Okay, for this week and next week, we’re back to one “Sports Night” review at a time, as I enjoyed both “Dear Louise” and “Thespis” too much — and couldn’t manufacture enough of a connection between the two — to try to mash them together in a single review. Looking down the line, I suspect there will be more two-fers to come, but not at the moment. Spoilers for “Dear Louise” coming up just as soon as some stamps materialize… While the forced marriage of Aaron Sorkin to a live studio audience was a bad idea on ABC’s part, “Dear Louise” is one of the few episodes where the laugh track doesn’t feel out of place. That’s because, for one week, at least, Sorkin, Tommy Schlamme and the entire cast seem to be making an effort to play to the audience in the studio at least as much as the viewers at home. When I talked about how uncomfortably broad Joshua Malina’s performance was during the Spike Lee scene in the pilot, several people pointed out that it’s the only part of that episode that the studio audience responds to enthusiastically. It was aimed at them, and the rhythms of it were more familiar than most of Sorkin’s repetitive, deadpan banter. But it’s jarring there because Malina’s the only one in the cast who’s playing to the cheap seats, where in “Dear Louise” everybody seems to be on the same page. Early in watching the episode, I would make notes about how Josh Charles was playing Dan’s writer’s block very big, or how Robert Guillaume was doing the same with Isaac’s angst about his daughter’s Republican boyfriend. After a while, though, it became clear that everyone was doing it — that, in addition to being a series of mood-setting vignettes, “Dear Louise” was pitched at a different comic speed than most “Sports Night” episodes — and it worked for me. And it clearly worked for the audience, since the laughter throughout the episode sounds heartier and more genuine than in nearly any other episode of the series. For one week, at least, the laugh track isn’t an awkward intruder, but a willing collaborator. And yet even in an episode that has Natalie throwing water in Dan’s face not once, not twice, but thrice, and that climaxes with Dana drunkenly blasting “Boogie Shoes” through the newsroom, Sorkin and company find a way to make it still be “Sports Night.” Even in the midst of the wacky hijinx, they slip in the A.K. Russell carjacking tragedy, and a sweet moment for Jeremy and Natalie, and even the way the gang assimilates the news that Louise is deaf and quickly moves on. It doesn’t feel like pandering, even though there’s more slapstick, and the performances are bigger than usual. I really wish this was one of the episodes featuring a commentary

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Sports Night rewind: "Dear Louise"