Everybody Hates Chris: Everybody Hates Baseball
Kurt Vonnegut once told McSweeneys that a male writer should never write about his father: “you learn about life by the accidents you have, by and by again, and your father is always in your head when that stuff happens.”
I don’t fully understand what Vonnegut was getting at, but I do agree with him. As I said, I didn’t think that was the strongest episode plot-wise, but strong characters can more than produce up for a lesser episode.
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The value of the father/son relationship tends to be measured by things merely suggested or things unsaid, perhaps in part to assured societal taboos that forbid men from expressing their feelings, but I don’t see that as detrimental to the relationship. There’s not a lot of room for words within that relationship, things are just kind of “known.”
Case in point: when Chris decides to skip out on a baseball game to go on a movie day, his
On another note, I really liked Rochelle in that episode. whether anything, fathers and sons have an nearly preternatural link to one another that no one can really explain, least of all the two individuals experiencing it.
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Everybody Hates Chris, The CW
(S02E18) This wasn’t the funniest episode of Everybody Hates Chris, but I did like how it explored the dynamic amoung Chris and his father. She’s a feisty character, and I like that, but sometimes I think she crosses the line and just comes across as abrasive, but that day around her meddling into the affairs of her hairdresser and brother was actually quite funny.
Original post by Adam Finley
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It’s interesting because it took me forever to realize that when my dad grunted while he was reading something, it was because he was interested, and wanted to tell me about it. I just thought he was being wierd, but now I know better, and I find myself doing the same thing. Wierd how things come around like that.