Thomas Pynchon, Sitcom Star
Friday A/V Club: The most unexpected literary joke in TV history


Now that television is a certified High Art and Americans binge-watch densely woven intertextual narratives for fun, I wouldn't be surprised if you told me tomorrow that Netflix is releasing a 30-part adaptation of Gravity's Rainbow with an option for a second season. But when I settled in one Tuesday evening in 1993 to watch The John Larroquette Show, a short-lived sitcom about a recovering alcoholic managing a St. Louis bus depot, TV was a medium with more modest ambitions. So I was kind of surprised when, a couple minutes into the episode, it launched into an extended Thomas Pynchon joke. There were places I expected to see references to Pynchon's paranoid postmodern novels, but this was not one of them.
The full episode, called "Newcomer," doesn't seem to be online. (Or rather, it's online only in that cropped-and-slowed-down format that YouTubers use to avoid the copyright police.) But you can see that scene, and a follow-up sequence near the end of the episode, in the clip below. Pynchon himself signed off on the dialogue (which is a little "racially charged," as they say), and there are rumors that the famously camera-shy writer slipped onscreen as an extra. Probably false rumors, but don't let that stop you from searching for him as you enjoy a TV moment so strange that for years I thought I might have dreamed it:
Bonus links: Pynchon later had two cameos on The Simpsons. Watch 'em here and here. For past editions of the Friday A/V Club, go here.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Larroquette is a serious book collector. That could explain this episode.
He's "appeared" a couple of times on The Simpsons as well. Both times wearing a paper bag over his head.
But when I settled in one Tuesday evening in 1993 to watch The John Larroquette Show,
This is the most appalling sentence a Reason employee has shared all week.
Could have been worse, he could have been settling in to watch The Nanny.
Would
I wouldn't be surprised if you told me tomorrow that Netflix is releasing a 30-part adaptation of Gravity's Rainbow with an option for a second season.
Would watch. Also, fuck that book. Also, I liked it a lot.
Today we learn that Crusty's copy of Gravity's Rainbow has a fleshlight taped to the spine.
OK, that was great - thanks for a non-shitty start to the Friday!
The John Larroquette Show, a short-lived sitcom
I checked on imdb, and the thing ran for 4 seasons. How times change - now that'd be quite a respectable run for a sitcom...
I member that show. Oh, I member. Also, member Night Court?
Yeah, one of the only bearable sitcoms ever. Which explains why we all tried the John Laroquette show...
Kitty: The program has changed my life. And I have a sponsor now. (Whispers) He's famous.
Michael: That's great.
Kitty: I can't tell you who he is. But let's just say that he was on Night Court.
Michael: Well, you look great.
Kitty: I can tell you who it's not. It's not Bull. It's not Harry Anderson.
Michael: I got it.
Kitty: He's white.
Michael: I know who it is.
Personal favorite novel ever. But all his stuff is great.
If not for Mason & Dixon, i never would have heard of Vaucanson's duck.
I liked the ketjap stuff.
I have a soft spot for Vineland. I really love that one
Well, I kept an eye out for a paraplegic guy in a wheelchair rolling through the background but I never saw one. And was that quote the dude was saying really come from Gravity's Rainbow? Just doesn't seem like the sort of thing you'd read in a book about black holes.
He's no Kurt Vonnegut in Back to School. (That has to be one of the most out of nowhere cameos in history.)
Ha. That is awesome. I will definitely have to watch the Gravity's Rainbow series.
It took me three attempts to get through the book, and then when I finally did finish it, I was like, WTF?
Huh I tried and failed twice, maybe third times the charm, might give it one more go.
Oh Gravity's Rainbow... I kept thinking Gravity Falls. Carry on.
Pretty funny. The way the book was signed was very clever.
Fun facts: It's a favorite novel of mine, I have a first edition, and I also have a signed Pynchon letter. Some day I'll sell the two of them together. Not quite the same as a signed book, but close.
I've never read the book, know nothing about it in fact, but I immediately thought John Larroquette Show before reading the post, because I remember that episode. It was a decent sitcom for that era.
My favorite bit from The John Larroquette Show was when Larroquette showed off his AA one month(?) chip to the bartender and the bartender offered him a beer. After some banter the bartender tells him other trades available all the way up to a full bottle of Johnnie Walker Red for a 20 year chip. He even snowed off a jar full of assorted chips.