The episode opens with Joey crying for Nick to cut him some slack. They’re both exiting the kitchen with Anthony in tow.
Nick says Joey’s grounded, he was caught cheating dead-to-rights on his history assignment, and what other choice does he have? Joey gets caught cheating and Nick still has to explain himself? Since money is really no object to this family, how about sending Joey off to boarding school?
At least Nick tries to strangle him.
Nick says Joey’s grounded, to establish that Nick has the
authority to punish his children, and that sometimes he will. This will be
important later, and it’s another instance of the writers actually doing
something clever with the format, which of course in turn means there will be a
hundred things that make no sense whatsoever.
Anthony tries to play good cop but of course Joey’s such an
annoying puissant that Anthony tries to strangle him, too. I guess the lesson
is, Joey should never be alone with any member of his family.
Blossom and Six storm in through the front door, and Blossom kvetches, “How could I be so dumb?!” Too easy.
Blossom and Six storm in through the front door, and Blossom kvetches, “How could I be so dumb?!” Too easy.
Nick inquires and it turns out a boy named Jason Bickler asked her what time it was and she told him without any kind of follow-up. Even though this was the thing most prescient in Blossom and Six’ heads, they only began talking about it five seconds before entering the house.
Blossom says she should have said something else, to let him know
that she was interested, and that she thinks he’s “really hot.” She slips in a “Don’t
worry, Dad,” casually to Nick, as if this does any kind of damage control.
And now on Saturday night while Six is out with Ricky’s friend, Blossom will be
at home alone like every loser, which immediately spotlights Nick, who says he
hasn’t been dating lately. Man, Blossom doesn’t usually dig herself this deep
so early in an episode. Also, can’t she be remotely happy for her best friend?
The girls go into the kitchen just in time for the phone to
ring. Nick picks it up and it’s Jason Bickler. Blossom and Six bolt upstairs to
take the call, screaming, as though Jason wouldn’t be able to hear this over
the telephone. And how did he get Blossom’s home phone number if they had an
awkward exchange with no follow-up, which was the conflict in the first place?
Pop Culture References: Sex, Lies and Videotape (title)
Pop Culture References: Sex, Lies and Videotape (title)
Blossom and Six get upstairs and Blossom picks up the phone.
She says some bland such-and-such about how “Mr. Farber certainly does make
algebra come alive” (ha) while Six runs back downstairs to make sure Nick hung
up.
When the coast is clear, Jason asks Blossom to a double date
with Ricky and Six, which was never really checked with Six, but about which
everyone involved is thrilled nonetheless.
Down in the kitchen, Nick’s on the phone with someone named
Diane. No problem, he says, he’ll try her again some time. He hangs up the
phone and hangs his head.
Anthony asks if he was shot down again, and Nick says he
doesn’t get it. Diane is a clarinetist he’s been doing session work with for
ten years. They’ve always been flirting but have never been unattached at the
same time, and now they are, but she turned him down anyway. Maybe she heard
how he lets his teenage children have run of the house while he gets advice
from a recovering drug addict. Anthony makes a dumb joke so the scene can end.
Some day later, Six runs into Blossom’s room with big news.
It’s always strange to me when sitcom characters do this, because you really
have to wonder what Six’ interaction with whoever answered the door was. Did
Nick answer the door with Six so excited that she was unable to speak? Actually
that would be pretty funny, so of course we don’t see it.
Blossom assumes they’ve been dumped, you know, because she and Six are annoying
and principled, but it turns out the boys actually want to go to one of Sheila
Osterman’s parties instead. Sheila Osterman’s parents are apparently never home
ever, so all of her parties are makeout parties.
While she mulls it over Blossom has a whole speech about how
daunting this is, because while she has been kissed before, she’s still mostly
inexperienced and has no actual technique. Premeditated kissing is a lot of
pressure, especially at a party known to have something called “The Room” where
all sorts of unspoken rites of passage take place.
It’s so weird how this show picks and chooses what is and isn’t expository. It’s probably a good choice that Blossom has already had her first kiss (because who really wants to see that) but beyond that, the writers choose what else she is and isn’t experienced with based on whatever the story needs at that moment.
Case in point, the girls decide they will go to this party
after all, and rely on the buddy system if the other is in trouble. How will
they explain the change of plans to their parents? “Lie,” they say in unison,
suggesting they’ve done this a million times before.
Blossom and Six head downstairs to go out somewhere which is
not the date in question. Nick is working on a machine of some sort on the nice
family coffee table since there are only two sets on this show, and he stops
them to make conversation. Blossom asks what he’s doing and Nick tells them how
now that he’s blown out the speakers, he’s trying to ruin the tape recorder.
This is supposed to demonstrate Nick’s unconscious vulnerability, now that it’s
established Blossom will be actively lying to him, but did it really have to
involve his occupation? Professional session musicians absolutely must know how to use
their equipment in the real world.
Anyway Nick asks the double daters what movie they’ll be
seeing on Friday, and Six, who along with Blossom is supposed to be showing off
her lying skills for this plot to move forward, bolts out the door in a
completely conspicuous fashion.
Still not consciously aware of the wool getting pulled over
his eyes, Nick nevertheless prods Blossom about the double date. And even
though the previous scene was meant to establish that lying to Nick was something
Blossom had done so many times before that she and Six have a readymade catch phrase for it,
Blossom is uncomfortable the whole time. Especially when Nick says he just
cares about her and this jumps into After School Special territory. There is no
one on this earth he cares about more than Blossom, Nick tells her before she
runs off. Yikes.
Next we’re in an episode of The Phil Donohue Show. This is
kind of interesting, because after researching the topic (God help me) I think this might be the
very first “characters vent their issues through the lens of a real world talk
show” done for a sitcom. This was almost two full years before Fresh Prince’s
“A Night At The Oprah,” which pretty much set the standard, and for the first
time ever Blossom did something that would only be considered cliché after the
fact. To demonstrate the stagnancy of this plot device: Margaret Cho’s
short-lived All-American Girl had a similar episode a few years later that was also called “A Night At The Oprah.”
Anyway Donohue introduces Blossom in a segment called “Women
Who Lie To Their Fathers.” Since this device was done by virtually every other
successful three-camera show of the 90s, you know the drill: the regular
characters are worked into the talk show’s little format moments. Joey calls
in, Six offers testimony from the audience, and Nick is on a TV screen live via
satellite.
Blossom wakes up. It’s also worth noting that since this
plot device was so new at the time, the first few shows that used it had to do so as a no-consequence dream sequence, since the idea that ‘regular’ people
would appear on a talk show was considered too much of a stretch. Which makes
sense in Blossom since this universe would only have us believe that Nick once
received a Little Richard-shaped pepper mill from Little Richard.
At some later point Joey and Anthony Joey says he’s learned
one thing during his time being grounded: that Nick keeps condoms in his sock
drawer.
Blossom enters. Anthony tells Blossom she looks great, and
she most certainly does, like a young Dinah Manoff! Anthony asks where she’s
going, and Blossom says she’s going to the movies. Anthony says those look more
like makeout clothes.
Anthony says in his day, all of five years earlier, a
turtleneck was called a “hide-a-hicky-dickey,” and everyone—Mayim Bialik,
Michael Stoyanov, and the entire studio audience—finds this uncontrollably
hilarious, I guess because of the word “hide.”
After the uncontrollable laughter has died down, Anthony tells
Blossom turtlenecks totes don’t work. Instead of telling her why they don’t
work, Anthony instead turns the conversation toward a time when he came home
with a hicky the size of Maui on his neck, which Maddy noticed. He convinced
her it was a birthmark she never noticed before. Joke? I dunno. I’d say this concludes
Anthony’s advice about the turtleneck, but it actually ended five or six lines
of dialogue ago.
By the way, Blossom says to Anthony, don’t tell Dad she’s
going, because he doesn’t know. Duh, Blossom.
Nick greets Six at the door, and tells Blossom and Six they
both look smashing in their turtlenecks, momentarily suspicious. The machine
that keeps a person being lied to from realizing it flips on as Blossom tells
nick it’s a retro thing.
Hang on a second, Nick commands. Alright, maybe the jig is up.
Nick instead asks if Blossom has that extra money he gave her. And the quarters
in case she needs to use the phone in case of emergency. “Five dollars in
quarters,” Blossom says, shaking her purse, which actually sounds like it has
twenty quarters in there. Because Nick would rather her be slowed down by an
amorphous blob of metal in the event that someone’s chasing her.
Outside the door, Blossom says she feels like a total creep,
and Six says she does, too. Then they look at each other and say, “LET’S
PARTY!” which makes sense because this will never be their attitude the entire
time they are actually at the party in question.
So they get to Sheila Osterman’s house, where kids dressed
in early 90s clothing dance to some unlicensed Saved By The Bell music. I
wonder which contributed more to the death of metal, Bon Jovi or NBC between
the years 1987 and 1992?
Blossom’s date is Johnny Galecki which means a whole lot
because during the production of this episode they had no idea they’d work
together twenty years later.
For some reason Blossom is the alpha in a group that
includes two forward males and her much more outgoing friend. Blossom comments
on the party and whatever. Johnny Galecki asks Blososm if she wants to dance,
and Blossom says she and Six have to go up to the bathroom to bond first. While
this is happening, Six’ date has his hands all over her sweater, which is as
awkward, lifelike, and hilarious.
They go to the bathroom which at a party with a dozen other
teenage girls is somehow unoccupied. The girls pump each other up in a scene that’s actually not
terrible. They’re scared because they’re in a different league now. They do a
breath check; Six’ smells like green Tic-Tacs, and Blossom’s smells like root
beer. Cute.
They head back downstairs and some curtains at the back of
the set lead into black stage space, which for the purposes of the scene is the
entrance to “The Room.” Blossom and Six peek in but can’t see anything.
The boys return even though they were not going anywhere and
the bathroom was occupied, so who knows. Johnny Galecki asks if they want to
sit down. Blossom gets super defensive, saying if they think they’re going in
“there,” meaning "The Room," they’ve got another thing coming. Johnny Galecki tells her to relax for fuck’s
sake, he meant sit down anywhere in the giant living room. Blossom’s a real fun
date.
Back at the Russo residence Nick continues breaking the stereo equipment that’s ostensibly part of his livelihood. The door rings and it’s Diane. I had to check with IMDB to see if this woman, who could be described as “Every single character Brenda Strong has ever played,” is actually being played by Brenda Strong. And she is!
Anyway Diane begins talking and I’m not really sure what
she’s saying because everything Brenda Strong says and does is hypnotic. Halfway
through her speech her powers of hypnosis prove no match for the clunky, forced
dialogue of Blossom and she admits she came over just because she wanted to
talk to Nick. Oh, see, even adults get nervous and lie in their attempts to
mate. That wasn’t obvious.
Nick asks oh whatever does she mean, and Diane is like, for
fuck’s sake Nick, we’ve been building up to this for a long time.
Joey comes down crying that the Nintendo’s broken. So he’s
grounded, but he’s allowed to play video games? Joey cockblocks Nick but we’ve
been well aware that something would have eventually. If it wasn’t Joey,
Anthony would have come in with plans to start a singing telegram service or
something.
Since banging Brenda Strong is literally the only thing that
will allow Nick’s conscious to finally abandon Joey, Nick follows Diane out the
door so they can go to her place. But then at the last moment Nick realizes he
can’t go because Blossom might call.
Wait, what?
Nick shoos Diane away when he’s got plenty of other options.
He could follow Diane to her place, and have Joey, who’s being forced to stay
at home, answer the phone then relay any information to Diane’s house if
anything happens to poor Blossom. Or if that fails he could have Joey give
Blossom Diane’s number. If he’s worried about Joey skipping out on his
grounding, Nick could have Anthony be the authority figure and shift all those
prior responsibilities to him.
Finally, Nick could also just hook up with Diane in his own
house like an adult and not give two shits about Joey. It’s already been
established in “Dad’s Girlfriend” that Blossom is the only one who has a
problem with Nick dating anyway, and Blossom’s out of the house for once. Where
any obstacle is present in this part of the story is a fucking mystery to me.
Anyway Nick asks Diane if worrying about Blossom makes him
sound overprotective. Since she’s a guest star, Diane is rational and
understanding about it. She says she wishes they didn’t have such lousy timing
but they kiss anyway. Joey starts perving on it. Diane tells Nick to call him,
and it’s a good thing they created this ten-year backstory between the two
characters because Nick’s longtime friend and love interest will not be seen or
mentioned again until the next season.
Pop Culture References: Nintendo
Back at the party Johnny Galecki asks if Blossom wants to
sit down now. Blossom is finally ready for it, so they sit down on one of the
several couches Sheila Osterman’s house has, the one closest to the cameras.
Suddenly Nick appears in place of Johnny Galecki, and he
asks if Blossom is enjoying the “’movie.’” Blossom screams, and Dear God please
let that be happening in real life.
Nick turns back into Johnny Galecki and Blossom asks if she just screamed, her grip on reality dwindling in the high-pressure world of a party with no alcohol or drugs.
Nick turns back into Johnny Galecki and Blossom asks if she just screamed, her grip on reality dwindling in the high-pressure world of a party with no alcohol or drugs.
They finally kiss and all of the sudden a girl runs out from
“The Room” in a panic.
Since there will be no consequences now that the story is drawing to a close, Blossom tells this girl who is apparently the unseen Sheila Osterman to take a hike, and Sheila naturally directs her attention at Blossom out of every other person at her party when she announces that her parents are home! Everybody run!
Since there will be no consequences now that the story is drawing to a close, Blossom tells this girl who is apparently the unseen Sheila Osterman to take a hike, and Sheila naturally directs her attention at Blossom out of every other person at her party when she announces that her parents are home! Everybody run!
Blossom and Six catch up with each other and run into the
bathroom, because this show will simply not build a set that it only uses for
one scene.
“Nobody leaves,” says a woman’s voice. “I want all of you to
call your parents.” So Blossom and Six, the seasoned liars, don’t know their
ABCs here, and finally we have our Intentionally Absurd Element of the episode.
For the next part of the story to happen, the writers need
to have Nick come get Blossom and be super mad about it, so that means that
Blossom and Six are totally amenable to being fucking kidnapped by Sheila’s
parents. The Ostermans have no information on these kids, let alone any
authority. The police would most certainly laugh at being called in to break up
a party where everyone is invited minors and there are no drugs, alcohol or
public disturbance. Even if this is supposed to take place in a gated
community, there’s not much that private security could do beyond escorting
everyone off the grounds.
If Blossom and Six choose (as they should) to say absolutely
nothing, Sheila’s parents would be guilty of keeping teenage girls at their
house against their will, which lo and behold is an actual crime. Obviously the
point of the episode is that despite her and Six’ delusion, Blossom has no
lying skills whatsoever, but giving no information to these people with no
authority over her would solve every problem here. I’m assuming the subtext is
that Blossom unconsciously wants to be caught so that she can finally have an
honest dialogue with Nick, but this is just a stupid move. I’m starting to
wonder what help Six actually is, since she’s usually presented as being
somewhat worldly yet doesn’t know the basics.
Then again maybe this is a subtle dig, since Blossom and Six
could save their skins by simply shutting their mouths for once, and no
teenager would ever do that, ever, a-hardy-har-har.
Back at the Russo residence, Joey and Anthony sit on the
couch. Blossom enters, crying “But that’s not fair!” with Nick right behind her,
mirroring the first scene. “Good,” Nick shoots back, “that’s exactly the way
I feel: not fair. Get used to it.” I dunno what that means.
Joey can’t get over it. “Blossom at a makeout party, what
was she, the lookout?” Nick shouts for him to to leave him alone. Joey, being a
Russo and all, won’t let it go and decides to prod Nick further, asking why
he’s the only one who gets grounded around here.
Nick tells him he grounded Blossom for six months. Joey is
shocked, and so are the people the audience. There’s more than one “Oh my God”
said in complete clarity, which is fucking hilarious because, seriously, Nick.
Joey runs up to his room and Nick tells him to stay out of his sock drawer. Ha.
Nick does his best impression of a Marvel Comics supervillain
from the Hanna-Barbera era to demonstrate his frustration. Anthony, since he
hasn’t interfered with Nick’s parenting for a while and was noticeably absent
when he could have solved Nick’s earlier problem, again plays good cop and asks
Nick if maybe he’s overreacting. Nick says Blossom outright lied to her, and
Anthony puts out the idea that maybe it wasn’t the lying, it was the fact that
she went to a makeout party.
Nick says it was the lying, then realizes it wasn’t, looking
completely overpowered by Anthony.
If this scene seems familiar, it’s because Nick is wearing the exact same outfit he was when Anthony overpowered him in ‘School Daze,” which must be intentional.
If this scene seems familiar, it’s because Nick is wearing the exact same outfit he was when Anthony overpowered him in ‘School Daze,” which must be intentional.
Nick goes up to Blossom’s room. Blossom is going to collapse
from the looks of disappointment Nick is giving her so he faces away from her. They
hash things out and it isn’t terrible.
Nick has every reason to feel the way he does, and Blossom explains that she’s gonna be going through her rites of passage and Nick’s gonna have to learn to look the other way.
So after all these episodes Blossom finally says something wise. It must have been sweeps.
Nick has every reason to feel the way he does, and Blossom explains that she’s gonna be going through her rites of passage and Nick’s gonna have to learn to look the other way.
So after all these episodes Blossom finally says something wise. It must have been sweeps.
Intentionally Absurd Element: The conflict hinges on a point
which could be easily solved by Blossom doing nothing
Pop Culture Reference Tally: 7
No comments:
Post a Comment