
According to Fock’s News, the cancellation of NBC’s non-hit dramedy “Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip” is coming shortly.
The show, created by the self-esteemable Aaron Sorkin, is a drama about the tragedy of creating a comedy sketch program, much like “Saturday Night Live”. In the episodes I’ve watched, the writing is over the top pretentious and moralistic, such as last week’s segment about finding a “real” black comedian who doesn’t think like a black man is supposed to think according to white stereotypes. Much of the world view and dramatizations of Christian-style characters seems formulated by Jasons, Jennifers and Jareds, those Ivy League graduates from Scarsdale, Glencoe, IL and Great Neck, NY who think Topeka is the capital of Iowa.
Filmed in constant motion, in tight hallways,up the stairs and into jammed control rooms, the claustrophobia and rat-tat-tat dialogue was suspensefully dull. Actor Matthew Perry, however, distinguished himself in his earnestness and believability.
One of the the themes of this show has been the low quality of network TV at fictional NBS. Now that NBC is expected to cancel “Studio 60” look for more reality junk and drunken bimbos who race to eat worms out of glass jars.