Black-ish Spinoff Grown-ish Really More of a Rip-off
Cliché-addled college sitcom lacks any sort of originality.


Grown-ish. Freeform. Wednesday, January 3, 8 p.m.
After nearly two decades of journeyman work on mostly forgettable TV shows—literally; does anyone remember I Hate My Teenage Daughter, canceled after two episodes in 2012?—Kenya Barris suddenly stood the industry on its head in 2014 with Black-ish, a sitcom about an upscale black family in which race is not ignored but actually acquires the status of a character as the family struggles with the question of whether being bougie is compatible with being black.
Since then, everybody has been waiting to see if Barris had another big idea. And with the debut of the spinoff Grown-ish, we have the answer: Yes—to steal The Breakfast Club, lock, stock, and teen-angst barrel.
In 1985, director John Hughes' The Breakfast Club was the latest of an emerging genre of what might be termed intra-generational rap films, in which the members of various age cohorts whined to one another that life was disappointing them. The Big Chill had the slouching-toward-middle-age Baby Boomers and their first intimations of mortality; St. Elmo's Fire, the front edge of the Gen Xers and their first intimations of working for a living.
The Breakfast Club was for teenagers. It featured five archetypal kids—a pampered princess, a jock, a nerd, a rebel, and an outcast—marooned together in a Saturday-morning detention, little by little realizing that they're all concealing secrets and vulnerabilities under their labels. "We're all pretty bizarre," observes one. "Some of us are just better at hiding it, that's all."
In Grown-ish, the high school kids have turned into first- and second-year college students, including Zoey, the eldest daughter in Black-ish (played by Yara Shahidi). The detention hall is now a class that runs from midnight to 2 a.m., taught by a mostly absentee adjunct professor with an erotic fixation on drones and attended almost exclusively by whores and methheads. And the kids' secrets reflect that three decades have passed; overbearing dads have been replaced by drug-dealing and manipulative moms by closeted bisexuality.
Other than that, Grown-ish is a cell-by-cell clone of The Breakfast Club and its celebration of sophomoric melodrama, where cynical wisecracks inevitably give way to mock profundities, shouting matches to hyperemotive tears, and clichés to stereotypes. (Or maybe that one is the other way around.) The wholesale piracy is so blatant that Grown-ish even tries to make a joke or two about it. But the admission that you're stealing somebody else's work doesn't make it any less larcenous.
Making a doppelganger of an endearing if adolescent movie, however pathetic from a creative standpoint, might at least make the cash registers jingle-jangle satisfactorily, especially when it airs on ABC's Freeform, a cable net pitched to high-school and college-aged audiences who are about as likely to have watched a 1985 film as they are to have read Plutarch in the original Greek.
But a kleptomaniacal heart isn't the only or even the main problem with Grown-ish. Unlike its progenitor Black-ish, which sparkles with anarchic wit, Grown-ish feels forced, populated by stock characters reading lines delivered on a sweatshop assembly line.
A more talented cast would have stabbed itself in the collective eye before speaking aloud sentences like, "The one thing I didn't know about college—that I'd never admit to my dad or anybody else—was that in all actuality, I would soon discover that I didn't know anything." Instead, these actors embrace another part of the script: "The more we cried, the more we realized why we stumbled into this crazy class." Yeah, the paycheck.
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I liked this the firs time I saw it, when it was called A Different World.
Lisa Bonet > All other women ever.
Truth. Even when i was seven years old, Denise Huxtable made me feel scared but also important.
Do you remember when it was actually for reals Big News that Lisa Bonet was in a Family Way?
Does this have to do with nudity?
No.
I assume you mean Angel Heart, which I still like.
That was her big breakout as a Serious Actress(tm).
Nothing like hot chicken-blood sex with Mickey Rourke to say "Oscar Committee!! Look over here!"
You'd think, but when i did it all i got was a restraining order from the Academy.
*puts down chicken; starts putting clothes back on*
And I liked Blackish when it was called Girlfriends. The world is cruel in how it forgets its true originals.
I've not even heard much about this show Blackish. Is it a show about NPR diversity interns?
It's Anthony Anderson and Tracy Ross (From Girlfriends, only reason I make the comparison and one of the only good shows UPN managed to make) are an upper-middle class black family. A lot of the confrontation lies around the parents feeling insufficiently black, but also not really wanting to be. The episode about the Riots is probably one of the best to get a feel for the show.
It's not bad, but I like Anthony Anderson and Tracy Ross and they should have never cancelled Law & Order, damn it.
Except, for me, the only good parts of the show are Anderson and his co-workers at his ad firm. His family is fairly dull, save the youngest daughter. When I saw who they were going to base a spin-off on, I was wondering why they didn't spend the first few season giving anybody a reason to give a shit about her.
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taught by a mostly absentee adjunct professor with an erotic fixation on drones and attended almost exclusively by whores and methheads. And the kids' secrets reflect that three decades have passed; overbearing dads have been replaced by drug-dealing and manipulative moms by closeted bisexuality.
So what now?
Recalculate the time of the Rapture?
nevitably give way to mock profundities, shouting matches to hyperemotive tears, and clich?s to stereotypes.
So it's a show about Twitter?
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Are we sure the show isn't called,
Groan-ish
*dons sunglasses*
I suspect that approximately none of the target audience has seen The Breakfast Club.
So, copying it should not be a problem.
Maybe it is really similar to the Breakfast Club, but if the major similarity is that "yoots hash out the problems they have" then this might be an unnecessary level of reductionism.
Seems to be a common thing, where a criticism points out that someone else at some point did something similar, and therefore the new thing is a rip-off. Since everything has already been done, 100s of years before any of us were born, this just leads to people picking and choosing it as a criticism when they can't come up with anything more substantive.
The rest of the article is more substantive though. I just wish they'd skipped out on the comparison.
It's an age thing, I think.
When I was 14, my dad seemed obsessed with how all the music I listened to sounded just like something that had been done 20-30 years before. But to a 14-year-old that old stuff is just source material (in just the same way that Canned Heat weren't ripping off Blind Lemon Jefferson, they were just paying tribute).
Now I find myself hearing what my daughter plays and saying "that sounds just like Erasure," at which point she shrugs and continues having no interest in Erasure, because it's thirty years old.
"Simpsons did it!" to quote a South Park episode...
Depending on how old your daughter is she might know Erasure from Rainbow Unicorn Attack.
So does anyone even try to edit Garvin? You start reading "overbearing dads have been replaced by drug-dealing and manipulative moms" and then the whole sentence goes off the rails and has to be reparsed. Turns out the overbearing dads have been replaced by uh, the act of drug-dealing (not "drug-dealers"?) and the manipulative moms by something else that isn't parallel to moms, either. It's a train-wreck.