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A lot sooner than I thought we would, we've arrived at the last Thursday of 2017. Obviously, that also means this is the last Thursday Movie Picks of the year, too. As has become the custom, the last Thursday of each month is reserved for talking TV, so that's what we're going to do. Our topic is friendship. Shows about friendship are everywhere so no big deal, right? You know me. Every now and again I like to warn you. You'll probably never actually come across these shows, but just in case you do, stay far away from them.
Homeboys in Outer Space
(1996-97)
Two astronauts, Ty (Flex) and Morris (Darryl Bell) flew around the galaxy in a winged vehicle that was part low-rider and part 18 wheeler. The computer that did actual piloting was name Loquatia (Rhona Bennett). Somehow, they got a barely pre-
3rd Rock From the Sun John Lithgow involved in this thing, playing a character named Pitty McPatpat. Yeah, it was truly awful in every way imaginable. During the mid-90s, then-fledgling-but-now-defunct network UPN found it was doing fairly well with black audiences. As a result, they greenlit a bunch of black shows hoping to cash in. Unfortunately, by a bunch of black shows I mean any black show regardless of quality. Or how many stereotypes were involved.
Homeboys in Outer Space, which you can probably tell by the title, was one of those shows.
Malcolm & Eddie
(1996-2000)
This
Odd Couple inspired sitcom featured our eponymous characters sharing an apartment in a building they would soon buy and try to operate. Included in this purchase is the bar on the ground level, which is where much of the show takes place, and the garage from where one of them runs a towing business. Somehow, the two chaps found time in all for hijinks and shenanigans. Unfortunately, none of it was funny. It starred a post-Cosby Malcolm-Jamal Warner, trying to break into adult oriented roles, and comedian Eddie Griffin. It had potential, but never clicked. Yup, UPN strikes again.
Method & Red
(2004)
In real life, Method Man and Redman are hip-hop legends who formed a friendship after both were already stars. Their penchant for marijuana has made them the Cheech & Chong of the rap game. Their chemistry, and willingness to rap about said marijuana, has translated into two outstanding albums,
Blackout! and
Blackout! 2 along with all sorts of guest spots on each other's solo work. It's also resulted in the moderately successful stoner comedy
How High (2001). Picking up where UPN left off, Fox figured 'why not give these guys a TV show?' It was a bad idea. A very bad idea. It starred the guys as fictionalized versions of themselves who, after making money in the music business, move into an upper-middle class, and predominantly white suburb. Something that was supposed to be hilarity ensues. Fox pulled the plug 9 episodes in after warring with the guys over the direction of the show.
You know what? I'd rather not go into a new year of Thursday's on a negative note, so how about some shows about friendship that were actually good? I've got some.
What's Happening!!
(1976-1979)
Roger, aka Raj (Ernest Thomas), Dwayne (Haywood Nelson), and Rerun (Fred Berry) were high-schoolers and bestest buddies. The show follows them on their daily adventures in the Watts area of Los Angeles. Most of the action is centered around Raj's house or Rob's Place, the soda shop where the boys hang out. It's said to be loosely based on the 1975 movie
Cooley High, but honestly, has more in common with the legendary sitcom
Happy Days. It's got much the same sweetness and value-driven humor. It's also the first American show centered around African-American teens.
Living Single
(1993-1998)
Most of the action of this show takes place in an apartment shared by three women: Khadija (Queen Latifah), Regine (a post
Facts of Life Kim Fields), and Synclaire (Kim Coles). A fourth member of their little group, Max (short for Maxine, played by Erika Alexander), lives across the street, but visits every day. Also frequently around are a pair of fellas who share an apartment on the next floor up, Kyle (T.C. Carson) and Overton (John Henton). That gives us six main characters, on various rungs of the socio-economic ladder with their own ambitions, and plenty of zaniness to go around. Like my previous pick, this show was groundbreaking, as well. It was the first about a group of single African-American adults and explored all facets of their lives, socially, economically, and sexually, in a way that had never been done, particularly African-American women. The show made its debut a year before the seminal
Friends and fulfilled the same role for people who weren't into
Friends.
Girlfriends
(2000-2008)
Joan (a pre-
Black'ish Tracee Ellis Ross) is a lawyer and sort of the leader of her group of friends. This group includes Toni (Jill Marie Jones), her buddy from high school, Maya (Golden Brooks), Joan's assistant at the firm, and Lynn (Persia White), Joan's friend from college and current roommate who can't seem to make heads or tails of her life. William (Reggie Hayes) works with Joan and often finds himself in the mix.
Girlfriends picks up where
Living Single left off and injects a fair bit of
Sex and the City into the proceedings. It was more mature than the former, and more relatable than the latter with some of the best writing on any black sitcom, ever. Somehow, this slice of goodness started life as a UPN show, before moving on to The CW.
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