I continued my streak of never making it even as far as voir dire in the jury selection process, and while I sat in the jury room, I got to do my latest “Sports Night” review, which I’m posting a day early for reasons that I’ll explain at the end. Spoilers for “Thespis” coming up just as soon as I rehearse the route… “Ladies and gentlemen, Thespis has left the building!” -Dana There are deeper episodes of “Sports Night,” and probaby even funnier ones (I laughed more at the running gag with the water glasses in “Dear Louise” than I did at anything here), but “Thespis” is probably my favorite episode of the series. Just pure fun, a supremely confident farce that still finds time for a few heavy moments without ruining the tone. Sorkin’s fond of this Murphy’s Law structure (he did a similar storyline on the “Studio 60″ episode with Allison Janney, which was one of the less-bad episodes of that series), and where I think he finds the alchemy here is the decision to so quickly set up the idea of Thespis and have everyone buy into it. I think if everyone were in denial about it for more than the few minutes it takes Dana to slip and fall, it might have felt labored, but because we and the character understand by now that Jeremy knows of which he speaks, we and they just go with it. Whether there really is a Greek ghost in the studio or not doesn’t matter, because it’s in everybody’s heads. And once the premise is accepted, Sorkin and Schlamme can quickly accelerate the level of disaster, from Dana’s slip, to the falling turkey, to the entire signal dropping out for several minutes(*). (*) Time to call on the expertise of the commenters who say they worked on cable sports shows during this period: is that really plausible? What combination of factors would have to happen for a national cable sports network to just drop off the face of the earth in the middle of a show? What also makes it work, I think, are those serious moments I mentioned earlier — the idea that the bad luck afflicting Sports Night doesn’t just involve defrosting turkeys, but could lead to a tragic event for Isaac’s daughter. (That, I think, is the most significant difference between “Thespis” and the “Studio 60″ episode, which was played entirely for laughs, when the genius of Sorkin is the mix of jokes and pathos.) That storyline, or Dan’s lecture to Casey about his decision not to take the job that went to Conan O’Brien, don’t get in the way of the laughs; if anything, they make the laughs bigger, because they’re a respite from thoughts about what might be happening in that labor and delivery room 3000 miles away. And once again, how great is Robert Guillaume? The scene where Isaac is refusing to let Dana comfort him was expertly set up with the earlier scene about his son-in-law not rehearsing the route. Because Isaac is, like most Sorkin characters, smarter than the average bear, we know that he’s already thought of all of the myriad things that could go wrong for his daughter, and the way Guillaume plays that moment of mental torture is a reminder of the bliss that ignorance can provide. But really, I

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Sports Night rewind: "Thespis"