television
columns
- Turkey Shoot
Throwing darts at a bunch of new shows with a bunch of friends.
Troy Patterson
posted Oct. 10, 2008 - The End of Star Wars
With a new television series, the space opera reaches its logical conclusion.
Troy Patterson
posted Oct. 3, 2008 - Subprime Time
Watching the financial networks during the meltdown.
Troy Patterson
posted Oct. 1, 2008 - Chavs and Slackers
Little Britain USA and The Life & Times of Tim.
Troy Patterson
posted Sept. 26, 2008 - Knight Rider 2.0
A show so bad it makes one long for David Hasselhoff.
Troy Patterson
posted Sept. 24, 2008 - Search for more television articles
- Subscribe to the television RSS feed
- View our complete television archive
Flight of the ConchordsA new HBO comedy channels the spirit of Ricky Gervais and Christopher Guest.
By Troy PattersonUpdated Friday, June 15, 2007, at 5:15 PM ET

The handsomely shaggy-haired new comedy series Flight of the Conchords (HBO, Sundays at 10:30 p.m. ET) succeeds by flopping around in the shameless sweet spot where paying tribute to one's influences, mocking them, and ripping them fully off become inseparable propositions. We've been prepared for its premise—a dim pair of musicians rattle and hum through absurd rock songs—by the only-half-ironic bombast of Tenacious D. The New Zealand-born stars, Bret McKenzie and Jemaine Clement, play incompetent Kiwis named Jemaine Clement and Bret McKenzie, and as this bottom-rung folk duo blunders through New York City, the show's rhythms follow the awkward pauses and instant reversals of Ricky Gervais' office drones and Christopher Guest's obsessives.
Flight of the Conchords samples all these beats to make hipsters hop on lazy Sunday, and the patron saint of the endeavor is the singer Beck—specifically, the Beck who strutted and preened through 1999's Midnite Vultures, a too-ironic-by-half compilation of blue-eyed funk. Indeed, when the Conchords break into the first of the series' many musical numbers, their song initially seems like nothing more than a clever imitation of that album's last track. Bret, moved to lift his voice by the sight of a delicate blonde at an apartment party, lets leak a ludicrous slow jam ("Let's get in a cab/ I'll buy you a kebab") that's the spitting image of "Debra" ("I said, "Lady,/ Step inside my Hyundai").
The placement of this song may leave those viewers already inclined to player-hate the show—its advance publicity has rung obnoxiously loud—with the impression that these jokers have no ideas of their own, but as the first four episodes unfold, it becomes delightfully clear that McKenzie and Clement are upping the ante. They create cute little comic ditties that stand on their own to tease both the delusions of sensitive young men and the pretensions of pop songs. They've got a fair bit of range. Funk songs, dancehall anthems, and power ballads alike come in for parodic treatment. While a robot-themed bit of slagging on Radiohead doesn't really click until its reprise, which features a "binary solo"—"zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero one"—a synth-pop sprechsingen modeled on the Pet Shop Boys' "West End Girls" emerges as a very fine take on starving-artist poverty:
You want to sit down
But you've sold the chair
So, you just stand there
You just stand there
Clement, with his glasses and his cleft chin and his inch-wide sideburns, resembles a hybrid of David Cross and someone very handsome. His shtick is self-delusional buffoonery. McKenzie has a face like a knife and eyes to make all the girls swoon. Coincidentally, his shtick is delusional buffoonery. Please welcome them to these shores with open arms, as in that Journey song, which they really could do something great with. Seriously.
feedback | about us | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved
- Today's Headlines
- Historical Archives: To Be Sold - Rather Large Buttons
Sat, 11 Oct 2008 12:00:00 -0400 - Historical Archives: Ship's Log
Sat, 11 Oct 2008 08:00:00 -0400 - Historical Archives: Secret Society Of Free-Bakers Has Fail'd To Gain Influence
Sat, 11 Oct 2008 04:00:00 -0400 - » More from the Onion
Over the LineHarold Ford Jr. | I know what it's like to be smeared by your opponent.
: The Positive in Negative Ads
- Robinson: A Little Worried About the Meltdown
- Khaled Hosseini: Sen. McCain, Am I a Pariah?
- Ombudsman: A Puff Piece About the Obamas?
- King: The Anatomy of an Assault
- Today's Headlines
- Can Pakistan Stay Afloat?
Fri, 10 Oct 2008 21:20:52 GMT - Florida: Will Palin Cost the GOP Jewish Voters?
Fri, 10 Oct 2008 21:07:56 GMT - Review: le Carre Novel Is Missing the Old Sparkle
Fri, 10 Oct 2008 20:41:29 GMT - » More from Newsweek
- Today's Headlines
- An Obama-Palin Ticket
Thu, 9 October 2008 18:16:56 GMT - Love the Player, Hate the GM
Thu, 9 October 2008 21:10:07 GMT - Schooling McCain on the Man Code
Thu, 9 October 2008 20:03:04 GMT - » More from The Root

television













