Confession: I Didn’t Hate ‘Whitney’
09.23.11There’s a great divide in televised comedy right now. On one side are the single-camera shows loved by critics — “Community,” “Parks and Recreation,” “The Office” — that are marked by rapid-fire jokes, cutaways to reaction shots, and (with the notable exception of “Modern Family”) low ratings. On the more traditional side are the multi-camera sitcoms filmed in front of a studio audience that generally perform better in the ratings (“Two and a Half Men,” “The Big Bang Theory”).
“Whitney” is NBC’s attempt to make a comedy that pulls in a broader audience. It has been almost universally panned by critics — because it isn’t meant to please critics. It has been teleported to the present from the 1990s — stand-up comedian plugged into sitcom life — and it will continue to use the “set-up, one-liner, audience laugh” format that draws millions more viewers for CBS sitcoms than NBC’s Thursday night fare.
Within those parameters, “Whitney” isn’t bad. It’s not for me, but it isn’t terrible. I admittedly laughed a couple times during the pilot episode, which is more than I can say for CBS’s “2 Broke Girls” (19 million viewers on Monday). Really, the problem is the network and established audience, not the show. If “Whitney” were on CBS, it would be a huge hit and I could ignore it like “Mike & Molly;” on NBC, I’m forced to accept its existence alongside my favorite shows.
At the very least, we owe a fair appraisal of “Whitney”: it’s better than “Outsourced.”


I agree, to the extent I can seeing as I didn’t watch it. I knew going in that I wouldn’t particularly enjoy it, so instead of wasting a my time getting all angry about a show I knew wasn’t for me, I ate a buttload of gummi beers and looked at GIFs on Tumblr. Time well spent.
If it weren’t for the laugh track, I wouldn’t have been able to tell when a joke was happening.
To be fair, a live studio audience isn’t a laugh track, but the difference is pretty minimal for me as a viewer.
Honest criticism about a polarizing show that I hate sight unseen? BOOOOO! HISSSS!
I didn’t hate it, but I can’t say I liked it either. Compared to the rest of the NBC Thursday lineup, it was garbage. I won’t go out of my way to watch it, but I will leave it on in the background while I putz around online waiting for Sunny and Archer to start.
My wife dvr’d last night, I’ll probably watch it with her.
“Explosive diarrhea”: it’s better than “Outsourced.”
“It’s better than Outsourced”
Aw, but “Outsourced” had overt racism!
Gummi beers? Someone needs to make this happen. Like, NOW!
At least they are giving comedians an outlet. It seems the only time we see them any more is at one of those roasts. They don’t even get slots on the Tonight Show anymore to perform. Probably because Leno doesn’t want anyone to see what a real comic is like
It wasn’t terrible, but I wouldn’t watch it willingly. I can’t figure out why NBC didn’t put Free Agents there instead. I only saw the pilot, but it seems like a much better fit.
Oh, well. At least we get 30 Rock back soon.
Whitney has amazing legs. Unfortunately, I doubt that we’ll see that awesome nurses outfit again. So, with that said, I’m probably done with this one.
/liar
//willprayformorecosplay
@FC, I agree. Like I said in the earlier post, I’d watch every episode of this show if she wore the nurse outfit every week.
/joins FC in cosplay prayer
Terrible script writing. I’ll give some of the CBS shows this, while they are god awful, they can set up a set-up/punchline much better than the telegraphed jokes on Whitney
Whitney was boring and hardly worth my time. But if there’s any good in this I can see it doing gang busters with the general populace. And if NBC had any sense, it would bump the show to the 8:00 slot and then every other show back half an hour. Thus, giving better shows a more mass-appealing lead in.
Then, maybe then, Community and Parks & Rec will get the recognition they deserve.
I’ll try to translate Matt’s post into a format Whitney viewers can follow:
There’s a great divide in televised comedy right now.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
On one side are the single-camera shows loved by critics — “Community,” “Parks and Recreation,” “The Office” — that are marked by rapid-fire jokes, cutaways to reaction shots, and (with the notable exception of “Modern Family”) low ratings.
OOOOOOOOOOO!
On the more traditional side are the multi-camera sitcoms filmed in front of a studio audience that generally perform better in the ratings (“Two and a Half Men,” “The Big Bang Theory”).
AAAWWWWWWWWWWW!
Whitney was worse than Uproxxxxxxxxxxxx
Save for Vince of course
“Whitney was worse than these websites that I read and comment on.” Oooh, that really cuts deep, Wayne.
The fact that Gummi Beers don’t exist makes me question this country’s priorities. New jobs are great, but alcoholic candy? Heroic.
After much reflection…..
1.) Two Broke Girls
2.) Whitney
3.) Tons of shows
4.) The Zooey Deschanel show
5.) Tons of more shows
6.) Who knows…
I said save for Vince, he’s a talent. Put a bullet in nextround’s head already goddamn Uff
1.) I REALLY liked the 2001 A Space Odyssey scene in “Community”
2.) The Community dance scene was a nice tip o the hat to critics, bloggers and commenters…..the ass cheeks peek was a tip o the hat to everyone else…
3.) Rashida Jones is quite pretty ….and Park and Recreation is quite funny
4.) Unbelieveably…..The Office was funny…..and much better without Carrell
Honest appraisal: I kind of agree with Matt. It wasn’t awful, but it was a little too formulaic and CBS-y. It was a little off-putting that the audience laughed as hard at the good jokes as they did at the flat throwaway ones. I did get bored midway through and stopped watching. Whitney Cummings’ standup is pretty funny, but the characters in the show are all one-note and cliched. Rhea Seehorn is interesting to look at, though. Yeah, and that nurse’s outfit. Nice.
@Wayne: Nextround isn’t part of Uproxx. The sites with “uproxx” in the URL are the ones that are part of Uproxx.
If you don’t like a website, don’t go to it. As it is, you’re just giving the blogs extra clicks (and therefore income). But if you want to keep arguing with me about this, by all means go ahead. You’re paying me.
Yeah Wayne, ya fuck!
^5s
Sorry, dude. The problem with “Whitney” is not the way it’s shot, or the laugh track, or its time slot. It’s the fact that the jokes suck and aren’t funny at all. A hot chick and a bevy of lame sex gags aren’t a recipe for success. This crap would’ve failed on any network.
It’s so weird how grating a studio audience sounds now when I think about how much I enjoyed friends and seinfeld when they were in their prime. I agree with the general sentiment, it had its funny moments but its not going to be in my DVR rotation.
NBC should stick to their niche of the single cam criticly appraised sitcoms. These should still attract certain types of advertisers regardless of ratings. They can supplement their revenues with America’s Fattest Dance Loser Voice Off and still be known as a network with smart scripted programming.
This is arguing? I hope all the blogs are clicked and Vince gets what he’s earned ya dingus
Wayne, you’re like the assholes on KSK who complained about not getting good Sexy Friday posts ON A FREE WEBSITE THAT NOBODY MAKES YOU VISIT. If you were paying for this content and required to read it, you’d have room to complain. As it is, it’s all voluntary, dickbag.
To be fair, there is no real difference between a laugh track and a live studio audience. Non-diegetic laughter in a comedy hasn’t worked in 10 years and makes an already terrible show with awful, telegraphed jokes even worse. That said, the boyfriend was pretty bomb in that one episode of Workaholics.
Sounds like dude is Vince’s boy. Or wants to blow him.
The show is awful. She’s hot (for a female comedian), but the show is an awful rehash of obvious jokes and brings nothing new.
It’s just like her standup….it SEEMED funny for a few minutes, until you realize all her jokes and stories are centered on relationships (like the 99% of female comics who all suck) and she is just telling them in a more graphic way, which kind of confuses you and makes you think she’s unique….until you realize “Oh, I bet she’s about to talk about her period” and then BOOM! She does.
@clueheywood
to be fair whitney did have a blackface joke. i’m a sucker for a good blackface joke
my problem with whitney was that it felt like watching a drama school rehersal. YOU DONT NEED TO SPEAK THAT LOUD, EVERYONE.
that and every joke felt like it was to be followed with the other character going “OH YOU!!!”
On the one hand, the writing and acting were really lame. On the other, more important hand, Whitney shook her awesome red pantied-ass right in the camera. My boner was confused, but I still managed to whack off a couple times. It was pretty cool to see that uber-indie actress from “Breaking Upward”, Zoe Lister, playing the requisite wacky friend in the most conventional comedy format in the universe. I hope the dull ache of selling out is lessened by the sitcom money.
2 broke girls was TERRIBLE. It felt like a dysfunctional play with crappy dialog and an even worse setting. And after watching the trailer for Whitney I thought it’d be just as bad…but it was actually pretty funny. She’s a likeable character as is the boyfriend. I see this show getting progressively better as it goes along.
I’m not sure I wasn’t watching a parody of a laugh track here. Loud, punching up lines at inappropriate times, a f*ck you quality all around?
Or it was beyond awful.
Somebody hacked my twitter, sorry Doughy McIntyre. No seriously uproxx, great name for a blog tree, or meth suppository
I laughed at a few jokes, but I didn’t make it through the episode by a long shot. I agree, it just doesn’t fit in with the rest of the comedy that NBC’s doing right now.
I haven’t caught Whitney yet, but I’m pretty sure I lost part of my soul watching the 2 Broke Girls pilot. Kat is still HOT though…
I watched this and made what I call “Two and a Half Men” face almost the entire time. That’s when I involuntarily twist my face into a painful expression every time there’s a joke, not because I’m trying to hold back a laugh, but because I’m mildly disgusted that anyone would laugh at something so patently unfunny. But at least Whitney Cummings is nice to look at, unlike Jon Cryer.
This crap would’ve failed on any network.
It got twice as many viewers as Community, and almost as many as the Office. Did pretty well for an NBC show.
I think if this were on a different night of shows and not dropped in with the new form of comedy it would have been slightly less panned. Slightly.
Wait. People seriously liked this? It was terrible. As someone who likes both CBSs comedies and NBCs comedies, I can’t ever see myself watching Whitney again.