On NBC’s new TV show “Community”, we meet Jeff, a cocky lawyer who has to go to community college to get a degree he had previously fabricated. Jeff is used to getting anything and everything he wants by weaseling and charisma. However, at community college, he finds himself in an odd collection of strangers similar to The Breakfast Club. Among them is Britta, a sarcastic and ‘political’ woman that Jeff is instantly captivated by. In order to spend more time with Britta, Jeff pretends to be a Spanish tutor (he actually doesn’t know much useful Spanish) and ends up inadvertently starting a study group of mismatched people with all sorts of issues. Jeff feels like the group is a hindrance, but a necessary obstacle to overcome if it means he can win Britta’s heart.
While it seems like he is going to a lot of work to get to Britta, the viewers know that Jeff is not interested in hard work. In fact, we see in the first episode that his hopes are to find the loopholes and easy answers and skate through college. He has no problem with cheating and talking his way into getting what he wants. However, he finds out quickly that his modus operandi isn’t going to be successful here. He is actually going to have to apply himself and get through community college without someone providing him with all the answers to every test.
While Jeff doesn’t have the answers, the rest of the characters on the show are no better off. None of the group of misfits seems to have the answers for life either. Community has presented itself as an atheistic show. There are no answers; God is a punchline, and truth is relative. At one point, Jeff even says, “I discovered at a very early age that if I talked long enough I can make anything right or wrong, so either I'm God or truth is relative -- and in either case, boo-ya!” LA Times reviewer, Robert Lloyd, even says, “It may be the mode of modern life to trust no one and mock everything.” All of Jeff’s best moments, when he is being a good person, he is lying.
Since God is nothing more than a joke or a hot topic for debate (Jeff, when told to get away from small talk, asks Britta if God is still dead), all religion and ‘answers’ of any kind are mocked. In episode 3, when Jeff is caught up in a class where the teacher believes he is Robin Williams in Dead Poets’ Society, he finds that he can’t even “seize the day” without lying and that his lying isn’t actually seizing the day. That paradox, in a sense, describes the entire awkward plot of the show: lying or not, no solutions are right or come easy.
So while truth is no better than a lie, neither God nor any other higher source come into the picture on either side. The key to life is seemingly finding community with others, but even that, on this show, is all a production and a lie. Community for the rest of the misfits in the study group is their greatest desire, but to Jeff, it is just another means for him to get what he wants: Britta. While the lack of truth and good intentions makes for some decent humor at times, it is a sad portrait of the lack of purpose that comes with a lack of truth. The absurdity, situationalism, and general absence of truth or morals seem to reflect postmodern perspectives. Its atheism is neither as optimistic as naturalism, nor as dark and angst-ridden as nihilism/existentialism, and so postmodern atheism seems the most apt label for it.
Community is in its first season on NBC, with only three episodes having aired at this date. Community is praised for its cast lineup, including Joel McHale (The Soup) as Jeff, Chevy Chase as Pierce, Gillian Jacobs as Britta, Alison Brie as Annie, and Danny Pudi (Greek) as Abed. It was created by Dan Harmon.
[written by] Sarah M