TMC
04-15-2025, 02:53 AM
https://jacksonupperco.com/2025/04/15/the-ten-best-30-rock-episodes-of-season-three/
30 Rock’s third season is great, boasting the firmest command on the leading characters yet, as the series’ awareness of how to best feature them only continues to rise with their further exploration, while a still-elevating sense of abandon when it comes to big idea-led comedy that feels sketch-like (less based in literal realism) also moves the show aesthetically closer to its Saturday Night Live roots. However, despite this rising character know-how and loosening comedic freedom, the show’s novelty of premise is naturally dwindling, and inevitably, these increasingly bold idea-heavy setups are starting to not always be well-connected to the series’ situation — either its tangible backstage-of-a-variety-show construct or, more broadly, the topical, parodic, and media-focused themes that are more uniquely evocative of SNL. In fact, as the series is going bigger with its humor, it’s also starting to become more hit-and-miss (like sketch comedy as a genre) — and this will continue throughout the rest of the run… That said, this is still another stellar year for 30 Rock, with a high baseline of quality yielding episodic results that, if not as consistent as Season Two, nevertheless has highs that are just as high — and sometimes higher — thanks to bigger comedic swings and even bolder sketch-like stunts (such as star casting, which continues to be a 30 Rock calling card).
30 Rock’s third season is great, boasting the firmest command on the leading characters yet, as the series’ awareness of how to best feature them only continues to rise with their further exploration, while a still-elevating sense of abandon when it comes to big idea-led comedy that feels sketch-like (less based in literal realism) also moves the show aesthetically closer to its Saturday Night Live roots. However, despite this rising character know-how and loosening comedic freedom, the show’s novelty of premise is naturally dwindling, and inevitably, these increasingly bold idea-heavy setups are starting to not always be well-connected to the series’ situation — either its tangible backstage-of-a-variety-show construct or, more broadly, the topical, parodic, and media-focused themes that are more uniquely evocative of SNL. In fact, as the series is going bigger with its humor, it’s also starting to become more hit-and-miss (like sketch comedy as a genre) — and this will continue throughout the rest of the run… That said, this is still another stellar year for 30 Rock, with a high baseline of quality yielding episodic results that, if not as consistent as Season Two, nevertheless has highs that are just as high — and sometimes higher — thanks to bigger comedic swings and even bolder sketch-like stunts (such as star casting, which continues to be a 30 Rock calling card).