Community, S03E14
The conclusion of Abed and Troy's epic pillow fort battle was told to us in a mock documentary style, narrated by Keith David. There seemed to be no reasoning with the two commanders of Blanketsburg and Pillowtown, even with Jeff's weakest attempts. In fact, Jeff was content to stay on the sidelines, texting and occasionally giving speeches to the two sides to prolong the battle as long as possible to keep himself out of class. Thanks to Annie, he gradually changed his position to be neutral and tried to get the two friends to reconcile. Meanwhile, Pierce was battling Chang's army of kids, and Shirley was knocking down as many people as she could with her mighty pillow attacks. It was Jeff who got Abed and Troy to eventually put down their pillows, but it was them losing their chance to get the world record that made the rest of the "soldiers" throw in the towel (or blanket, if you will).
Hearing Keith David's voice and watching the format of this episode, made me feel like I was back in class for a minute. I really enjoyed that since they were mapping out Greendale like a real battlefield. The serious way that they presented the story emphasized how little meaning the fight had at all. It was easier to laugh at it, instead of getting annoyed about how Troy and Abed were acting like kids who just needed to make up already.
I particularly liked that the narrator was making fun of Greta's photographing skills. He made a good point that just because it's in black and white, doesn't mean that it's good. Greta's pictures looked like the stuff people take by mistake from their pockets with their camera phones. He gave her credit for capturing the moment that Abed and Troy became one again, but she just got lucky when she was trying to get the light hitting off of a stack of pancakes. What?? Who takes pictures like that?? I loved the stupidity.
What I didn't love was the cheap shots that Abed and Troy were making on each other. Abed wrote an email that listed all of Troy's weaknesses, making it seem like he didn't have an ounce of respect for him or his feelings. Troy, in return, told Abed that Troy was his only hope for a friend because no one else would have the patience. They were being so mean to each other! The worst kind of mean where it's nothing but the ugly truth. But I guess it's good they got some things off their chest. A friendship without any arguments sounds a little too good to be true (even for TV).
Usually, when Jeff comes to "save the day," it just makes me roll my eyes. But this time, when he used Abed and Troy's child-like nature to prove they valued their friendship, I thought he was sweet. I mean, he didn't just pretend to put their friendship hats on them again, he went back to the dean's office, pretended to find them, fixed them, and then brought them back to place on their heads. Way to go above and beyond, Jeff. He may never stop being self-centered, but he does care about his friends on some level. Even if Annie needs to push him (though, I feel like he's always trying to please her because he wants to date her), he'll eventually get it through his thick skull what the right thing is to do.
On a random note that I meant to mention last time, it's pretty annoying that Subway is sponsoring Community. Advertising on shows is nothing new, but I absolutely hate it when it's so obvious (an example that comes to mind is recent episodes of Psych where they practically have a commercial within an episode). I suppose now with Subway being a part of the cafeteria, we will have to see a glimpse of their brand in every episode now. Boo. It might be necessary for funding or whatever, but can't we make these things subtle?? Ugh. I'm not going to go to Subway because I like this show.
Anyway, as long as Troy and Abed got back together (and we got to see them doing their routine extra at the end of the episode--pledge drive), I liked the episode. I wish their battle was a little more exciting and less of a joke, frankly. It was good, but it could have been better (I'm shooting for the stars because the paintball episodes were so good). Also, I liked how it ended with Jeff talking with the narrator and him asking if he was in The Cape. The narrator pauses and says no, but we know that Keith David surely was. Good ending to a good episode.
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