Ah the sitcom. Such a tricky genre to do well, and yet one that has lasted through the history of television, changing and morphing to suit social mores and creative trends.
This week there's a flood of them in the network roll-out of new season shows. There's some interesting trends in this year's brood too, even if it often seems like a new season of old jokes.
Curiously, the vast majority of the new sitcoms centre around females. Perhaps it's a market research reaction to the success of Two And A Half Men. New Girl, 2 Broke Girls, I Hate My Teenage Daughter, Are You There Chelsea?, Happily Divorced, and Suburgatory all have their own take on what it means to be a female in modern-day America. Airbrushed promo photos are compulsory, and the stereotyping runs wild.
Even the indie cred of actress Zooey Deschanel can't seem to save New Girl from falling into tired jokes. In the first episode her character Jess lies on the couch crying a lot and watching Dirty Dancing after a break-up, falls over in high heels, burns her hair with a curling iron and has to subvert her personality in order to get a date. Hilarious.
It's not that being quirky and confessional can't be funny (Brit show Miranda is the perfect example of a successfully bonkers, embarrassing and yet relatable woman), but Jess and her three male flatmates present nothing we haven't seen before. In fact the "men are from Mars and women are from Venus" dynamic of non-coupled males and females living together ("oh, look how different we are!") has been done in so many ways that it would be tricky not to repeat oneself.