Glenn Howerton as high school teacher, Jack Griffin, in A.P. Bio. |
There’s a forced wholesomeness to some network television that’s enough to make you want to puke. The commercially motivated impulse to create entertainment that appeals to some imaginary Middle-American audience easily suckered by anodyne content and blatant moralizing can often lead to a product that feels cynically calculated, rather than the genuine result of a sincere outlook.
That’s part of why I’ve found NBC’s
A.P. Bio so refreshing, at least insofar as its early episodes
have proven willing to buck that trend. Created by Saturday Night
Live alum Mike O’Brien, the comedy follows Jack Griffin (It’s
Always Sunny in Philadelphia’s Glenn Howerton), a former
Harvard philosophy professor who’s been forced to retreat in
ignominy to Toledo, Ohio, where his old friend Ralph Durbin uses his
role as principal at a local high school to get Jack a sinecure
teaching Advanced Placement Biology. The concept is fairly
straightforward but nevertheless promising: O’Brien is obviously
reversing the well-worn trope of the enthusiastic teacher who takes a
group of apathetic and often underprivileged kids and gets through
to them, inspiring them to achieve their full potential. Instead, the
kids are all nerdy, straight-arrow overachievers and the teacher’s
an unrepentant asshole (there’s a running gag in which Jack will
finish whatever he’s eating as he enters the classroom and then
carelessly hurls the remnants in the general direction of the garbage
can, which he misses every time).
While Jack’s at
the core of the show, other parts don’t feel quite as
well-developed yet. Patton Oswalt is entertaining as the put-upon
Ralph, but O’Brien and his writers haven’t quite figured out what
to do with characters like Stef (Lyric Lewis), Mary (Mary Sohn), and
Michelle (Jean Villepique), the trio of teachers with whom Jack hangs
out in the faculty lounge, usually in the middle of his class. So far the
younger actors who play Jack’s students have mostly been required
to react to whatever outrageous request he makes of them, and
they don’t fully register as anything other than stereotypical
Type-A students, although Allisyn Ashley Arm has made an impression
as the deceptively dorky Heather.
As always with shows that are designed
to run for multiple seasons, the question is: how long can this
premise be sustained? While A.P. Bio’s refusal to offer life
lessons and heartwarming moments is appealing right now, it’s
unclear how it will develop from its initial status quo. At some point,
you suspect that Jack is going to start bonding with his students,
and that characters will learn Valuable Life Lessons. That may be
necessary to give some long-term structure and narrative interest to
the show, but it may diminish some of the acidic tone that makes it
so refreshingly different from much of the rest of network television
at the moment.
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