OPINION

NBC Gets a Little Scrubs and Polish

Written by Josh Lasser
Published April 18, 2008
Part of TV Nights

I'd like to, just for a minute, thank NBC. Last night's comedy lineup was… funny. I didn't laugh out loud a lot, but I did once or twice, and I certainly felt a little jubilant watching the shows. Maybe it was just a little nitrogen narcosis from practicing my scuba diving a little earlier in the evening, but I don't think so (my understanding is that nitrogen narcosis disappears as soon as one goes to a lesser depth).

My Name is Earl didn't feature the titular Earl waking up from his coma, but it managed to be funny nonetheless. The vast majority of the episode took place in the past, when Earl was still in his "very bad things" phase. His father, played by the funny Beau Bridges (who knew?) was present and remembering just how Earl ruined his vacation to American Samoa by stashing a duffel bag full of Mendocino Greeno in his house. While I don't advocate the smoking of Mendocino Greeno (or any of its close relations), simply having it present apparently does make for funny television.

Funnier still was The Office, which is one of the few shows on television that has successfully been able to negotiate the pitfalls of having a will they/won't they romance go to the will they side and, hopefully, stay there. Now that Jim and Pam are together the whole thing feels so… right. That could be because we've known that they were always really together in their souls even if they weren't together in their lives. It makes the transition to actual romance go smoothly. Plus, so much of the best comedy on the show has always come from the two of them working together against someone else, and having their relationship succeed doesn't preclude those comic gems.

And then, Scrubs... ah, Scrubs. It's a show that I've always watched; in fact, I remember watching the pilot for the show back when I was interning on a studio lot one summer. From the first time I saw it I knew that I would continue to watch the show for the course of its run. I do, however, now feel like the show has run its course. There are babies running all over the hospital, Kelso needs to retire, and Cox hasn't had a good outburst in about a season. J.D. and Turk talking every week about how they're older now and have to grow up isn't the same as the two of them actually growing up, and their having children hasn't changed them either (even if they give some lip service to saying that it has).

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Josh Lasser, formerly known as "TV and Film Guy," and complete with a Masters Degree in Critical Studies in said areas, gives his opinions on TV, Film, and Entertainment in general. All of which he does in a shameless attempt to try to get paid to do the exact same thing. Josh is also the editor of the Blogcritics Magazine Television Section.
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NBC Gets a Little Scrubs and Polish
Published: April 18, 2008
Type: Opinion
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Comedy, Video: Television
Part of a feature: TV Nights
Writer: Josh Lasser
Josh Lasser's BC Writer page
Josh Lasser's personal site
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Comments

#1 — April 19, 2008 @ 12:06PM — John C.

Here's my attempt to "stand up" and explain:

Scrubs doesn't NEED to become a massive hit on ABC. It just needs a home for the cult following to watch a proper send off. The same 6.5 million people are going to watch it, even if they aired it on the Food Network. NBC learned this lesson as they single-handedly tried to kill Scrubs for the past 3 years.

An example of a show switching towards the end of it's run is Buffy the Vampire Slayer - which went from the WB to UPN for it's final two seasons. It wasn't a massive hit, but it did well, and allowed a good show some well needed closure.

We're only going to get 11, MAYBE 12 episodes this season on NBC, still 6 or 7 short of what we expected the final season to be. Talk from the set (which has already started writing/filming the "Season 8" episodes) is that ABC will be airing an additional 16 or 17 episodes. That makes Season 7 and Season 8 combined around 28 episodes, which is only really 4 more than any other show would receive in ONE season - such as the Office. It's probably actually less if you factor in those disasterous hour-long Offices.

NBC hasn't really ever treated Scrubs right (to the tune of almost 20 time slot changes), even back when it averaged around 16 million viewers, and a move to ABC could be a breath of fresh air, both for fans of the show, and for loyal ABC viewers who haven't seen a decent comedy in years.

#2 — April 21, 2008 @ 15:26PM — Alice Jester [URL]

Amen, John C, I couldn't agree more. Scrubs deserves a proper send off.

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