[S4E10] The Christmas Special
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But, after I had my trip down crazy town lane, I realized the reason I was so frustrated and upset was because of how brilliantly the story of Norma Bates was written, especially this season. She had come so far and become so strong, so to see her almost achieve her dreams and see them stomped on like Norman did to that big ass TV was enough to do my head in.
In terms of TV Christmas specials, Community certainly aired the best of the best. Considering that the average episode of Community, especially in the later seasons, includes some manner of spoof or homage, the Christmas season is a goldmine for themed holiday episodes.
While other shows focus in some manner on characters celebrating Christmas together, Community takes its Christmas episodes one step further, both exploring different genres and Christmastime clichés. Listed from the worst to the best, here are Community's four Christmas episodes that range from hilariously inventive to your new favorite Christmas specials.
Though the holiday party becomes somewhat of a hostage situation, an outrageous but very Community-like occurrence, \"Intro to Knots\" has a tendency to drag in terms of pacing. However, the colorful inclusion of wildcard Ben Chang (Ken Jeong) and Cornwalis's mind games make this episode a fun addition to your yearly Christmas special watchlist.
As the most realistic and grounded Christmas episode of Community, Season 1's Christmas special focuses on the relationship between Shirley and the rest of the group and highlights Jeff's desire to make her proud. While Jeff is mostly portrayed as a selfish jerk throughout Season 1, he has grown into someone who wants his friend's respect. Shirley also learns an important lesson, and it's one that isn't easily found in Christmas specials: If you respect the people in your life who are precious to you, then you will respect their beliefs as well, even if they're different than yours. Shirley displays this character growth by performing her own rendition of \"Silent Night,\" retitled \"Sensitive Night,\" rewriting the lyrics to be enjoyed by all members of her study group.
Community has never shied away from making fun of Glee, and this Christmas special is part-homage and part-spoof. As the passion for glee club spreads like a virus, the cast of Community has a blast performing original Christmas songs, from Troy and Abed's rap, \"Christmas Infiltration,\" to Annie's song, \"Teach Me How to Understand Christmas,\" which tries way too hard to be sexy. When Abed finally realizes that Mr. Rad plans to keep the study group as the glee club permanently, his solution is as heart-warming as it is funny. Even though the group's Christmas has been mostly spent performing glee music, their holiday is not ruined, as shown by their caroling as they stop by Abed's apartment to spend Christmas with him and cheer him up.
\"Abed's Uncontrollable Christmas\" is Community's most ambitious Christmas special and one of the best Abed-focused episodes of Community. When Abed wakes up to find that the world around him is stop-motion animated, and he is the only one who can see it, he sets out to find the meaning of Christmas, because what else would you do if you find yourself stuck in a Christmas special When the study group tricks Abed into therapy to try and find the source behind this psychological break, they get more than they bargained for as Abed hijacks the therapy session to include them on his journey through a winter wonderland in his mind.
\"Abed's Uncontrollable Christmas\" isn't just Community's best Christmas episode; it is one of the best Christmas specials on television. Abed's holiday story is heartfelt, fun, hilarious, and inventive, cementing it as one of Community's strongest episodes in a long list of stand-out stories.
There aren't actually any Mayan church Web sites. The Mayans were wiped out 500 years ago by the conquistadors and smallpox. That's like chicken pox, but smaller. Look, when I heard the two of you were getting engaged, I thought to myself, These are two special kids. The last thing we need is another teen tragedy of marrying too young, popping out a couple kids before you're 20 and ending up with your faces blurred out on an episode of Cops.
Similarly to season 2, the holiday isn't focused on that much, but \"Christmas\" manages to be a superior episode, due to a significantly better balance of humor and compelling moments. When Terry overcame his fears and went back to work on the field just in time to save Holt's life, it displayed a strong amount of growth for the character. B99 was also still finding its footing at this stage in the season, especially since the Christmas episode had to follow up Nine-Nine's pilot episode along with the first Halloween heist and Thanksgiving entries.
Greatly disappointed, they discuss about their situation. Just then, Benson passes by, telling them to stop slacking off, except Eileen, which he questions if she was also a slacker. Mordecai retaliates to him that they are planning something important. However, Benson questions that, and asks if they don't want the special assignment, to which Rigby says yes. When he said about boarding up the old ballroom, they were shocked.
The passengers contemplate throwing Sky outside, horrifying the Doctor, who thinks that the entity might be trying to learn from them. He tries to calm everyone down, however, his attempt to take charge backfires as the passengers become suspicious of him, especially when he proves unwilling to reveal his real name or origin and admits to feeling a thrill from the situation. The passengers contemplate throwing him out too if he gets in the way of them trying to save themselves. However, as the Doctor protests that they will need him to survive if the entity turns out to be malevolent, Sky stops repeating everyone and focuses solely on the Doctor. To try reasoning with the consciousness in Sky, the Doctor attempts to offer it help with finding a voice of its own without stealing his. However, when the Doctor asks the entity if it can agree with him, he has spoken after Sky.
This delightfully hilarious quiz show gives participants more points for interesting answers than correct ones (and nobody understands how they're allocated). Sandi Toksvig hosts this special Christmas episode for season T. DATE TBA 781b155fdc

