Sunday, June 3, 2012

Episode 52, Part 1: Doug Graduates

The sixth graders are graduating from Bluffington School in three days. From there, they will go on to jr. high. Everyone is excited about this except Doug of course.

Skeeter notices that Doug is not happy and tells him to cheer up because three more days! Doug says he feels funny and down about it.

Some jackass on a skateboard rides by and tells Doug he should talk to Mr. Shellacky about it. Al and Moo said they did that and recommend it. Doug is not convinced. Roger suggests Doug see Mr. Bone. "He always straightens me out." That's actually kind of sweet. Connie suggests he see Principal Buttsavitch.

"He's supposed to be a great guy."
"YEAH! He's the one that got us the school newspaper back!"
"And our new volleyballs!"
"He built the new planetarium."
"When the chemistry lab blew up, he single-handedly pulled Skunky Beaumont out of the flames."

Is that something that actually happened? Did an elementary school really get a planetarium? Did it really have a chemistry lab that blew up? I should have grown up in Bluffington. Sounds awesome. My elementary school was broken into and vandalized once, but nothing ever exploded, and we certainly didn't have a planetarium. I feel cheated.

Doug is convinced and suggests they all go see the principal. They march straight to Mr. Bone's office and are denied their request.

Mr. Bone says he's all booked up. He's way too busy running the school to waste time talking to students. I'd call bullshit on that based on my school experiences, but I never went to a school where the principal had to personally get volleyballs, build a planetarium, and rescue students from burning parts of the school. Maybe he is too busy.

After Mr. Bone kicks them out of his office, they realize none of them has ever actually seen Mr. Buttsavitch. Doug wonders what he's like and has a fantasy.

He's the Wizard of Oz. He's pissed that he's been disturbed and he doesn't understand why Doug is unhappy. Doug says he can't feel excited about graduation like everyone else. The Buttsavitch of Oz quickly changes his attitude, saying, "why didn't you say that in the first place? You just need the same thing all other kids have!"

A gift from the Buttsavitch of Oz! Perfect! Unfortunately, when Doug goes to open it, it morphs into his alarm clock and he wakes up.

It wasn't going to make Doug feel better anyway, but I like the angry, fiery Buttsavitch of Oz that turns into the cheerful, glowing Buttsavitch of Oz aspect of this. Porkchop didn't even uncover his amazing ruse that involved projecting his head while he stood behind a curtain. Nope, he's just regularly a giant floating red head.

I also want to take a moment to finally say how much I love the poster above Doug's bed. I don't know why he has WWII propaganda above his bed, but I love it. I feel like that poster might be his ruin with Patti. He has to keep his crush a secret or it will be the death of him.

With two days left of sixth grade, it is now yearbook day. Everyone is getting everyone to sign theirs, and their 20-something selves aren't there to tell them "don't bother." They are already laughing about lame shit in the book like the Bumpkin Ho-down. Apparently the school had a Bumpkin Ho-down and I was not invited. Anyway, Doug walks up and Patti asks him to sign her yearbook. Because he's thinking so much about Buttsavitch, he doesn't really realize what's going on here and absentmindedly signs her yearbook and misses another free opportunity.

Doug tells Patti, Skeeter, Beebe and Chalky he's figured out a plan to see Mr. Buttsavitch. They've all forgotten about the whole thing. Doug's plan is predictably inept. Skeeter is standing on Chalky's shoulders. Patti is standing on Skeeter's shoulders. And Doug is standing on Patti's shoulders.

They're graduating sixth grade and don't even know how to steal a ladder from a construction site. This is sad. Also, what a terrible plan! There are several easier ways to see the principal than this. Doug could simply wait outside his office at the end of the day until Buttsavitch finally emerges. To make this plan even worse, they aren't even outside the principal's office. When Doug finally gets to the window, a bunch of girls scream. One of them shouts, "somebody's peeking in the girls' bathroom!" These kids are morons. Of the four of them, with genius Skeeter (though Chalky gives a speech at graduation, so how smart is he?), how did they not know which window to peek into? Did Doug's plan involve starting anywhere and then having the bottom person walk them around the school until they found it? Or is it just an unfortunate coincidence that the principal's office is right next to the girls' bathroom and the girls' bathroom has giant unobstructed windows? How unsettling is that? Anyway, Mr. Bone lets them off the hook because they are graduating the next day. Sure, peeking in the girls' bathroom might actually be the worst thing they've done in sixth grade, but who cares since they're graduating?

Doug starts to suggest hiding out in the teachers' lounge (already a better plan) but everyone else wants to forget it. They don't care. Doug feels a little more anxious and has another fantasy. Doug, Skeeter, Chalky and Beebe are climbing a mountain.

There's something really weird about this fantasy. It starts with Patti saying "Doooouuug, why don't we just forget about it?" Then Beebe yells, in Patti's voice, "WE'RE GRADUATING IN TWO DAYS!" It's crazy.

So Doug drags the rest of them to the top.

"As principal of an elementary school, it's important that I do all my stamping at my desk on the top of a mountain. The thin air makes the ink dry faster."

Anyway, just as Doug drags the rest of them to the top, his rope breaks and only he falls to his death like Wile E. Coyote.

Doug jumps up from his bed. It was just a dream, which, to me, excuses the Beebe/Patti voice switch. Dreams are naturally weird like that. My favorite dreams are the ones where the only other character is an amalgamation of all my friends that looks and sounds like no one I've ever met.

Finally the last day of sixth grade has arrived and it is every bit as useless as the last day of any school year. They're having a party and Chalky is giving Ms. Wingo a card signed by the whole class.

Ms. Wingo gives Roger his last lesson and informs him that "sayonara suckers' is two words. Roger is embarrassed, but it seems like quite an improvement. She didn't correct his spelling, and if he was maybe a bit quicker, he could have said he just wrote them too close together, perhaps to save room for the other students. She really didn't need to call him out on that. Bitch. She asks why Doug didn't sign the card and Patti says they couldn't find him. Ms. Wingo says, "couldn't find him? That's funny. Where do you think he is?" She also could have said, "couldn't find him? That's Funnie. Where do you think he is?" I am not certain which spelling went with what she said, because they both work. So where is Doug? Oh, he just had himself shipped to Mr. Buttsavitch.

How much did that cost? The secretary asks who the package is for but the delivery man can't read it. She tries to read it but gives up and assumes the box contains the new volleyballs. Doug is left in the gym.

He escapes saying, "maybe if I sneak into his car." Well obviously. He probably should have thought of that before he spent all that money shipping himself to the school. How did he do that anyway?

Outside the gym, Ms. Wingo stops him to tell him she was worried she wouldn't see him again. Their conversation sets off another fantasy. This time Doug and his classmates are on a rocket hurtling through space. Everyone is excited except for Doug, who points out that they are being sucked into a black hole.

Doug determines to find Captain Buttsavitch, but he breaks into the cockpit and finds it empty. Theda wakes him up and ends the dream. It's time for graduation.

While the graduating class sings their alma mater song, Patti and Skeeter talk about the absence of Doug. Skeeter reasons that he's probably just fixing his tie. If he only knew the truth. Doug is actually climbing through the air ducts.

This might be one of my favorite moments of the series. Doug climbs up to a vent and sees this.

It's a giant, one-eyed, shirtless man shoveling coal into a furnace, muttering about how glad he is that it's graduation because he needs a vacation. Is Jim Jinkins David Lynch?

Meanwhile, Chalky is giving his speech (because I guess he is more genius than Skeeter). Doug comes up to another vent to see a teacher dancing on a desk and singing a song of good riddance.

Because a climbing-through-the-air-ducts scene wouldn't be complete without it, Doug finally reaches a point where he falls through the ceiling into a room. It happens to be the principal's office. Finally.

Look at his stupid butterfly collection. Doug starts asking, "Mr. Buttsavitch?" until finally the chair spins around.

Doug asks him what he's doing there and he says, "what do you think, lamebrain?" Doug says, "you're not hiding out from graduation are you?" Roger explains that he's been in sixth grade for three long years (!!!) and he practically runs this school. Everyone is afraid of him. Who is he going to be in jr. high? Doug reassures him that he's not going to be the only one going to jr. high. Everyone he knows is going to be there. The teachers and the building are going to be different, but all of his friends are going to be there. This actually makes Doug feel better too, finally. Roger sees his point and is glad that he'll be there with Doug, if only to have someone to pick on.

I still maintain that all he wants is to be Doug's best friend. They exit the office together and join the graduation ceremony. At the ceremony they are giving out diplomas, because let's face it, some of them are going to need their sixth grade diplomas to get a job.

Doug and Roger get in line behind Patti and Skeeter. Skeeter tells Doug he missed the principal. Patti says he gave a great speech. Doug says, "oh, well, no big deal." Patti and Skeeter are surprised. His anxiety only showed as an extreme curiosity about the principal. Once he finally dealt with the anxiety of the situation, his curiosity disappeared. Anyway, Mr. Bone finally calls his name.

And Ms. Wingo's concern that she wouldn't get to see him again no longer makes sense. She knew this was going to happen. Presumably, she's done it every year she's been teaching. It might not be the best opportunity to really talk to your departing students, but it's certainly the best opportunity to say goodbye and good luck.

"When you're about to go someplace new, it can be kinda scary. Well, you kinda want somebody older and more mature to tell you everything's gonna be alright. But I found out today, that older, more mature person was...me."

That sounds a bit crazy, but it's not really. He tried to talk to someone that would reassure him, but found that person to be hopelessly inaccessible. Mr. Bone phones it in on the last few days, Ms. Wingo makes the situation worse, and who knows which window is the window to Mr. Buttsavitch's office? What's crazy are the fantasies that start in the school and end the next day when Doug wakes up and they were just dreams. And all of his ridiculous plans to see Mr. Buttsavitch. None of them make any goddamn sense at all. Only a crazy person or a graduate of the sixth grade could invent such shitty plans.

6 comments:

  1. Blame BeeBe speaking in Patti's voice on, what Christopher Sobieniak would say, "incompetent Korean animation".

    One last time, this version of Doug visits the self-contained show bible. Doug DID see the principal before in "Doug Gets Busted".

    And the scene where Doug crawls through the vents reminds me of "The Breakfast Club".

    Not much to say about this episode, other than that there is one last Nickelodeon segment of this show left to cover.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And to add to my own post, when I said BeeBe speaking in Patti's voice, I was of course, referring strictly to Doug's mountain climbing fantasy.

      Delete
    2. I don't think that was a goof on the writers' parts.

      I think that's why they made that reference to "Doug Gets Busted" with Principal Buttsavitch supposedly pulling some kid out of a chemistry lab fire. They were either making a "yes, we know this doesn't have continuity with that episode" joke, or they were implying an explanation as to how Doug could still have never seen the principal, even after that episode. Principal Buttsavitch may have been off saving Skunky from a real fire in the science lab, and Doug got his ribbon from someone else in the Principal's office.

      Remember, WE didn't see the Principal in that episode, so we don't know whether he saw him or not.

      Either way, I think there was irony intended to it.

      Delete
  2. Is that something that actually happened? Did an elementary school really get a planetarium? Did it really have a chemistry lab that blew up? I should have grown up in Bluffington. Sounds awesome.

    we all wish our towns were that bone-headed!

    but nothing ever exploded, and we certainly didn't have a planetarium. I feel cheated.

    For me, a swimming pool in a high school since mine had none!

    My favorite dreams are the ones where the only other character is an amalgamation of all my friends that looks and sounds like no one I've ever met.

    As a thirty year old, that's all I can do!

    At the ceremony they are giving out diplomas, because let's face it, some of them are going to need their sixth grade diplomas to get a job.

    Yeah that was pretty awesome in an implausible way!

    Only a crazy person or a graduate of the sixth grade could invent such shitty plans.

    This is like the stupidest Afterschool Special ever penned (40 years ago anyway)!

    vnisanian2001 said:
    Blame BeeBe speaking in Patti's voice on, what Christopher Sobieniak would say, "incompetent Korean animation".

    Thanks for giving me street cred!

    Yes, that would be one of the familiar mistakes we've all witnessed.

    One last time, this version of Doug visits the self-contained show bible. Doug DID see the principal before in "Doug Gets Busted".

    Writers had a brain fart!

    And the scene where Doug crawls through the vents reminds me of "The Breakfast Club".

    It did for plenty of us!

    Not much to say about this episode, other than that there is one last Nickelodeon segment of this show left to cover.

    No, not the mysterious "IT", Bug Ranch, Blythe Field and Painted Gorge, anything but that!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "This is like the stupidest Afterschool Special ever penned (40 years ago anyway)!"

      Huh?

      1. Doug's not an afterschool special, and none of the episodes in the Nickelodeon version had anything in common with those in any of the episodes in any way at all.

      2. Why would you even bring up afterschool specials? What does that have to do with this episode?

      3. Are you trying to insinuate this is poorly written? Seriously? This show is brilliantly written.

      From, "I guess the 1 must be...me" to, "But I found out today that older, more mature person was...me." Absolutely fantastic...start to finish.

      On the other hand, YOU write like a fucking kid, using exclamation points after every single fucking sentence. Your comments are pretty much unintelligible and scatterbrained. In replying to various quotes, your replies don't have any discernible meaning. And nobody fucking cares about your personal experiences in childhood that you ramble on about.

      Delete
  3. I couldn't stop laughing at this!
    http://dougyearbook.ytmnd.com/

    ReplyDelete

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