The same way that these dramas echo
back to The Prisoner (1967), a couple of years later there'd be a
comedy troupe who got a sketch show that would change comedy going
forward, influencing countless others who came after. Enter Monty
Python's Flying Circus (1969). Absurdist comedy now had something of
a visual identity. Though they were beaten to the punch by Spike
Milligan's Q... series by a matter of months, that ended up having
almost no worldwide significance in comparison. Then in turn Tim & Eric were inspired by Bob & David, who had cited Python as their biggest inspiration.
The vast
majority of the spotlight here is on Western (primarily US and UK)
media. There's bound to be some recency bias too. I purposely opted
for mostly scripted rather than loosely scripted or unscripted
content that you might find in improv and so-called reality TV.
However I made sure to include a small sampling from supposed
documentary programming that feature over the top larger than life
characters or who have odd things going on in their lives.
Some
of these are a blend of actual people and semi (if not fully)
fabricated stories either on the part of the producers, people
desperate to get on TV, or a mix of both. Often you don't know where
the truth ends and the lies begin. One episode or even season could
have nothing deceptive about it and another one be full of shit.
And
of course there's different types of weirdness, from mild to
mindfuck. There's “you need to read a breakdown or watch a video
essay to understand the symbolism” kind of weird, there's
meaninglessly silly, and everything in between. Then you've got first
of its kind, groundbreaking, innovative, and unique projects where
the subject matter itself isn't what's odd. Sometimes all you need is
a quirky, kooky cast full of unconventional, offbeat beatniks to be
considered strange. Maybe it's surreal and trippy, maybe it's
puzzling and confusing. From the bizarre and eccentric to the
avant-garde and arthouse to the creepy and nightmarish.
Part six tomorrow, same Bat time, same Bat channel.
Before this series, never did I expect to see you talking about The Prisoner and Monty Python.
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