Today's "30 Rock" review, plus some "30 Rock" news

| | Comments (1)

Entertainment Weekly's website is reporting that "Mad Men" star Jon Hamm will appear in a multi-episode arc of "30 Rock" as a potential love interest for Tina Fey's Liz Lemon. So that's two Emmy-winning series Hamm's got notched on his belt, and this pretty seriously erases Liz's lovable loser persona, and it looks like the TV gods are smiling down upon us.

35348_384x288_generated__uMkJrxgVQUS-MYnjxFGqeA.jpg 2442840165_40157d491e.jpg


(Cute couples of our time.)

Oh, and those suffering from "Mad Men" withdrawal symptoms may want to know that "The Simpsons" parodies the show's opening title sequence in Sunday's episode, with Homer standing in for Don Draper. It's not much, but it's better than nothing.

So anyway, the "30 Rock" review:

A strange and distressing thing has happened to NBC during "30 Rock's" tenure on its airwaves. When it debuted, it was one of the network's least-watched (if most-acclaimed) shows, drawing five or six or maybe seven million viewers.

We'll soon see how it does as the show enters its third season, having recently won its second Outstanding Comedy Series Emmy and stoked by the heat of show creator Tina Fey's beloved impressions of Sarah Palin. But even if it doesn't budge from its earlier numbers, no big deal - most NBC shows these days draw such low ratings numbers.

As "30 Rock" commences season three, Liz Lemon (Fey) is determined to adopt a baby, while Jack (the hilariously seething series MVP Alec Baldwin) has returned from his ignominious time in Washington to try to get his job back from Devon Banks (Will Arnett), about whom he kvetches, "He's a party boy with a grown man's job" (a not-so-shadowy reference to NBC Entertainment co-chairman Ben Silverman, reinforced by Banks' propensity for blowing off meetings).

rock.jpg

Meanwhile, Jenna (Jane Krakowski) is feeling slighted because she hasn't been paid for her participation in Tracy's (Tracy Morgan) wildly popular videogame, which he calls "the most profitable thing since the war on terror." So when the uptight and inappropriate representative from Liz's adoption agency (Megan Mullally) shows up to take in the conditions of Liz's workplace, the only possible outcome is disaster.

Next week, Oprah Winfrey appears as herself - well, sort of - as Liz meets her on a plane and falls apart. Meanwhile, Jack must deal with a disgruntled Olympic tetherball athlete: "We staged several events so that Americans would win more medals," Jack explains; one of the losers is threatening to go public.

Kenneth the Page (Jack McBrayer) is scandalized: "Was any of it real?" he asks, distraught, of NBC's Olympics coverage. "Beer pong, jazzercize, women's soccer?" Jack is forced to teach the upright Kenneth a lesson in situational ethics.

"30 Rock" remains a giddily entertaining show - cartoonish and outsized one moment, bracingly and witheringly smart the next. There are withering inside-baseball jokes for those who understand the TV industry and broadly silly gags for those who don't.

And as NBC's fortunes continue to wane, it's at this point the network's grandest achievement, engaging in self-mockery even as the once-proud peacock sheds the feathers in its cap.

- "30 Rock:" 9:30 tonight, NBC (Channel 4).

1 Comments

addison said:

The set designs and costumes are great, and they really seem to capture the era they represent very well, but the acting and story lines leave much to be desired.catch all episodes from here Watch Mad Men Free

About this blog

david-kronke.jpgDavid Kronke was appointed Mayor of Television after a bloodless coup in 2000. Since then, he has improved infrastructure, championed greater educational opportunities and fought for reforms that have utterly erased corruption and incompetence from the television industry. Since Mr. Kronke has ascended to power, Television is a far better place.

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by David Kronke published on October 30, 2008 2:48 PM.

Barack Obama's landslide victory over the competition (in TV ratings, at least) was the previous entry in this blog.

Don't boo "The Simpsons"' latest "Treehouse of Horror" is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Powered by Movable Type 4.25

Advertisement

Other blogs