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Girl Meets World - Episode 1.09 - Review: "I am a continuation"

21 Sept 2014

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“I continued it. I am a continuation. That’s what history’s about.”

Concept episodes have a rich history in Boy Meets World. Probably one of my defining memories of the series is season five’s “And Then There Was Shawn”, a horror movie send-up pitting the gang against knives, masked murderers, and blood-scrawled threats as they wander the halls of John Adams High. A quick Google search tells me I’m not alone, and I would strongly recommend it to those coming to Girl Meets World blind. It’s funny, it’s ludicrous, and it’s surprisingly tender by episode’s end, as Shawn learns a very important lesson about himself and the way he fits into his friends’ lives.

So know that I am delighted to see Girl Meets World continuing this legacy, even if I’m not sure this week’s “Girl Meets 1961” was a promising start. I did appreciate the show’s subversion of the repeating history trope, with the group’s great-grandparents somehow meeting once in the whirlwind that was 1960s New York, but pointedly not knowing each other for more than a few hours on a single night. It might still be an overly cute idea, but while there are many aimless lessons swirling around “Girl Meets 1961” (I feel like there’s a law written on a whiteboard somewhere that Maya MUST learn how skilled she is and how she needs to get out there with her talents every episode, no matter whether it fits or not) the quiet curiosity in wondering what could have been really helps to land the idea of history as education. For many different reasons, Rosie, Meg, and Merlin wander away from one another that night. For many different reasons, their lives don’t go quite as planned. There are better lessons than others there—friendship smiendship, what about the genuinely interesting and perhaps tongue in cheek, coming from a 10 year old spin off to a show that was never a ratings success, tidbit about how what may seem world-changing today may be just a blip in time tomorrow—but they are lessons all the same. Maya might snark that a class about the future would be more helpful, but that’s really what history is. The past is unchangeable—the future, however, is wide open, and with the context of the past, at least partially navigable.

Unfortunately, ideas don’t an episode make. There’s easily enough material in “Girl Meets 1961” for two episodes. Yet, not only is it crammed into 22 minutes, no one seemed to care which parts went where. We shift from class to a (at that point) inexplicable and slow flashback, with Rowan Blanchard adorably dolled up as Audrey Hepburn and poor Corey Fogelmanus stuck with a diseased cat’s hairball on his face. This might have been all well and good if we didn’t cut to credits and then … return? For another scene? And then, only then, finally discover just what was going on? It’s far more legwork than such a simple plot should need, and saps the energy from the room every time we flip back without any clear reason why. 

Similarly mishandled is the tender reveal behind the meaning of Topanga’s name. Perhaps if it had been thrown in at the end over the credits, I could forgive it. However, while Fishel sells the moment of discovery with beautiful grace, it remains a puzzlingly jerky insertion into an episode where she is otherwise completely absent. It’s not surprising, really. GMW has had a lot of trouble balancing its parents and its children. It’s hard to know exactly what the issue is, but with “Girl Meets 1961” admitted into evidence, I’m inclined to think we simply don’t spend enough time at home. Sure, Cory’s in the classroom, but Classroom!Cory is a Feeny!Cory—not an Alan!Cory. Meanwhile Topanga’s usually in the air, plucked down either solely for the reminder she is actually a parent or the Topanga we knew, or forced into a completely different subplot entirely. It’s a simple fix really, and one I imagine the show will enact as it goes, but it would have been nice to get even one dinner table conversation about history and Rosie out of Topanga to help tie everything together.

Don’t get me wrong, there is a charm about “Girl Meets 1961”. When you see that photo of the real Rosie, Meg, and Merlin, it’s hard not to feel something. It’s hard not to nod at the power behind Riley’s realization, that we are all ourselves and so much more, the next step in a long series of steps before us. It just doesn’t work—but then maybe that’s the exciting part. “Girl Meets 1961” is just one step, and not even a fully terrible one.

We’ve got so much more climbing to go.

RANDOM THOUGHTS
  • Rider Strong, you tease. YOU WERE RIGHT THERE, DIRECTING. SURELY YOU COULD HAVE APPEARED.
  • At the risk of stating the obvious, Sabrina Carpenter is amazing. Rowan Blanchard was clearly genetically engineered to be Ben Savage’s slighter, girlier clone, and will always have that to save her, but this show would be in tatters were it not for Carpenter. Her switch between Maya and Meg was actually insane. If she breaks off the Disney train, she’s going to have quite a career.
  • I remain not a shipper but on the Maya/Lucas train, so long as the dynamics seem safely preserved in Tupperware while the show sorts out what they’re doing. You know. Just in case we’re taking a survey. There's just so much more potential there.



Thoughts of your own? Let me know!

About the Author - Sarah Batista-Pereira
An aspiring screenwriter and current nitpicker, Sarah likes long walks not on the beach, character-driven storytelling, drama-comedy balancing acts, Oxford commas, and not doing biographies. She is the current reviewer for Girl Meets World.

13 comments:

  1. Thanks for the great review Sarah. I had similar feelings about this episode. It seemed very jerky.

    Glad there is someone covering this show.

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  2. I ship Maya and Lucas!

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  3. Sarah Batista-Pereira20 September 2014 at 20:49

    Glad to be here, good and bad!

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  4. Sarah Batista-Pereira20 September 2014 at 20:52

    I get the feeling like the show was designed with the idea of Maya/Farkle and Lucas/Riley, but I do really hope they either change their mind or start making Lucas and Riley an actually interesting combo to watch. Not that I wouldn't be glad for them all actually just being friends with only outside romantic entanglements, because I enjoy the weirdness of the group.

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  5. I really like the idea of Riley and Farkle, becuase it's a bit like Topanga and Corey, with the gender's reversed. Something needs to happen for Riley to see Farkle as more than a friend, but it could happen.

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  6. Sarah Batista-Pereira20 September 2014 at 23:22

    If the group has to split into romantic duos by the law of fiction, I agree. Particularly if this takes some of the obnoxious out of Farkle.

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  7. huh i thought i was the only who saw something between maya and lucas i mean i think they're going the riley/lucas way but i guess the actors can't help what they bring to the screen, i really thought rider strong was going to appear there at the scene since they didn't show what cory was seeing i really thought it was shawn, it would've been awesome

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  8. I can't explain it but there was something about this episode that made me cry. The idea behind it was so simple, beautiful, and souful that I teared up. That was when I really knew this was a continuation of BMW

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  9. I too thought I was the only on seeing that! They're just like... written for each other lol

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  10. Might seem like a small thing but that acoustic transition music before one of the breaks was a nice touch. Kinda wish they would have used that in place of the real ones. It sounds more timeless and classic. The desaturated colors was also a nice change from our normal explosion of color. If only we could find a middle ground somewhere it'd be perfect.

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  11. Sarah Batista-Pereira22 September 2014 at 04:57

    It's funny though, because I actually think Rowan and Peyton have more natural chemistry. I just think there's a lot more to play with character-wise with Maya and Lucas, and so far the way they episodes have gone, it does seem like the writers have way more fun writing them. If they tweaked Riley/Lucas a little, I'd be down though.

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  12. Sarah Batista-Pereira22 September 2014 at 04:59

    My kingdom for a more naturalistic color palette. I'm sure it's a network thing, but wow do I hate the brightness.

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  13. Shirleena Cunningham22 September 2014 at 06:06

    I totally agree with you!! The writers don't want to make a love story like BMW, its about four friends going through life. GMW and BMW is all about teaching kids life's lessons.

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