6 - Tuesday, September 30, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6- Tuesday, September 30, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 0 Tom Petty meets Tony Soprano "You guys on MySpace?" 'Nine-Nine' starts sophomore season FOX comedy continues to thrive off its ensemble By DREW MARON DalyArts Writer "BrooklynNine-Nine"returned in "O-some" fashion this week, and as expected, the sophomore' comedy still rules. Like their A other comedic masterwork, Brooklyn "Parks and Nine-Nine Recreation," Dan Goor and Smson two Michael Schur premiere bring every Sundays at character to a level where any 8:30 p.m. one of them can FOX be your favorite. Andy Samberg ("Saturday Night Live") continues to shine as Jake Peralta, showcasing enough goofiness while remaining as competent as you'd expect a New York City Detective to be. And like "Parks" 's Leslie Knope, Peralta might be a fool, but when there's a job to, do;he, can always be counted on. The season two premiere, "Undercover," featured so many strong lines and moments from the whole cast, including Terry Jeffords (Terry Crews, "The Expendables") and Captain Holt (Andre Braugher, "Men of A Certain Age") performing constant drills involving the 6'2" Jeffords masquerading as a confused old person, a seven-year- old boy named Timmy and a piece of "ticking" unattended luggage. Braugher, Emmy-nominated for his role, continues to kill it as Captain Holt and his back- and-forth banter with Santiago (Melissa Fumero, "Gossip Girl"), Diaz (Stephanie Beatriz, "Modern Family") and Jeffords in the premiere is priceless. Two of the biggest scene- stealers of the show are Gina Linetti (Chelsea Peretti, "Kroll Show") and Charles Boyle (Joe Lo Truglio, "Superbad"). Each had their moments ofhilarity following the harrowing (for Gina), life- affirming (for Charles) event of theirsleepingtogether.For Charles, it meant a newfound confidence in helping Jake track down an escaped Mafioso. His insistence on the sunhat - because that's what he thinks a Mafioso would wear - and his "tough guy" line, "There's more where that came from. I got areal-wet mouth,"all assure Lo Truglio's Boyle to be one of the most frequently cited fan-favorites. But the breakout star of the series is Peretti's Gina. Following her flingwith Boyle, Linetti'susual swagger is diminished, donning a black sweatshirt with her new "spirit animal," the naked mole rat, "God's disgusting mistake." When Santiago disses the shirt, Linetti snaps back, "Hey! Only I get to talk about my spirit animal that way,you don't getto say that." But it's the delivery and Peretti's performance - confident, self- deprecating, deadpan and always hysterical - that really sells the humor. This episode also featured "Parks and Rec" alum Jenny Slate, guest starring as a mafia girlfriend whom Peralta must outwit. Given Schur and Goor's strength in making memorable recurring characters, one really has to hope that Slate and many other former residents of Pawnee, Indiana might also soon find themselves at home at the 99th precinct in the form of guest roles. (Also, please give us a crossover episode of "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" and "Parks and Rec." The world will be a better place.) It's only the beginning of the second season, and it's tough to say with any certainty, but if the jokes keeplandinglike they have and the characters continue to be as lovable as they are, it looks like "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" might indeedbe the next great television comedy. want to talk about the greatest use of music in a TV show that I have. ever seen - season six, episode two of "The Sopranos." Carmela Soprano (Edie- Falco) puts on "American Girl," the '70s Classic Rock Radio staple by Tom Petty and the Heartbreak- ADAM ers, for her THEISEN husband Tony, who's in a coma after being shot. Even if you know nothing about the show, I think you can be touched by watching this scene. Falco's performance - talking and reminiscing and working through nostalgiathen intense desperation then guilt and bar- gaining while her normally fear- some, hulking husband lies inert with an enormous breathing tube sticking out of his mouth - is astounding, and when those tears come at the end, I'm absolutely crushed by all of her emotions. In a series with a plethora of consis- tently incredible moments, this, to me, beats all the rest. While I want to take nothing away from Falco's, it's Tom Petty who makes this moment. Before I watched this scene, I thought "American Girl" was exceed- ingly lame, that it should sit on a shelf gathering dust with "Slow Ride" and "Life in the Fast Lane" and all those other "classics" that I guess were pretty good at the time they were releasedbut should probably be forgotten now. But in this episode, the second Carmela started playing it out of that little radio, I knew some- thing special was coming. It starts innocuously, and you're familiar enough with the song's verses that you almost think.ie's.goi go jasthoe back- ground music for this grand emo- tional scene. But no, as Carmela starts talking about their trip to the beach, her memories and my memories intermingle. I think about going to the beach with my cousins and hearing Songs About Jane or Gnarls Barkley's "Crazy." And then I think about a scene earlier in the show's run where Carmela finds out Tony is cheat- ing and they get into one of the most terrifying TV arguments I've ever seen. Or I remember seeing Tom Petty perform this song at the Super Bowl Halftime Show, and then for.some reason. this random memory of playing Tony Hawk Pro Skater while "I Won't Back Down" plays. Now Carmelaand Tony are in a pool together last season, as Carm reluctantly realizes that she'll never be able to get Tony out of her life. And then I think about my friend's lakehouse this sum- mer, and hearing Petty's hits being blasted from someone's boat on the 5th of July and we're sitting on the deck while the sun beats down and the wind messes up our hair. I see Carmela in the hospital and hear classic rock and I remember the hospital the last time I saw my auntbefore cancer took her while I hear her sing Fleetwood Mac years earlier as we play Rock Band at my house. I want to buy into the idea that, as fucked up as Tony and Carm's relationship is, Tom Petty can fix it. At its core, "American Girl" is such a simple, lovable song. The drum beat bounces and makes you smile, the familiar rock struc- ture immediately comforts and the lyrics evoke images of per- fectly picturesque suburban cities where teenagers get together on weekends to courageously flirt with their crushes and discover new romantic feelings that lead to, fondly remembered embarrass- ments. I want Carmela and Tony to rediscover their young love just as badly as I want Carm to just for the love of God get out and never talk to him again. Her words of encouragement, her compliments ring hollow but still I believe and accept them. Then the songclimaxes just as.Carmela's love, exhaustion and despair hit their peak. Her voice cracks, saying "You're coming back here," just as the guitar soars and the wordless backing vocals crescendo. You're overwhelmed with everything at once. Her tears escape and I think about visiting relatives in the hospital and abusive relation- ships and all the pressures of try- ing to be an adult but at the same time Tom Petty's songsurprises me with how amazing it actually is and I hope that maybe, despite everything, all thatshit willwork out in the end. The emotional power of song is the closest thing we have to a time machine. That's part of why I love music. Geniuses and nov- elty acts alike bring backthe past. In our memories, "Summer Girls" can be as exalted as "Mr. Tam- bourine Man," and Toto's "Afri- ca" can occupy the same space as "Big Poppa." Whenever I turn on the radio I can'be suddenly bombarded with old fragments of my life; when browsing through my iPod I unconsciously have the ability to pull back long-forgotten times - good and bad. The endless tree of associa- tions that we have with music connects us, comforts us and fills us with more than we can handle. And though I'm not always thinking about all of this when "American Girl" comes on the radio and I use it for pure escapism, rolling down the windows and singing along because I've come around to the fact that it's a blissfully fantastic rock song, there will also always be those strangely wonderful nights where it feels like every song that comes up on shuffle has several random half-lost moments attached to it and I can't help but reminisce on the people, places and emotions the music'inspires. Theisen is feeling sad and nostalgic. To console him, e-mail ajtheis@umich.edu. 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We then see who it is - a small child. He claims to have just broken into NASA. Your response to this scene will determine your appreciation of "Scorpion." Years later, the little boy is one of the five smartest people on the planet and an ace computer hacker named Walter O'Brien (Elyes Gabel, "Game of Thrones"). The opening is ridiculous and the rest of the show isn't far off either. If you don't have a prob- lem with a genius hacker driv- ing a Lamborghini 200 miles per hour down a runway over- a doomed plane while Katha- rine McPhee stands through the sunroof with a laptop connected from the car on the ground to the still airborne plane's computer system, you will have a blast with "Scorpion." If you like fast cars, great chases, some funny char- acter moments and not a lot of sense, again you will like "Scor- pion." If you were hoping this would be director Justin Lin's big demo reel for "True Detective" season two ... you'll probably be excited to find that Lin does end up shooting the crap out of it. Lin is known for his contributions to the "Fast and Furious" fran- chise and especially for making it the awesome, globe-trotting, over-the-top ensemble epic it's evolved into. He's also directed some excellent TV in recent years including the paint-ball episode of "Community," "Mod- ern Warfare." The cast is decent, and has some definite potential, nota- bly newcomers Ari Stidham as "human calculator" Sylvester Dodd and Jadyn Wong as genius engineer Happy Quinn. For now, the cast works and little details like Dodd not talking to his par- I ents in 10 years provides much- needed pathos to some of the more chaotic elements of the pilot. At times, though, it does seem like lazy writing could turn them all into action-team stereo- types. The pilot puts the show in the same boat as "Fringe" and "Agents of SHIELD" were when they started - it could either progress in quality or fall aside into mediocrity. Hopeful- ly, writer Nick Santora and his team have enough passion for the characters and story to let it meet its full potential. "Scorpion" has a lot going for it and honestly isn't deserving of some its more negative criticism. The pilot might not be spectacu- lar, but the fundamental ideas at its core show at least some sem- blance of potential. 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