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'Community' on NBC

TELEVISION REVIEW

'The Soup' host Joel McHale does only a middling job attempting to channel Bill Murray as an attorney forced back to school when his academic credentials are found to be lacking.

September 17, 2009|ROBERT LLOYD, TELEVISION CRITIC

"Community," which premieres tonight on NBC, adds a fourth large-ensemble institutional comedy to the network's Thursday night "Comedy Night Done Right" block. Such a sad little slogan for what has been a slate of excellent shows: "The Office," "30 Rock" and "Parks and Recreation," still around; "My Name Is Earl" making room for this new one. And though "Community," which is set at a community college, is not as good as the least of those, it is technically proficient -- that is, the jokes consistently work, even when they don't add up to much -- and its problems may not be unsolvable, if anyone even considers them problems in the first place.


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The show centers on reluctant new student Jeff Winger, played by Joel McHale, 38, a lawyer whose license has been suspended by the state bar because his undergraduate degree was found to be "less than legitimate."

"I thought you had a bachelor's from Columbia," says his friend Duncan (John Oliver, from "The Daily Show"), a professor at Greendale Community College.

"Now I have to get one from America," Jeff replies. "And it can't be an e-mail attachment."

McHale is also the host of E!'s "The Soup," a week-in-review show that requires him to cultivate an attitude of affectionate disdain toward objects of popular culture -- to be at once lovable and superior -- which must have made him seem like the right guy to star in what is essentially a Bill Murray movie, a fact the script itself spells out, down to name-checking "Stripes" and "Meatballs." But, as may be said of most humans, he lacks Murray's bright, scamp-ish charm.

Jeff is less a scamp than a sociopath, a man for whom life is a series of insincere closing arguments: "I discovered at a very early age that if I talked long enough I can make anything right or wrong, so either I'm God or truth is relative -- and in either case, boo-ya!" He only wants to cheat his way through school, yet he finds himself leading a Spanish-class study group he inadvertently convenes in an attempt to seduce classmate Britta (Gillian Jacobs).

In "Groundhog Day" terms, she is Andie MacDowell to his Murray -- empathetic where he is exploitative, a Peace Corps veteran who dropped out of high school because she "thought for some reason it would impress Radiohead."

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