Sibling Rivalry Might Have Been a Better Name Than Life in Pieces

We are winding up the Sibling Rivalry series, and as promised, we are coming back to a comedy. In fact, this show had so much sibling rivalry, that could have been the title.

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In 2015, CBS ordered a pilot called Life in Pieces, and it was on the schedule that fall. It was on the air for four seasons until it was canceled. This was a fast-paced and interesting show because it included four different stories each week. The show features the Short family who live in LA. Each episode breaks down into four “short” stories, and the fourth one tied them all together. Sometimes a story will go back in time, so we begin to understand the siblings’ relationships better.

The show was blessed with a wonderful cast. John Doe Short (James Brolin) is a retired airline pilot. Joan (Diane Wiest), his wife, is a therapist. They are a bit quirky and may have lived in a commune in the sixties for a year or two too long. They have three kids: Heather (Betsy Brandt) who is married to Tim, a doctor (Dan Bakkedahl), with two daughters and a son; Matt (Thomas Sadoski) who is recently divorced and dates and then marries Colleen (Angelique Cabral) during the series; and Greg (Colin Hanks) who is married to Jen (Zoe Lister-Jones) with two kids.

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Heather and Tim are typical parents of teens and preteens. Matt is the stereotypical middle child. He lives in his parents’ garage and never seems to grow up. Even when he tries to do the right thing, it seldom works out that way. Greg is the most normal kid, but when he gets around his siblings, he often becomes dysfunctional.

Greg’s wife Jen is my favorite character. She is the ”realistic” relative and often makes asides and assumptions about the situations they find themselves in that we can relate to. She shares exactly what is on her mind, and we typically agree with her. My second favorite character is the other in-law, Tim. He just can’t do things the easy way. He ruins the Thanksgiving turkey, removes most of his eyebrow, and seems to screw up in a new way every week. But he is fun and easy-going and fits into the family.

Some of the characters had worked together before. Weist and Brolin played a married couple in the film Sisters in 2015. The Brolin-Hanks family must like working together. James Brolin appeared with Tom Hanks in Catch Me If You Can in 2002; their sons Josh Brolin and Colin Hanks were in W. in 2008, and then Brolin and Colin teamed up for this show.

There were many recurring characters on the show as well. My favorites were Gigi, Joan’s mother, played by Ann Guilbert; Martin Mull who plays a neighbor of John and Joan’s and is president of their HOA; and Professor Sinclair Wilde (Cary Elwes) who is Joan’s creative writing teacher.

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Season one found the show highly rated, just behind The Big Bang Theory, but by season three, the ratings had dropped significantly and early in season four, the network canceled the show but aired the remaining nine episodes that had been filmed. Many fans blamed the network because of the scheduling. Season one began in September, but the rest of the seasons kept getting pushed later and later. Season four didn’t air the first show of the series until April which means fans had not seen the show for almost a year. The network justified the cancellation because it saw declining ratings, was refused an ownership stake in the show, and wanted to bring in four new sitcoms for the next season.

Many of the complaints I read about this show said it was just a clone of Modern Family. I don’t agree at all. While this show had some of the best one-liners I ever heard in a television series, the humor was not consistent and sometimes, especially when it featured Joan and John, it was just weird. Jay and Gloria were not John and Joan. Modern Family had it all: good writing, fun characters, realistic plots. The Short family had it all but never in the same episode. Sometimes the writing was good, sometimes the characters were fun, and sometimes the plots worked. While I didn’t mind watching this show, especially to catch those ultimate one-liners, I never felt bad when I didn’t see it. I knew that I had missed a fun part of the week if I missed Modern Family. I could connect to the characters on the show in a way I only connected with Jen and Tim with on Life in Pieces.

Just to give you an idea of what this show was like, I’ll summarize the first episodes of each season below.

In season one, Matt walks in on Joan and John in an intimate moment; Joan attempts to lead a group therapy session; Jen hires a breast-feeding consultant couple; and Heather and Tim move into a new home, using a company that employs ex-cons.

Season two was Heather and Tim ask Clementine’s parents (their son’s girlfriend) to convince Clementine and Tyler to get an annulment; Tommy moves in with Colleen to the dismay of her roommate; John takes the wrong dose of medication which leads to several complications.

For season three Tim and Heather move into John and Joan’s home after their kitchen is destroyed; Matt and Colleen expect a monetary settlement from Colleen’s fall; and John tries to get Sophia (his granddaughter) back on track when she begins acting up.

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Last, but not least, season four began with the Shorts vacationing in the Yucatan; the accommodations are not what they expected; Heather is overprotective of Sophia; Jen and Greg learn that Matt and Colleen have been lying to the family.

If I am honest, I think the network did not do the show any favors by messing up the schedule, but it was not destined to last more than the few seasons it was on the air. However, if you disagree with me, I would love to hear your reasons for loving the show.

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Sabrina Won Us Over Without Magic

We are on the last week of our Teen Scene blog series. We began the month with Melissa Joan Hart in Clarissa Explains It All, and we end with Melissa Joan Hart in Sabrina the Teenage Witch.

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Clarissa Explains It All went off the air in 1994, and two years later Sabrina hit the airwaves. The show was on ABC from Fall of 1996 until May of 2000 and then moved to The WB network for three seasons, going off the air in April of 2003.

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Neil Scovell created the show based on the Sabrina the Teenage Witch character from the Archie comic series. The premise was that on her sixteenth birthday, Sabrina (Hart) learns that she has magical powers. She lives with her aunts who she learns are 600 years old and also witches: Hilda (Caroline Rhea) and Zelda (Beth Broderick) and their cat Salem who is also magical. Salem was voiced by Nick Bakay. The three family members live in Boston.

A lot of the plots are based on spells that don’t go quite right as Sabrina learns her magic skills. Unlike Bewitched, it’s her father’s side of the family that she inherited her powers from. Other plots come from the circumstances that arise as she tries to keep the fact that she is a witch from her friends Jenny (Michelle Beaudoin), Valerie (Lindsay Sloane), her boyfriend Harvey (Nate Richert), and her suspicious principal Willard Kraft (Martin Mull).

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Sabrina has an annoying cousin but rather than Hart playing both roles like in Bewitched or I Dream of Jeannie, her sister Emily portrays cousin Amanda.

There was no live studio audience because of the complex visual effects that were necessary for the filming.

Season one is Sabrina dealing with the fact that she is a witch and that she needs to learn how to deal with her special powers. In season two, she learns she needs to earn her witch’s license or give up her powers. She has to attend witch boot camp before her test.

For season three, she learns before she can use her license, she must discover her family secret. Different family members provide her with clues throughout the year, and eventually, she learns every family member is born with a twin. Harvey learns during season four that Sabrina is a witch. Their relationship is on and off again but he leaves the show at the end of the year.

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For season five, Sabrina begins college and moves into a house with other students. She goes to work at a local coffee shop. Her aunts want to stay close to her so Hilda buys the coffee shop and Zelda becomes a professor at the school. Sabrina gets a new boyfriend Josh.

Josh is offered a job abroad and while he is trying to decide, Harvey reenters Sabrina’s life because he is dating her roommate Morgan. Eventually, Josh and Harvey both move away. At the beginning of the last season, Sabrina and her roommates Morgan and Roxie move into her aunt’s house and Sabrina becomes a writer for a magazine. She meets a new guy, Aaron, to whom she eventually becomes engaged. However, in the series finale, Harvey returns on her wedding day and Sabrina leaves with him.

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The series was well known for its music and musical guests. During the run of the show, Britney Spears, Avril Lavigne, N*Sync, Coolio, The Backstreet Boys, Paula Abdul, the Violent Femmes, 10000 Maniacs, and Usher all make appearances.

One of my favorite moments comes during an episode in season 2, “Dante’s Inferno.” In this episode, Aunt Hilda has an illness called pun-itis where everything she says becomes literally true. She says there’s a monkey on her shoulder and voila, it is.  However, it’s no ordinary monkey. It’s Monkee member Davey Jones wrapped around her shoulder.

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This show was genuinely funny. Sabrina was youthful and optimistic and fun. Her aunts truly loved her and brought a warmth and a kindness to the show. Salem’s dry sense of humor and sarcasm make him a delightful pet. They were a delightful family to spend time with.