jaime_weinman
09-20-2002, 11:04 PM
Since this was the episode chosen for discussion...
"Real Families" was definitely ahead of its time. Not the format (the idea of doing a sitcom episode as a mock-documentary started with M*A*S*H's "The Interview"), but the idea of a sitcom making fun of -- and even attacking -- television itself. The whole episode is a half-hour essay on how television distorts and manipulates and how nothing is "real" on television. And it even takes aim at sitcoms in that scene where the Tarlek family sits like zombies watching a sitcom (which sounds like the kind of insult-heavy sitcom that WKRP is not). Add in Lucille's memorable speech about Little House on the Prairie, and you've got a very media-savvy episode at a time when TV characters still didn't usually watch TV.
Anyone notice that Herb sort of took over the show in season 3? There are so many episodes that are either about Herb ("Real Families," "Frog Story," "The Painting," "Out To Lunch") or have major Herb subplots ("Hotel Oceanview," "A Mile In My Shoes"). You can see why, of course -- the jerk is always the most fascinating character to write for. Similary Louie kind of took over Taxi at the same time.
Also: As a Canadian, I am kind of foolishly proud that this episode was written by WKRP's token Canadian producer, Peter Torokvei (a former law student in Toronto).
"Real Families" was definitely ahead of its time. Not the format (the idea of doing a sitcom episode as a mock-documentary started with M*A*S*H's "The Interview"), but the idea of a sitcom making fun of -- and even attacking -- television itself. The whole episode is a half-hour essay on how television distorts and manipulates and how nothing is "real" on television. And it even takes aim at sitcoms in that scene where the Tarlek family sits like zombies watching a sitcom (which sounds like the kind of insult-heavy sitcom that WKRP is not). Add in Lucille's memorable speech about Little House on the Prairie, and you've got a very media-savvy episode at a time when TV characters still didn't usually watch TV.
Anyone notice that Herb sort of took over the show in season 3? There are so many episodes that are either about Herb ("Real Families," "Frog Story," "The Painting," "Out To Lunch") or have major Herb subplots ("Hotel Oceanview," "A Mile In My Shoes"). You can see why, of course -- the jerk is always the most fascinating character to write for. Similary Louie kind of took over Taxi at the same time.
Also: As a Canadian, I am kind of foolishly proud that this episode was written by WKRP's token Canadian producer, Peter Torokvei (a former law student in Toronto).