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Parks And Recreation Season Premiere Review: “London” (Season 6 Episode 1 and 2)

Parks and Recreation has long been the best comedy on network television, and only those who have failed to watch the show on a weekly basis could ever think otherwise. I can probably name more riotously funny comedies, both past and present – though the show’s 2011 third season could go toe-to-toe with just about any comedy year in terms of outright hilarity – but no television comedy being produced today is nearly as warm, heartfelt, infectiously optimistic, or rich with life and character as Parks. This is a show that makes its audience think, laugh, and even tear up on a mostly consistent basis, but moreso than any modern series, in any genre, it simply fills its viewers with pure, unadulterated joy, and in a media landscape dominated by increasingly dark storytelling, that is an extremely special quality none of us should take for granted.

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Parks and Recreation has long been the best comedy on network television, and only those who have failed to watch the show on a weekly basis could ever think otherwise. I can probably name more riotously funny comedies, both past and present – though the show’s 2011 third season could go toe-to-toe with just about any comedy year in terms of outright hilarity – but no television comedy being produced today is nearly as warm, heartfelt, infectiously optimistic, or rich with life and character as Parks. This is a show that makes its audience think, laugh, and even tear up on a mostly consistent basis, but moreso than any modern series, in any genre, it simply fills its viewers with pure, unadulterated joy, and in a media landscape dominated by increasingly dark storytelling, that is an extremely special quality none of us should take for granted.

This is all as true as ever before in the show’s sixth-season premiere, “London,” one of the very best episodes in the series’ entire run, and one of the best hours of television to air in 2013 to date. It encapsulates everything that makes this series wonderful, giving each and every character multiple fantastic beats to play, offering a steady stream of big, organic laughs, and following up on all the major arcs Season 5 left in play in the most satisfying ways imaginable. If there were ever a single Parks episode I could point to as one that fully embodies my love for the show, and all the beautiful, varied emotions it makes me feel as I watch, “London” would be it.

And while being this impressed by Parks and Recreation should never be a surprise, I will admit to being slightly taken aback by the sheer excellence of this hour, given not only its length – this is the first time Parks has done a double-length episode, but when The Office used to do them, those tended to be fairly weak, overly elongated outings – but also my own relative apathy about some of those aforementioned Series 5 arcs. I liked last year’s finale just fine, but none of the cliffhangers it left us with – Tom facing a rival clothing store, Ron’s girlfriend Diane becoming pregnant, and Leslie facing a recall vote – particularly hooked me. But Parks understands and services its characters just as well as any series on television, drama or comedy, and all those arcs, in addition to several others, proved in “London” to be absolutely terrific ways to continue exploring and enriching them as the series enters middle-age.

Leslie’s story in particular struck me as a wildly sharp way to test the character now that she has achieved so many of her dreams. Much of Season 5 was about the way her expectations for the City Council job were undercut by the difficulties of the position itself, particularly in regards to the sheer, overwhelming ignorance and, as April put it, “apathy” of many of Pawnee’s citizens. That has always been a point of humor on the series, of course – and continued to be here, as we heard the increasingly banal procession of citizen complaints at the start of the episode – but at a certain point, it would of course be frustrating to be in Leslie’s shoes and see all her hard work and enthusiasm be met with complaints and obstructionism at every turn.

So “London” lets Leslie Knope go to a bit of a dark place, relatively speaking, as she cannot help but vent her frustrations over Pawnee’s lack of gratitude as she accepts her prestigious award in London. It is a great, hilarious scene, but also emotionally affecting and satisfying, just as cathartic for a long-time viewer as it was for Leslie herself. But Parks is, at its core, a highly optimistic show, one that presents government and civil workers not as they are – useless, corrupt, and insular – but as they should be. And the ultimate message of London – delivered first by Ron, then hammered home by April in the hour’s emotional climax – is that while it is okay to be frustrated once in a while, giving up is never an option. The point of the job isn’t to win awards or earn thanks, but to make a difference, and whether the people of Leslie’s town uniformly love her or not, it is what she does, not how she is received, that ultimately matters. I doubt the real world will ever be nearly as idealistic as the world of Parks, but I cannot help but watch this episode and think about how much better our government would be if they took this immensely simple, and immeasurably profound, moral to heart. In this way, “London” is one of the best and most meaningful ‘political’ stories the show has ever told, and another great tribute to what a great protagonist the show has forged in Leslie Knope.

As for Ron and Diane’s impending child, “London” tackle that dangling thread right off the bat, in an opening scene that immediately entered the “Ron ‘Effing Swanson Hall of Fame.” Of course Ron and Diane would choose to get married immediately, with as little fanfare as possible – again, Parks’ grasp on its characters is unparalleled – but beyond feeling absolutely spot-on, that opening scene was just gloriously executed, a relentlessly paced, riotously funny, and amazingly emotional way to open the season. So many things are going on in that scene – Ron and Diane quietly basking in each other’s love, April being simultaneously sarcastic and happy, Leslie not knowing what to do with herself, Ethel Beavers doing her best to shoo them all away, etc. – and yet every single layer lands, from the funniest gags – Diane dryly joking about her middle-name being Tammy – to the heartfelt love that clearly underlines every character’s motivations. A perfect, symphonically rich opening, and only the tip of the iceberg, for both humor and emotion, where “London” is concerned.

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