like that? In the flashbacks-that-weren’t-really-flashbacks episode, there was a musical interlude that I liked pretty well, and that I hoped would go on longer than it did.

Well, I may have a little surprise for you this year. You never know.

Are you talking about the musical bit that opened the Season 3 premiere? Or do you have something more elaborate planned down the line?

Something else planned down the line.

Alison Brie: Buttoned-up sex bomb

Why the "Community" star is television's baddest good girl

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Alison Brie: Buttoned-up sex bombActress Alison Brie attends a special screening of "The Decision", a short film promoting the John Frieda Precision Foam Colour hair product at LAVO on Tuesday, March 22, 2011 in New York. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini)(Credit: Evan Agostini)

She didn’t snag an Emmy nomination Thursday — despite being in the cast of both a beloved comedy and a critically acclaimed drama series. But “Community” and “Mad Men’s” Alison Brie is nonetheless having a swell week. 

First, a clip of her doing a rocking karaoke duet of “Total Eclipse of the Heart”  last month with Emily Blunt in Ann Arbor, Mich., went viral, proving her adorable shamelessness knows no bounds. Then GQ answered America’s prayers and served up a black lingerie-clad Brie getting spanked with the business end of a hairbrush by her “Community” costar Gillian Jacobs.  Take that, Betty White. 

What is it about the fresh-faced Brie that makes her such a standout? Well, the looks don’t hurt. Like Katy Perry, she’s got the kind of doe eyes and formidable rack that would make a manga character jealous.  But more than that, Brie isn’t just another hot chick lucky enough to land on a sitcom. 

In her relatively short career, the 27-year-old actress has managed to carve out a distinctive niche for herself as the most winningly uptight woman on television. On “Mad Men,” her buttoned-up Park Avenue princess, Trudy Campbell — the Charlotte York of the Beatles era — has dazzling, youthful spark, touching naiveté and, increasingly, deep wells of inner strength. But it’s on “Community,” as the studiously “irony-free” Annie Edison, a woman who boasts, “I like being repressed! I am totally comfortable with being uncomfortable with my sexuality!” that Brie really shines. Troy and Abed may get all the attention, but Annie is the show’s most reliably warped scene-stealer. 

In letting her often exasperating characters fall just shy of unlikable, Brie somehow manages to make them vulnerable and real and eminently appealing. How can you not love a lady whose “Community” back story of losing her virginity to a gay man, in a closet, to the strains of Madonna’s “Erotica,” was based on a mortifying incident from Brie’s own freewheeling college years?  That she’d turn her sexual disaster into a comic bit is hilarious, that it happened in the first place is close to brilliant. 

What makes Brie fantastic is her unique knack for being smart, sexy and utterly weird at the same time. She brings to mind Susan Sarandon’s Janet Weiss — a woman who’s one part uppity priss, one part wanton sexpot. Few performers of either gender could get away with her commitment to playing both parts so convincingly — and be so wickedly funny while doing it. And though she may not get awards for it, there’s nobody else out there so beautifully comfortable being uncomfortable.

 

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Mary Elizabeth Williams

Mary Elizabeth Williams is a staff writer for Salon and the author of "Gimme Shelter: My Three Years Searching for the American Dream." Follow her on Twitter: @embeedub.

Betty White clones herself for the AARP

An army of "Golden Girls"? We'll take two

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Betty White clones herself for the AARPBetty White for the AARP

Betty White is like the James Franco of older women. At first everyone jumped aboard her popularity train, and then as she became ubiquitous in our pop culture, the backlash began. (Although, unlike Franco, no one can be too mean to White; instead they blamed the media gigs that keep employing her, like “Saturday Night Live” and “Community.”)

This time last year, we were all suffering from a little bit of Betty White fatigue. She was on the Emmys! “Hot in Cleveland”! “Inside the Actor’s Studio”! It was like, we got it, Betty White: You are talented and funny (we can trace this whole thing back to when you called Sarah Palin a crazy bitch in 2008) and have sex appeal, something that only older men like Paul Newman are supposed to have! You’re one in a million!

Well, not quite.

I don’t know what is appealing about this AARP ad; perhaps enough time has gone by that the Betty White effect is no longer as grating as it was last year. Perhaps it’s because the “Being John Malkovichian” elements of the ad seems uniquely tailored to White’s brand of spunky, off-kilter weirdness. Perhaps it’s because you’d never expect to be sending an AARP commercial to all your friends saying, “Watch this video!!”

Whatever it is, let’s just agree that White shouldn’t take it as a sign to do 100 more of them. Why ruin a good thing?

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Drew Grant is a staff writer for Salon. Follow her on Twitter at @videodrew.

Ken Jeong’s CPR infomercial

The "Hangover Part II" star lends a helping hand to a funny, weird PSA that has a little bit of heart

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Ken Jeong's CPR infomercialKen Jeong is "Stayin' Alive."

Ken Jeong has made a name for himself in the past several years with small, hysterical cameos in everything from “Knocked Up” to “The Hangover.” Now on “Community,” Jeong has subsidized his teacher’s income with several commercial spots, most infamously in Adidas spots as “Slim Chin,” a hip-hopping mogul who hangs out with Dwight Howard and Derrick Rose.  Oddly, the official video for the commercial has now been marked “private,” perhaps in response to the swirling controversy around his portrayal of Asian stereotypes

Maybe that’s why Jeong is now starring in infomercials for CPR: As penance for playing up the ethnic card (if you want to call it that), he is now giving people tips on how to save lives with cardiopulmonary resuscitation … the fun way!

I have mixed feelings about this ad: On the one hand, the tone seems a little off-kilter, mixing the madcap antics of Jeong with this deadly serious topic. On the other, Jeong does provide a much-needed service. (People always want to know what to pump to when doing CPR, and after that “Office” episode when Stanley had a heart attack, I know the answer is “Stayin’ Alive.”)

What do you think? Is this new CPR spot more manic than helpful?

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Drew Grant is a staff writer for Salon. Follow her on Twitter at @videodrew.

Your guide to “Community” pop culture references

Slide show: From "The Iliad" to "Scooby-Doo" -- we explain the obscure jokes on TV's most meta show

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Your guide to

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Out of all the shows on NBC’s Thursday night lineup, “Community” may be the smartest. No offense to Tina Fey or Amy Poehler, but Dan Harmon’s show about Greendale College is so rife with pop culture references that it’s impossible to get most of them in one sitting.

And with tonight’s first half of the season finale showing us exactly what happened to “Lost’s” Sawyer after he left the island (apparently he became a paintball expert), I’m expecting nothing short of 10 meta-layers of insider jokes that I won’t get until I look them up on Google. In the meantime, enjoy this slide show that encompasses my favorite wink-wink/nudge-nudge culture jokes from “Community’s” second season. There’s doubtlessly more: Please leave all the ones you think of in the comments!

 

View the slide show

Drew Grant is a staff writer for Salon. Follow her on Twitter at @videodrew.

“My Community Pulp Fictional Dinner with Andre”

TV's most pop culture-obsessed comedy disappears into its own navel -- and creates a work of art

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COMMUNITY -- "Critical Film Studies" Episode 218 -- Pictured: (l-r) Yvette Nicole Brown as Shirley/"Jules", Gillian Jacobs as Britta/"Mia", Ken Jeong as Chang/"Butch", Alison Brie as Annie/"Yolanda" -- Photo by: Lewis Jacobs/NBC(Credit: Lewis Jacobs)

Last night’s “Community” — aptly titled “Critical Film Studies” — was art. And art about art. And entertainment about entertainment. And a free-ranging conversation about the value of stories. The episode was “Pulp Fiction” metafiction wrapped in “My Dinner With Andre.” It had a monologue about being and nothingness and “Cougar Town,” references to Quentin Tarantino and Louis Malle, a fire gag and a poop joke, Ken Jeong in a skullcap and Chevy Chase in a fetish outfit. (Bring out The Gimp!) It was the most self-aware, self-reflexive half-hour I’ve seen on a broadcast network since the “Simpsons” episode “The Itchy and Scratchy and Poochie Show.” But it improved on that classic in one important respect: Even as it folded and refolded itself, morphing from analytical to sincere and back again, it focused on characters we’ve grown to know and love, and scrutinized two of them with such compassion that it made them seem more real than ever.  

Advance publicity sold “Critical Film Studies” as ‘The ‘Pulp Fiction’ episode of ‘Community.’” Period. In retrospect, that seems as playfully misleading as the opening title card of “Pulp Fiction,” a dry definition of pulp fiction (the literary genre) that the film transcended within minutes. You knew “Community” was zigging instead of zagging when Jeff (Joel McHale) walked into a fancy restaurant to meet Abed (Danny Pudi) for a pre-surprise-party dinner. Instead of Dick Dale or Kool and the Gang or some other bone-crushingly obvious Tarantino cue, the soundtrack offered naturalistic voice-over backed by solo piano: the opening of Malle’s “Andre” reimagined via “Community.” After briefly cutting away to the “Pulp Fiction” party guests, the episode returned to Jeff and Abed in the restaurant … and stayed there … and stayed there. Abed’s monologue about his epiphany (ultimately non-epiphany) on the set of “Cougar Town” was a riff on one of Andre Gregory’s monologues from “Andre.” But it was also a totally unexpected yet spot-on observation that Quentin Tarantino and Louis Malle, who are about as different as two directors could be, are united by their belief that talk isn’t a substitute for action, but a form of action. 

Casually rejecting Jeff’s gift of a souvenir replica of Jules’ “Bad Motherfucker” wallet from “Pulp Fiction,” Abed said he’d decided to quit pop culture cold-turkey and live in the real world. “The girl says, ‘Now, when you hear ‘action,’ I want you to walk from here to there,’” says Abed. He goes on:

“That’s when I really started to panic, Jeff, because … If I’m a person that watches ‘Cougar Town,’ how can I be in ‘Cougar Town’? The more I start thinking about it, the less any of it makes any sense at all. And I just want to turn and run, but it’s too late, because the director’s calling ‘Action.’ So, before I take my first step, I realize that I have to stop being someone who’s ever seen this show, and become a character on the show … become a man from ‘Cougar Town.’”

Abed tried to get into character (as Jules urged Vincent to do in “Pulp Fiction”!) by devising a name for his “extra” character: Chad. But in creating a back story for Chad (like a writer fleshing out a character), Abed had a chilling realization:

“Chad had lived, Jeff. Chad had lived more than Abed … And then they called ‘cut,’ and the scene was over. But I wasn’t ready to stop being Chad.”

The tale is an existential freakout that ends with the narrator soiling himself.

At this point we might w0nder, if only for an instant: Is Abed changing? Is he becoming someone else — someone more evolved and mature and connected to the world?

Of course not — and if you consider the double entendre built into Abed’s “Cougar Town” tale, you can see where the episode will end. When Abed expunges all that pop culture — all that shit — from his system, he doesn’t just void his bowels, he voids himself. Abed’s fixation on pop culture is  the realest part of Abed, the center of his life. Get rid of it, and you get rid of Abed.

This is “Community”-style, inside-out, metafictional pretzel logic at its finest. Only by entering the make-believe narrative of a pop culture touchstone could Abed realize the emptiness of a life that revolved around pop culture touchstones. “Who needs any pop culture whatsoever?” Abed asks Jeff. “TV, movies — to hell with all of it … This is the first birthday of my new life.”

But not really. The monologue turned out to be a piece of a larger fakeout — part of Abed’s strategy to make Jeff’s would-be surprise party one aspect of another, hidden surprise party, and re-create another of Abed’s favorite films, “My Dinner With Andre,” as a birthday gift to himself. The episode ended with another homage to “Andre,” scored to that film’s closing credits music: Erik Satie’s “Gymnopedie No. 1.” The cue was inevitable and perfect. But considering how deftly writer Sona Panos and director Richard Ayoade pulled the rug out from under the viewer, the episode could have ended with Scott Joplin’s “The Entertainer.”

Abed’s non-epiphany on the “Cougar Town” set had a sly corollary in the cutaways to the other study group members awaiting Abed. Troy (Donald Glover) stared in awe at a replica of the briefcase from “Pulp Fiction,”a prop that was itself an homage to one of Tarantino’s favorite films, “Kiss Me Deadly” (an homage to an homage to an homage). Then he opened the briefcase and revealed its contents: a certificate of authenticity and a light bulb. The light bulb set the certificate of authenticity on fire and destroyed it.

The briefcase was later revealed as a fake — but the episode established that the singularity of the prop didn’t matter. What mattered was that Jeff cared enough about Abed to spend money on what he thought was the actual briefcase from “Pulp Fiction.”

 Abed and Jeff’s restaurant conversation wasn’t about “Pulp Fiction,” or “Cougar Town,” the ”Community” characters’ fondness for one work or another. It was about the desires and fears that drive people to fixate on “Pulp Fiction,” or “My Dinner With Andre,” or any other piece of entertainment that centers your personality and helps shape a shapeless existence.

If Quentin Tarantino saw this half-hour of NBC comedy (and why wouldn’t he?) I’m sure he was bursting with pride and affection. The makers of “Community” went beyond homage, into understanding. The playful structure, the out-of-nowhere voice-over narration, the languid pacing, the camerawork, the lighting, the deep and circuitous and unexpectedly moving conversations, and most of all the long pauses that Mia Wallace called “comfortable silences,” were Tarantino-esque — but not just in the obvious, imitative sense. They were Tarantinoesque because, like Tarantino at his best, they absorbed and transformed borrowed material into something that was meaningful not just to the filmmaker, but to the characters who were making the references. The characters weren’t just referencing films and TV shows. They were divulging truths about themselves — often painful truths, such as Jeff’s confession that he called phone sex hotlines posing as a morbidly obese man because he feared that if he wasn’t handsome, no one would like him. That’s as real as fake can get.

In a March 8 column, I described “Community” as an example of “footnote comedy” — comedy so dependent on pop culture references (often at the expense of character and story) that future generations might find it more mystifying than involving. “Critical Film Studies” aside, that’s an accurate  description of “Community” — in its second season, anyway. The show’s array of references is vast yet shallow, a wading pool the size of Lake Superior.

But its twee tendencies are redeemed by great virtues: wit, confidence, formal invention and, most of all, a willingness to root its allusions in character and story, and bring everything back to friendship and feeling. (The briefcase Jeff bought for Abed was a fake, but their friendship is real; that realness gave the fake prop real value.) The series also believes (like many postmodern works) that the question of fakeness vs. realness or disposability vs. durability is a false one — that if a work has something interesting to say, and says it with intelligence, creativity and conviction, then it is by definition substantive and lasting, regardless of how it’s made or what it’s made of. To quote Vincent Vega, that’s a bold statement, but last night’s episode of “Community” made it with such conviction that I wouldn’t presume to argue. “Critical Film Studies” was “Community” at its most stubbornly original. It dove deep into its own navel and found authenticity.

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