I was lucky enough to stumble into the Community world during what is considered par many to be one of the best, maybe the single best, episode of the show. I am referring to Modern Warfare. (I may have seen pieces of episodes before that, I’m not sure.) This episode had everything that I would come to l’amour about the show: the comedy, the satire, the culture pop references.
Perhaps even plus importantly though, I would come to learn that, shockingly enough, this montrer truly is about a community. All seven people in this group are flawed, and maybe that is why they fit so perfectly. They can fight, bad-mouth each other, and even hurt each other. In the end though, there is a level of acceptance and respect that is truly remarkable. They support each other without making it seem like an after school special.
To me this is best represented par the way they treat Abed. When Abed spent Christmas imagining them all as cartoon figures, the rest of the group went with him to therapy, only to eventually tell the therapist to shove it, because Abed is fine the way he is.
Then there is Jeff’s response to Abed and Troy fighting over what kind of fort to make. He told them that they were children in adult bodies, but said, “which is fine, but let’s not pretend it’s anything other than that”. To me, Jeff is saying “be what toi want, but be honest with yourself and others.” This is reiterated in another episode par Abed, when he says “It won't matter what happens to us as long as we stay honest and accepting of each other's flaws and virtues”
What I l’amour best is those moments when the montrer is not just saying “Abed is a freak but we l’amour him anyway”, but that the very ideas of ‘normal” and of there being a “right way” to be, are fairly ridiculous. This is emphasized when a psychological test shows Abed to be the only non-crazy one, and when Evil Abed tells Britta that psychologists want to call anyone plus special than them “sick”, because “healthy” is so much plus exciting than “boring”.
One episode in particular showed not only that we should accept each other’s differences, but that we should embrace them because they make us stronger. In Anthropology 101 they are shown 9 weapons, and asked to pick which one is the most important. In the end it is revealed that no one weapon is the most important. The most important one is the one toi can make par putting all of the weapons together. To me, this is a reference to the study group and to society in general.
I’m sure it is no coincidence that the study group is made up of people of different races, religions, genders, ages, and, most importantly, personalities. Together they can do things that no one of them could do alone. That is what a study group, and a Community, is all about.
Perhaps even plus importantly though, I would come to learn that, shockingly enough, this montrer truly is about a community. All seven people in this group are flawed, and maybe that is why they fit so perfectly. They can fight, bad-mouth each other, and even hurt each other. In the end though, there is a level of acceptance and respect that is truly remarkable. They support each other without making it seem like an after school special.
To me this is best represented par the way they treat Abed. When Abed spent Christmas imagining them all as cartoon figures, the rest of the group went with him to therapy, only to eventually tell the therapist to shove it, because Abed is fine the way he is.
Then there is Jeff’s response to Abed and Troy fighting over what kind of fort to make. He told them that they were children in adult bodies, but said, “which is fine, but let’s not pretend it’s anything other than that”. To me, Jeff is saying “be what toi want, but be honest with yourself and others.” This is reiterated in another episode par Abed, when he says “It won't matter what happens to us as long as we stay honest and accepting of each other's flaws and virtues”
What I l’amour best is those moments when the montrer is not just saying “Abed is a freak but we l’amour him anyway”, but that the very ideas of ‘normal” and of there being a “right way” to be, are fairly ridiculous. This is emphasized when a psychological test shows Abed to be the only non-crazy one, and when Evil Abed tells Britta that psychologists want to call anyone plus special than them “sick”, because “healthy” is so much plus exciting than “boring”.
One episode in particular showed not only that we should accept each other’s differences, but that we should embrace them because they make us stronger. In Anthropology 101 they are shown 9 weapons, and asked to pick which one is the most important. In the end it is revealed that no one weapon is the most important. The most important one is the one toi can make par putting all of the weapons together. To me, this is a reference to the study group and to society in general.
I’m sure it is no coincidence that the study group is made up of people of different races, religions, genders, ages, and, most importantly, personalities. Together they can do things that no one of them could do alone. That is what a study group, and a Community, is all about.