This Awkward Search Party May Be Worth Joining
TBS is burning off the quirky comedy Thanksgiving week.


Search Party. TBS. Monday, November 21, 11 p.m.
Viewers wondering if they should give the bleakly satirical TBS comedy Search Party a try can certainly be forgiven if they get the impression that the network is kicking them under the table and mouthing "don't bother." Modeled on indie films not only in its grimy photography and elliptical plotting but its penurious budgeting—the closest thing to a marketable star is Alia Shawkat, part of the ensemble cast of the decade-old cult favorite Arrested Development—Search Party is not so much being aired as burned off, two episodes at a time, at 11 p.m. every night during Thanksgiving week. Don't let the lid hit you on your head as we lower your coffin into the grave, fellows.
What's strange about this (well, okay, almost everything is strange about this, but especially strange) is that if you give it a chance, Search Party is kind of weirdly endearing, in a misanthropic, foul-mouthed sort of way. If you've ever wondered why all your friends are self-important sociopaths, Search Party may be the show you've been waiting for all your life.
At the center of Search Party is a group of superciliously narcissistic college friends nearing the end of their 20s whose pathological self-absorption leaves them happily blinded to the fact that their supposedly fast-track career paths have veered into the breakdown lane. The single exception is Dory, played by Shawkat, the cunning, irascible teenager with incestuous designs on her cousin in Arrested Development. She has a dawning awareness that inside the group she's a doormat and outside even less: "You're not even equipped to teach tic-tac-toe," snaps a charity manager when she volunteers to mentor teenage girls.
Dory is even feeling the stirrings of disenchantment with her tight little social circle, which includes Drew, her pampered, clueless boyfriend (John Reynolds, Stranger Things); Elliott, a preening designer who runs a charity that supplies designer water-bottles to sub-Saharan Africa (John Early, Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising); and Portia, a bit actress and walking blonde joke (Meredith Wagner, Royal Palms).
Disenchantment turns to rebellion when Dory finds herself inexplicably moved at the news that a college acquaintance named Chantal has ominously gone missing. Her friends' reactions range from bored shrugs to open hostility. "She sucked!" shouts one. "She was always brushing her hair in public!" With a surprising, if tentative, stubbornness, Dory pushes the crew into a grudging pursuit of the mystery.
Like the hunt for Chantal, Search Party moves fitfully in its early stages, when it's more a series of bitterly etched sketches than a cohesive narrative. But the preening egomania of its characters becomes easier to laugh at as they acquire a few trappings of humanity. And the show gains momentum as the vanished Chantal turns from a Hitchcockian MacGuffin—a device of no importance except to trigger the plot—into a genuine mystery.
The show's progression also makes it clear that the pugnacious self-absorption of Dory's friends is not trendy TV millennial-bashing but merely one more malevolent element of a hostile universe. In the unhinged world of Search Party, a subway passenger reading Anna Karenina is likely to be accosted by a strap-hanger who leans close to murmur, "I'll save you 400 pages, she dies at the end." A neighbor who timidly offers shelter to an abused wife is rewarded with a shriek: "Get the fuck out, you baby-cocked bitch!" Perhaps the reason the characters in Search Party spend so much time in front of mirrors is that they're wondering if the person they see there is, like everybody else, out to get them.
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TBS has sucked ever since they stopped airing racist cartoons, The Little Rascals, The 3 Stooges, old movies and Georgia Championship Wrestling.
What, no Minoriteam, Black Dynamite?
You bring Black Dynamite into this space?
They still play reruns of Seinfeld
"The Contest" was on the other day. So funny!
Have you noticed that they cut the blackface scene from "Holiday Inn"?
H & R is kind of weirdly endearing, in a misanthropic, foul-mouthed sort of way. If you've ever wondered why all your friends are self-important sociopaths, H & R may be the blog you've been waiting for all your life.
I find Alia Shawka strangely hot.
George Michael?
Nothing strange about it.
She is funny.
Look, women are funny. Get over it. There's nothing italics-worthy about it.
Watch a bunch of millennials go on a journey of self discovery?
No thanks.
Isn't that just a typical Reason staff meeting?
Enough about Nick Gillespie.
When was the last time Reason gave a really enthusiastic review to a TV series?
West world? That Kristen Bell sitcom that Akers the piss out of government?
Akers the piss out of government
Apple, making otherwise smart people look like morons since 1977.
And me, as well 🙁
They pimp ReasonTV endlessly...
That's gone downhill since Carey left.
Is it actually possible to pimp the organization you work for?
Are you saying that Bishop Don Magic Juan pimps for the benefit of a competitor's stable?
I think not.
the cunning, irascible teenager with incestuous designs on her cousin in Arrested Development
As a hardcore nerd, I have to correct this. She, in fact, was not interested at all. It was George Michael who had the designs on her. Also, the running gag was they were never sure if they were blood cousins or related only by adoption....
Are we taking about a different George Michael, because it was my understanding that he was gayer than when Mr. Gay Goes to the Gay Spa in Gaytown.
George Michael Bluth, son of Michael Bluth on Arrested Development.
Huh, so not WHAM!'s George Michael. Carry on.
She had her moments of weakness. IIRC she kissed him before the floor shifted.
She kisses him after the floor shifts and she's thrown onto him.
The point stands, she never once has designs on him.
TBS should send out a search party to look for a good script, amiright?
I was scrolling through the few hundred channels I get on DIRECTV and thought, "why do I pay for this?".
My thoughts and prayers are with you.
until I looked at the paycheck saying $4730 , I did not believe that...my... brother woz like actualy bringing in money part time from there computar. . there friend brother started doing this for less than 7 months and resently paid for the morgage on there home and bought a new Cadillac .......
>>>>>>>>>http://www.centerpay70.com
until I looked at the paycheck saying $4730 , I did not believe that...my... brother woz like actualy bringing in money part time from there computar. . there friend brother started doing this for less than 7 months and resently paid for the morgage on there home and bought a new Cadillac .......
>>>>>>>>>http://www.centerpay70.com
until I looked at the paycheck saying $4730 , I did not believe that...my... brother woz like actualy bringing in money part time from there computar. . there friend brother started doing this for less than 7 months and resently paid for the morgage on there home and bought a new Cadillac .......
>>>>>>>>>http://www.centerpay70.com
In the unhinged world of Search Party, a subway passenger reading Anna Karenina is likely to be accosted by a strap-hanger who leans close to murmur, "I'll save you 400 pages, she dies at the end."
Good thing I finished Anna Karenina before I read this, or I woulda been reeeeeeal mad.
It's Russian literature, of COURSE everyone dies.
It's Always Sunny in PhiladelphiaSearch Party is kind of weirdly endearing, in a misanthropic, foul-mouthed sort of way. If you've ever wondered why all your friends are self-important sociopaths, It's Always Sunny in PhiladelphiaSearch Party may be the show you've been waiting for all your life.
TBS put the entire first episode on YouTube. It's pretty hit-or-miss, but it does show some potential.
You might all consider watching just for the sex scene with Alia and her boyfriend, which comes fairly early in the episode.
Is this the link? Can you give a specific time into the episode?