September 10, 2017

Bojack Horseman: Pilot Episode

  Bojack Horseman is an adult cartoon comedy that follows the life of the once been sitcom star and titular character Bojack Horseman.

The show opens up on a scene from his old sitcom called Horsin' Around before cutting to reality where Bojack is at an interview while drunk. This entire bit sets up a main theme of the show, the segregation of Hollywood glamor and reality. The interview only furthers this with Bojack attributing the shows wide success to, “People coming home after a long day of life kicking them in the urethra to watch a show about good, likable, people who love each other, where no matter what happens after thirty minutes everything is going to turn out okay”. In contrast to this when asked about his life he can not answer the question. This scene tells us a lot about Bojack, but the show just piles on.

We cut to the opening of the show that has Bojack waking up and moving through his day. Always blank faced and staring at the camera while the world goes crazy around him. Finally climaxing at a party where he falls in a pool seeming to drown only for the next shot to feature him lazily laying on top of a raft on the same pool. This opening could imply many things, but the one I got was Bojack Horseman trying to distract himself from the world, but ultimately failing by falling in a pool, and how he tries to ignore his world and reality by putting something protective between him and the pool. However it could also be implied that he finds a way to rise above his world by sitting on the very same pool.

Coming back to the show we see that not only does Bojack have issues, but so does the publishing company Penguin Publishing. This is the company that Bojack is supposed to be writing his memoirs for, that he never actually does. The company, run by penguins (high brow comedy there guys), has run into financial trouble after making a series of bad investments and lack of sales. Penguin Publishing is an obvious parody of the real world company that runs by the same name. This continues to drive the point that beneath the seemingly easy life of success and glamor, these are people with real problems as well.

We continue through Bojack's day meeting various members of the cast who bring up differing flaws and contrasts to Bojack. Todd Chavez, who is his free loading room mate, that acts only to fill up his empty time. We meet his ex girlfriend and agent Princess Carolyn who serves as another amusing dichotomy between Hollywood stardom and reality. Mr. Penutbutter, a golden retriever who has had the same life as Bojack, but is seemingly unaware of anything and must be stupid since he's happy as Bojack puts it. The final character we meet is Diane Nguyen, Mr. Penutbutter's girlfriend and Bojack's ghost writer, she serves as the outer person's view and somewhat naive to Hollywood's inner workings.

The show Bojack Horsemancis an adult cartoon comedy that follows the life of the once been sitcom star and titular character Bojack Horseman. I find the jokes to fall flat most of the time, and the comedy to hit the lowest common denominator. I do find myself wanting to watch more however. I have only watched one and a half episodes, and find myself eager to continue. I think it is do the the rather cynical and satirical nature of the show that makes Bojack Horseman an interesting character and show.

2 comments:

  1. I also have watched Bojack Horseman, I even did a blog post on one of the episodes! I think if you were to continue watching you may change your mind about Bojack being a show that appeals to the lowest common denominator. There is a lot of complicated stuff in there. To each his own though, no? The first thing I noticed while reading was I think your summary to analysis ratio needs to be tweaked. There is an abundance of summary that doesn't really get elaborated on, and not enough analysis. While some context is necessary, you should try to limit summary to what is truly needed to understand the analysis. I also felt that there could be more structural organization. I think that the entire blog should have a main claim, and each paragraph should have a mini main claim that supports the bigger claim somehow. What id the main message you're trying to convey? That may be picky, but the paragraphs should at least have a central topic. I sometimes wasn't sure what purpose a paragraph had, or felt some of the summarization in the paragraph was irrelevant to the point of the paragraph. The paragraphs seem to be completely linear in terms of what happens in the episode, and this arrangement isn't the most powerful way to convey something. I also don't believe the restatement at the end of what you said at the beginning is necessary. Lastly, there are some typos that could be easily fixed (Penutbutter, Horsemancis) by carefully re-reading. I hope you change your mind about Bojack!

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  2. It's somewhat embarrassing that there are typos in this comment but that just proves how important re-reading can be.

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