It is with great shame and embarrassment that this reviewer must admit an egregious error. In the previous post, I identified the reviewed episode as "J.T.'s World." While the episode "J.T.'s World" introduces the audience to J.T.'s cable access show, it is the episode "No Business Like Show Business" that carefully traces the plot of the feature film Wayne's World. To the numerous readers who showed me the error of my ways, I thank you.
More importantly, upon a subsequent viewing of "No Business Like Show Business," this reviewer could not help but think of Brad Pitt. Why you ask? The thought stems from the fact that Step by Step's pervasive derivative nature extends even to the production itself, most notably the casting department. Inexplicably, Step by Step repeatedly used the same actors to portray completely different characters. For example, in the above scene, producer Phil Jones is played by actor David Graf. Two seasons later, Mr. Graf played the character Mitch Crawford in the episode "The Flight Before Christmas." Two seasons after that, Mr. Graf played Dave Roberts in the episode "Just Say Maybe." Notably, in the latter episode Dave Roberts is a police officer who is nearly cuckolded by the inexplicably heterosexual Jean-Luc. The late Mr. Graf clearly had a talent for playing buffoons.
Mr. Graf is far from the only example of this bizarre practice. Mary-Pat Green played Cody's Russian mail order bride in "Don't Ask" and then played a mother at basketball game who fights with a cross dressing Carol in the episode "Walk Like a Man." Melanie Wilson plays Aggie, the woman whom Frank hires to work on his construction crew, in "One of the Guys." She then plays two more roles in the series including the prospective buyer of the Lambert home, Cathie Adler, in the series finale.
Which leads us to Growing Pains, the sitcom that provides perhaps the most stunning example of an actor playing multiple roles in one series - Brad Pitt. Mr. Pitt portrayed Jeff in the episode "Who's Zoomin' Who?" in 1987. In "WZW?" Jeff is the new kid in school who scams Carol into dumping her beloved Bobby in favor of his mysterious charms. Two years later, Mr. Pitt played a very different role in the episode "Feet Of Clay." In that episode, Mr. Pitt played Jonathan Keith, a cool rock singer who seemingly befriends Ben. But when Ben catches Jonathan cheating on his wife backstage, Jonathan shows his true nature and lashes out at a hurt Ben.
The strangest aspect of this casting is that it resulted in Growing Pains launching the career of both Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt.
Finally, numerous readers questioned the accuracy of the previous post's representations. Several followers of this blog insisted that Step by Step could not have borrowed from Wayne's World as liberally as your faithful reviewer stated. To those readers, I provide this exhibit. Skip ahead to the 3:30 mark for the truly damning footage.
Nowhere in the New Classic Television Canon is this phenomenon more prevalent than in Night Court. The casting directors habitually used the same ensemble of washed-up character actors and "friends of the show" to play the various petty criminals hauled into Judge Harry Stone's nocturnal circus. Instead of the easy explanation that Night Court's universe had a high rate of recidivism, the writers instead had so little regard for their audience's episodic memory that they assigned them new names, new professions, and new personalities. On the rare occasion when Night Court did have repeat characters, the crimes they stood accused of were incongruous with their prior offenses. For example, a flasher later commits a robbery, a jaywalker commits a simple assault, and the like. It would have been more realistic to have someone accused of animal cruelty later accused of ritual murder, or someone accused of child pornography be later accused of molestation.
My point is this: with these practices, Night Court insults the high intelligence of the kind of person who spends their Tuesday afternoons watching re-runs of a 20-year-old show. Namely, people like me.
Posted by: Ted "Theodore" Logan | July 06, 2009 at 01:46 PM