Time: Wednesday, 9:00-10:00pm
Cast: Matthew Morrison, Jane Lynch, Jayma Mays, Lea Michele, Cory Monteith, Amber Riley, Chris Colfer, Kevin McHale, Dianna Agron, and many more...
Creator: Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuck, Ian Brennan
Summary: To put it quite simply, this is a show about the Glee club in a fairly typical (though slightly insane) high school in America. Will Schuester, a Spanish teacher and former Glee member, is trying to restore Glee to its former glory (his idea, not mine) by coaching them to win Nationals. Meanwhile the high school hierarchy is conspiring against him to try to make him realize that, no matter what Glee does, they're still going to be the geeks of the school.
Review: You know how sometimes a show is just so absurd you can't stand it? The characters seem forced instead of funny, the plot makes you roll your eyes and look away, and the jokes fall completely flat? Well, that's not Glee.
Think about it: they created a show about a high school Glee club. I'm looking forward to its spin-offs, the Marching Band and the Chess Club. But, unlike Drumline--where the marching band was considered the cool thing to be a part of--Glee has much more realistic portrayal of its members. In other words, they're geeks.
That may be what I appreciate most of this new show, this one inch of realism in what is otherwise an absurdly hilarious program. Yes, kids who did Glee in high school were considered dorks. They ranked somewhere above the marching band and somewhere below the soccer team (because, even though soccer is a popular sport everywhere else in the world, Americans scorn it for reasons no one's ever been particularly clear about). Glee understands that. This show doesn't make the Glee club out to be the coolest thing since Justin Timberlake split from N*Sync. And if anyone thinks differently, there are football players and cheerleaders (aptly called the Cheerios) who are more than willing to put them in their place.
Other than this smidgen of reality, however, Glee tries really hard to make everything else... completely implausible. Let's start with Sue Sylvester, the head coach of the Cheerios. Sue is mean. Very, very mean. She likes to win, and she doesn't care who she runs over in the process. She doesn't seem to care thar she's working with children. In fact, she doesn't even seem to LIKE children. No real principal would ever let her stay employed.
Then there's Will Schuester, the main character. Will is probably the only somewhat normal person, and even that's stretching it a little. Will is a Glee-club graduates who's trying to relive his high school glory days--back when Glee was cool. I don't know when exactly Glee was cool, but Will seems to think it was, and he's trying to get it back to that status. Good luck with that.
Meanwhile, his wife--who is probably the most psychotic character on the show (and that's saying something)--is pregnant. And instead of cutting back on expenses in preparation for the really expensive bundle of joy they're expecting, she pressures Will to quit Glee and get a better job to support her in the manner to which she hopes one day to become accustomed.
And then there's Emma, the OCD guidance counselor who's in love with Will. There's not really much more that needs to be said about her. That pretty much sums it up.
As for students, well, they're certainly... diverse. There's Rachel, who believes she's the only good singer in the Glee club. There's Finn, the high school quaterback who Will blackmails into becoming a singer as well. His girlfriend Quinn (yes, Finn and Quinn... say that five times fast), who's the head Cheerio and never (I mean, never) takes her uniform off. She and Finn are also the co-Presidents of McKinley High School's chastity club. And there's effeminate Kurt; tough, gutsy Mercedes; stuttering Tina; crippled Artie; and a ton more. I couldn't list them all if I tried.
Long (long, long) story short: this is definitely a show to check out. It takes stereotypes and enhances them to the point of hilarity. It is absurd, but in the best way possible. For a change, absurdity actually makes the show funnier. The characters all have their annoying quirks, but there's a little something about (almost) all of them that makes them really lovable despite their faults. Plus, there's singing in every episode (this episode had a really great version of Don't Stop Believing by Journey). And, really, what isn't made better by a musical number?
Rating (this episode):
[1] Run in the other direction
[2] Don't bother
[3] Worth a watch if you've got nothing better to do
[4] Definitely try it out
[5] A total keeper
[1] Run in the other direction
[2] Don't bother
[3] Worth a watch if you've got nothing better to do
[4] Definitely try it out
[5] A total keeper