Alcohol Studies, the Sandy Five, & a riot over Obama
Tag Archives: Modern Family
Three stereotypes walk into a diner…
Are walking ethnic clichés better than no clichés in sitcoms?
Babies are taking over television
As actors, they’re notoriously obstreperous, but babies are television’s hottest stars
Introducing…
Newsmaker entrances
The Emmys: Accent on Youth
Finally some “new blood”; but not of the ‘True Blood’ variety
Daddy knows best
More and more gay men are having children, and a new study shows they are very good at ‘mothering’
Someone give Glenn Close a hug
Today the popular shows, like ‘Parenthood,’ are sweet and mushy, not mean like ‘Damages’
Who on earth are they talking to?
The hit show ‘Modern Family’ never bothers to explain who’s interviewing the characters
Community > Modern Family
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Second and First Episodes
The data from ABC’s attempt to build a comedy night: good ratings for Modern Family in its second week, a larger decline (but still pretty good numbers) for Cougar Town, and the “Back To You Twins” — Kelsey Grammer’s Hank and Patricia Heaton’s The Middle — won’t last long. The upshot seems to be that, as expected, Modern Family has the most hit potential out of this group; it’s got a durable format, a good team and, most importantly, it has something resembling a breakout character who can forge interesting, unusual comedy relationships with other characters. I’m talking, of course, about Ty Burrell’s Cool Dad character. His “why the face?” immediately became the big catchphrase of the pilot, and the choice of “The Bicycle Thief” as the second episode may have had something to do with the fact that he had a big part in it. (I read somewhere that this was not the second episode in production order and that it was aired second because it would make the strongest impression after the pilot, but I can’t verify that.) In my mammoth sitcom post the other day, I somehow neglected to mention the importance of having at least one character/actor combination that takes off and goes beyond the easy TV stereotypes; Burrell, who makes his character seem weird and lovable rather than pathetic, is that guy.