OK, and Murphy might agree with you, if he remembers something like that. I'm not talking just about the use of music and dance, the spirit of musical comedy often pervaded - the characters were always parodies of stock figures, like Sue Sylvester, the athletic coach who toggled from enemy to ally of the glee club from week to week, probably depending on what crazy situation was more fun to write and play. Will Schuester tended to be an exemplar, so he could do the right thing by the end of the episode. (BTW, Wikipedia says he was taking a job as an accountant, till he thought better of it.)
Whatever Katims is attempting, it's much drabber. |