Monday, August 21, 2023

“Jury Duty”: A TV Star is Born

The prank show is as old as television. How well I remember Candid Camera, various versions of which were around from 1948 to 2014. This hidden-camera reality show delighted in putting the unsuspecting in awkward situations (like encountering a mailbox from which a human hand reaches out to take your mail). There was lots of innocent merriment to be had in seeing others fooled by wacky oddities.

 Then there’s the so-called mockumentary. It’s realistically filmed, as though a camera crew just happens to be looking in on some everyday but slightly eccentric folk. Among movies, I’d cite 1984’s This is Spinal Tap, in which actor Rob Reiner—making his directorial debut—appears on-screen as Martin Di Bergi, earnestly interviewing four members of what is called “one of England’s loudest bands.” Among the droll rockers in Spinal Tap is one played by Christopher Guest, who went on to produce and direct his own series of mockumentaries. These have included my favorite, Waiting for Guffman, as well as the deathless Best in Show, an hilarious send-up of the snooty kennel-club world. The mockumentary format has been used on TV on such sitcoms as The Office, the U.S. version of which pretends to be filming a workplace documentary about the employees punching their time-cards at Dunder Mifflin Paper Company.

 All of this, I suppose, paves the way for an 8-part TV series produced by Amazon Studios and now nominated for three Emmy awards, including Outstanding Comedy Series. It too is a mockumentary, with jurors and other courtroom personnel being interviewed by off-camera journalist-types, supposedly for a film about what it’s like to serve on an American jury. Here’s the key difference from most mockumentaries: though the judge, the bailiff, and eleven jurors are all actors playing roles, the jury foreman has no idea that he’s at the center of an elaborate prank. Ronald Gladden, of San Diego, is a good-natured young man excited about serving on a jury for the very first time.  

 What he experiences is a trial that at first seems straight-forward: the well-heeled owner of a T-shirt manufacturing business is suing a derelict employee who—drunk and disorderly—befouled a huge stack of her product. But nothing goes as planned. The plaintiff is obnoxious; the defendant’s attorney is hopelessly inept; one juror suffers a near-fatal fall; a second is having a major romantic crisis; a third keeps falling asleep in the courtroom; a fourth is a total space-cadet who enters the jury room wearing his own bizarre invention--“chair-pants.” To add to the chaos, the jury’s alternate member is a semi-well-known actor, James Marsden, who can’t help reminding everyone of his celebrity at every turn. (“James Marsden” is played by James Marsden, best known for films like X-Men and Hairspray. His obnoxious but somehow endearing lampoon of his own public image earned him an Emmy nomination.)  Because of Marsden’s outrageous shenanigans to get out of serving, the jury ends up sequestered in a local motel, where many adventures await them, involving both sex and plumbing.

 None of this would work if it were not for Ronald Gladden. As the one person who’s not in on the joke, he’s trying hard to be both a good juror and a friend to all. Yes, he deals with some pretty unspeakable things, but it’s made clear at the end that everyone on the cast and crew loves him. By the end of Episode 8, you will too. I suspect this will not be his last time on the tube. And I know law students will be in stitches over this very funny show.  


 

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