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Buffy Rewatch Week 2: Xander is Chandler Bing

Week 2 went off without a hitch, as per usual, where we got to watch some of the viewers’ most-hated episodes ever. Those included “I, Robot…You, Jane,” “The Puppet Show,” and the more loved “Nightmares.” And can I just say—again—that I really don’t understand why anyone hated these episodes. Now, that’s not to say I would have liked them in 1997. But in 2012, where we can completely laugh about Internet apocalyptic jokes and the idea of dolls coming to life and removing your organs, I say these were extremely enjoyable episodes. Especially “The Puppet Show.” Oh, my goodness. Thank you for the laughs, Buffy the Vampire Slayer. And although “I, Robot…You, Jane” had a ton of hilarious colloquialisms, it actually scared me. I’ll point out when below.

Buffy 1; Fans 0.

Oh, and it totally created my first ship on this show. Mr. Giles and Ms. Calendar! Can you say “sexual tension?” Because oh, boy! I feel it!

Oh, my god! Please tell me this happens! Know what? Better yet — DON’T tell me! I don’t want to know. I want to be surprised; I want to go on this journey. What is this, though? Gilendar? Calendiles? Another thing I noticed about the show is that people just die in this school and then the next day it’s like nothing happened.

I love how they’re always friends with the dead person only in that episode but then just don’t care about them when they finally die. And I also love how no one decides to LEAVE THAT EFFING SCHOOL! Holy crap! If there were like 27 dead guys at my school one year, I wouldn’t even wait to see the third one. I’d get the heck outta that place.

Also, this crop of three episodes continued the trend of dead people in/near lockers.

And lastly, I finally realized why I’m very comfortable with Xander, why he seems so familiar. HE’S TOTALLY CHANDLER BING (from Friends). You guys…you guys, seriously. Has this been a thing before?

The hair! The clothes! They’re the same person! Okay, to be fair, that’s a pretty typical ’90s look. But, y’know, still. The way they talk, their snide jokes, apathetic optimism (which is a paradox, but truthful). I’m pretty sure they’re one and the same at this point. I mean, they even share the same nightmare:

And if you don’t understand this picture and now think I’m a total weirdo (not that you didn’t before), then you cannot call yourself a Friends fan (not that you did before)!

To understand, watch this video below at the 1:10 minute mark where Chandler describes his dream from the Friends pilot:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EfZ8swV7eKg]

Okay, so, he was technically in the cafeteria. But yeah! I now have all the evidence I need to convince myself that Xander is Chandler Bing: The Teen Years. Anyway, let’s get to the recappin’ and opinionatin’!

1.08 “I, Robot…You, Jane”

Buffy the Vampire Slayer has this tendency in its first season to be one episode on (the season arc) and then about two episodes off. So, since “Angel” was all about the arc and whatnot, the show had to go off for another two episodes, where we got to see them extremely not understand the Internet. And it was glorious. First off, however, I need to mention this. Look who it is:

It’s the Turn Face Monster from the opening titles every episode!! You know, I was waiting for him to finally pop up. And, boy, what an entrance. So apparently this monster/demon guy is in love with this other guy. And he looks like the creepy version of Aladdin, like the version that has to register on the sex offenders list.

Tell me I’m wrong. Anyway, he’s all, like “I will always love you!” But the monster/demon guy isn’t buying it and has to break up with him otherwise it would be awkward.

…by breaking his neck. It was a tough breakup. So these Italian people — oh, yeah, it’s in Italian this scene, by the way — put him in a book for the rest of his days! And this is the part where I cried:

Because, oh my goodness, The Secret Circle is canceled and Buffy needs to stop being so dang topical in 2012. I mean, cannibals? And now Secret Circle references!? Not cool.

So moving on, they succeed and now flash forward to 1996 and that book just coincidentally finds itself in the Sunnydale high school because why not. And this is where we have our first Gilendar/Calendiles interaction where she’s totally up for it.

He’s complaining because he doesn’t want his books to be “skimmed” and she’s all “it’s called scanning—it’s new, and improved purrrrr!

Okay, so maybe their choice of conversation isn’t the most sensual, but they’re on a first-name basis. HAWT! The point is that Giles is an oldtimer and Calendar is all about the “new technologies.” For a Calendar, she sure ain’t dated! Bahahaha! I slay me! Oh, goodness! Me and these puns! (I guess her name should be Jenny Smartphone Calendar App Har Har Har!). Moving on, there’s this guy who you know will be the FOTE (Friend of the Episode) — he will end up dying at some point, as they all do, and then never mentioned again. Mr. Giles makes some snide remarks about technology and he’s all “YOU WILL OBEY TO THE INTERWEBZ YO!!!”

So yeah, he was creepy from his first line.

Anyway, Willow ends up scanning the book and the Monster Guy enters the computers because that makes sense in 1997. And he uses his evilness to…hit on Willow a lot, which we know won’t work out because (A) he’s a monster and (B) for…reasons. But Willow is loving her new Internet boyfriend, and Buffy is sort of concerned. So she goes to FOTE 2 to find out information about people online.

She finds out that just anyone can fill out a profile page online and it can be literally anyone in the world you just don’t know!!! Like, for example:

At this point, it was sort of becoming a PSA for online anonymity. I was half expecting Chris Hansen pop out at any moment. And my other half expected the Glee kids to bust in and sing about it. Anyway, when FOTE 2 finds out that Buffy is worried about Willow he gets all FOTE 1 on us and acts creepy. At this point, we know that Monster Guy is totally controlling them…somehow…it’s not really explained. Basically, these kids just listen to anything they read. And Monster Guy is trying to kill the slayer, who just so happens to be Buffy.

Which is why I wasn’t surprised when FOTE 2 apparently tried to kill Buffy with help from FOTE 1. He makes pretend that Willow is calling her (they’re on the outs), lures her into the gym showers, and then cuts a hot wire and puts it into the water…which in turn causes this:

Totes would happen, you guys. Don’t even laugh about this one. I mean, look at her unprotected feet!

That’s only, like, four inches of rubber protecting her. How careless!

Anyway, she survives, but ONLY because she’s the slayer. We find out that Willow is in danger, since FOTE 1 chloroformed her (which is when I got genuinely scared), and is in the hands of Monster Guy. FOTE 1 dies and no one is sad. And then Buffy and Xander go to look for Willow at some abandoned facility. And then this insanely anticlimactic scene happens:

WHAT? She just…KNOWS? Okay. I guess the point is that in 2012 Calendar and Giles would be one and the same person, because as I said previously, it would be a Media Center Specialist. And apparently every teacher in this school just knows about crazy demon stuff, which yet again makes me question why Buffy hasn’t told her mother that she’s “the slayer.”

I mean, I know a lot of these vampire/supernatural shows always argue that they have to not tell their friends and family because it would put them in danger — and I would mostly argue that it at least keeps the show grounded in some sense of reality — but on Buffy TVS, it’s most apparent that it’s just ridiculous! If anything, it just puts them in danger. Like, for example, when Darla BIT HER MOTHER because she invited her in!!! Preventable. But, whatever.

Anyway, Buffy and Xander save Willow because Giles and Calendar figure out a way to re-curse Monster Guy (but not before FOTE 2 dies). They are saddened about their love lives.

Future Pop Culture References: None, really. Except that you probably still can’t believe some of this stuff was possible in the 1990s. And then what brings it back to the 1990s is all the hilarious Internet lingo!

They don’t really say all those terms, but you get it. Oh! And also that final scene pictured was TOTALLY…

You know, Fear? That movie with Reese Witherspoon and Mark Wahlberg? Yeah that one. And if you don’t know, I envy you. Because yeesh!

Oh and also this episode sort of reminded me of The NeverEnding Story, so there’s that.

The Grade: Hey, I got scared during this one. I think that warrants some sort of “good” on the season one scale.

1.09 “The Puppet Show”

Okay so this very well may be the best episode of anything ever in the history of the world. The gang get a new principal and he’s sort of a hard ass, so he makes them participate in the school’s talent show — where there is an evil demon ripping people’s hearts out. And — get this — he’s a DUMMY! Oh, my goodness! THANK YOU!

But as it turns out, there’s a twist! He’s not a demon, he’s hunting demons. And then it gets even more hilarious because this dummy’s got wood (bahaha!) for all the girls. And he, like, drinks and smokes cigars. It’s awesome.

Anyway, they find the right demon person and he rips his heart out and then the Dummy dies (which is what he wanted all along). Episode over!

Oh, yeah, and Joyce shows up to pretend she’s a parent:

FOTE: The Friend Of the Episode is this guy, who you think you’ve seen in something else before but it turns out he just looks familiar.

He’s the ventriloquist and he goes frantic looking for his dummy. But for the most part, he’s kind of just useless. The audience knows pretty early on that he’s not really doing anything and is a victim of his own mind. And, y’know, talking dolls. Also, if you count the girl who died as a FOTE, then the “they always die” theory is still true.

(Not Always) Future Pop Culture References: Um, a talking Dummy that may or may not be causing mischief?

But I only read Goosebumps in the 2000s, so…

And a doll that’s DEFINITELY causing mischief?

Oh and seriously, I cannot believe it took me this long to figure THIS out…

Cordelia was also Kendall Casablancas on Veronica Mars! It only took NINE episodes! Oh, goodness. That means she an Allyson Hannigan were TWICE the working buds!

The Grade: Okay, seriously. This was absolutely HILARIOUS. I think it was also meant to be hilarious, too. And for that reason alone, I LOVE this episode. It was going to be my favorite of the season, until…

1.10 “Nightmares”

This episode was actually kind of important. It didn’t ACTUALLY pertain to the entire season-long arc, but it sort of helped it move along some. What happens here is that some kid is in a coma and is affecting everyone’s reality — the world is turning into one, huge dream and everyone’s nightmares are coming true…literally.

Now, of course, the show makes use of it in a cheeky way to show Willow’s stage fright, or Xander’s classic naked-in-school nightmare, or Giles being afraid of incomprehension, but what I loved about this episode is just how much more dynamic it made the Buffy character. It wasn’t only the dad thing…

Which, by the way, what? She’s just hanging with her dad on weekends? I guess that’s why vampires and monsters take off on Saturdays and Sundays?

Anyway, it wasn’t just that. I mean it was; because oh, my goodness, what a scene.

Okay, but seriously, it was quite emotional. And I think the reason it was so, and maybe it’s because I’m still at an age where it’s quite relatable (though I think it’s timeless), is that these really are the things you think about as someone’s child. I know that Buffy is a freakin’ slayer and her mom and dad think she’s some lunatic arsonist, but the root of the insecurity still rings true. We’re all just walking around, living beside each other, wondering if we have or ever will live up to the person our parents imagined we would be, or could be. That’s a lot of pressure. And then to imagine that perhaps since you let them down that’s why they love you a bit less, or don’t like you as much.

Yes. Buffy. YES. So I connected to this right here a lot. And this is perhaps my worst nightmare. That and getting stabbed naked. I can’t be the only person who thinks getting stabbed while naked would hurt more than with clothes on, right?

Anyway, this little tidbit really helped diversify Buffy from just a slayer into a more well-rounded individual. And so I’m interested to see how these struggles play themselves out in the future.

Elsewhere, we also realized that Buffy fears becoming the one thing she’s fighting against, and even of failure (and having The Master escape). It truly makes you understand how much she has on her shoulders — the weight of everyone’s lives!

So, anyway, Buffy gets to the kid who’s in a coma and allows him to wake up before everything turns to s—, basically. Episode over!

Hey, don’t I know you from…oh, never mind: Just like Morgan, or FOTE, in the previous episode was this episode’s FOTE who totally looks like Joseph Gordon-Levitt but isn’t. But, c’mon, he so is.

I mean, I know it’s not. But that’ totally him.

Future Pop Culture References: Buffy speaking to people from Over There who make it extremely difficult to make you understand WTF is happening? Yeah that’s…

But it stays in the ’90s because having to defeat your enemy in your dreams or otherwise you’d all die in reality?

More Evidence SMG took this job to practice for Scooby-Doo:

The culprit was Old Man Little League Coach!

Also, why is Giles vogue’ing in that screencap?

The Obvious Parallel: Overcoming your fears of being who you are, your insecurities. But thankfully, not in SUCH an obvious way, y’know?

The Grade: This was quite a fun episode, but not as fun as “The Puppet Show,” which for those elements I like “Puppet Show” more. But in the sense of developing its leading lady, “Nightmares” may perhaps be the best episode of season one thus far.

And that’s three more episodes of Buffy the Vampire Slayer! We resume with the final three of the season this Monday at 9:30pm EDT on Twitter, #BuffyRewatch.

View Comments

  • Your recaps make my life!! This has been my fav show for about ten years now and reading these just reminds me all over again how much I love it. Can't wait to hear what you think of season 1 once you've finished season three!

    • Ha! :D I'm glad you're liking the recaps. They're a much different style than what I'm used to. I'm anxious for Monday myself to see the ending of season 1!

    • What? Hahah sorry I'm just really confused by this comment :D

      I wrote "Cordelia was also Kendall Casablancas." I don't see how that's different. And besides, if I had written it the other way around, I think it would have been justified seeing as I saw Veronica Mars first.

      I mean, I know Cordelia is a bigger character for the actress and for Buffy fans, but that doesn't change the chronology of how I saw her.

  • ok. re cordelia = kendal casablancas & also willow = logan's sister... joss whedon was a very vocal fan of veronica mars, had a cameo on the rat bus episode, as a rental car clerk. also.. joss directed an episode of glee, which stars dianna agron, who was on veronica mars. next stop, joss whedon & the cast of mad men...

    • Yes, I've heard of this and I don't blame him. Veronica Mars is a fantastic show and it somewhat stands for what he believes in, that society can see a woman as a hero and not just a heroine.

  • Ok, I genuinely love The Puppet Show and Nightmares too! Angel was the episode I started to love Buffy, the rest of the season is pretty good. I also mistook that kid of Joseph Gordon-Levitt. And HAHAHAHAHA he TOTALLY IS CHANDLER. I <3 you! Also, I had the opposite reaction...I just watched Veronica Mars recently and I was like LOL Cordelia Chase is the slutty stepmom! Did you know Joss Whedon also had a small cameo?

    • Right? The Puppet Show is absolutely AMAZING. That kid is SO Joseph Gordon-Levitt. And Xander is so obviously Chandler Bing that it hurts. I didn't know that Joss Whedon cameo'd until the comment above. I'm going to have to rewatch now!

  • I can easily say that Nightmare is one of my favorite episodes of this season.

    Its just so....fitting tot he themes explored in this show

    First of all, Nightmares hints a lot at Buffy's insecurities and why she keeps going "I'm the hero, la la la".... because in the notion of her NOT being the hero, in her mind, she would truly be at fault for her family break up and problems. Thus trying to pretend that her sucky destiny is something great. that hypocrisy is what brings her comfort.

    Buffy's "Superhero" facade is something she uses to hide a fragile girl who is trying to battle the very big enemy of hers named "BEING ALONE". She surrounded herself with friends, someone to whom she tries to appear as the heroic and awesome Buffy. Someone from whom she wants to get approval and acceptance. Confirmation of her illusion.

    But deep inside Buffy Summers is a frightened girl, deeply damaged by her parents divorce and her "Destiny". Deeply in fear of her end.

    And thats what Nightmares also showcases. It also showcases Buffy's fear of death, which clashes with her hypocrisy about "heroic job situation". She KNOWS that she might not be so lucky one day. She might end. Or worse, turn into one of them. And that. That "END" of normalcy". that END of everything that she wants to be. END Of her rebellion against her more supernatural side is what makes her fear death so much.

    Because let's be frank. A LOT of what Buffy did this season so far was to REBEL against her destiny. To try to grasp at the notion that she STILL can be a normal "non-freaky" girl who CAN have normal life. And death, the very notion that her illusion of "heroic nice adventure" might end like a horror story is what is spine-chilling experience for her.

    In other dreams there are also important bits.

    We see Xander's insecurity. We see his "struggle" against his self-notion of a looser and his try to overcompensate with fake masculinity.

    Willow's Stage-fright also takes up a new meaning when one looks at it from more metaphorical side. The whole life is a stage. And willow fears to be in the spotlight because of who she is. Because of people possibly REJECTING her pesonality, her self, her identity. And indeed a lot of Willow's journey seems to be about overcoming herself.

    Overall, Nightmares is just...beautiful episode. And I could write paragraphs upon paragraphs about it. I'd say that Nightmares, Invisible Girl and the finale are THE MOST important episodes of this season that remain important for years of this show to come. :)

    Some notions and sentences in Nightmares are downright frightening if one is watching it second time after finishing the show. But thats classic Joss for you. We laugh at something characters say one season and we hate ourselves for laughing at that the next.

    • Definitely "Nightmares" is a very influential and pivotal hour for the series. I mean, I haven't watched beyond it yet, but I can already tell that's what's happening there. I wont' delve into it too much (or at all, really) because I don't know what's to come yet, but you can obviously tell its significance.

      BTW, you're way too awesome for coming on NWN and opinionatin' :)

  • The Puppet Show has always been one of my absolutely favorite eps. It's twisty, it's funny, and it's genuinely freaky in parts. Plus we get Principal Snyder, who is the gifted foe who keeps on giving.

    And YES XANDER = CHANDLER!! I always said that when the show aired lmao

    Two more eps in Season 1, and then we get closer to shit getting real!

    • THE PUPPET SHOW IS THE BEST!!!

      And I'm glad I'm not the only one who sees the Xander/Chandler comparisons. Even their name! Can't wait until season 2 :D

  • PEOPLE HATED THESE EPISODES? Why?! I hope that was a joke... I watched the entire show for the first time last summer, and I can honestly say that "The Puppet Show" is one of my favorites. It's genius.

    • Apparently. I knew people hated "I, Robot…" because…well IDK just because, I guess. And then when we watched "The Puppet Show," people groaned about it still. But it's seriously the best thing ever.

      • People mostly hate "I, Robot" because of the IT references. While fitting for the time the episode aired, a lot people find them "weird" now. The notion that IT and internet was not always such an integral part of, well, everything and that the mainstream had a very strange view upon those things is hard to understand.

        "Puppet Show" is just silly fun(also best episode ender scene known to man) so I guess some people hate silly fun.

        But mainly its really just because those two episodes just do not hold up to the rest of the show. When those who watched Buffy, people think more of "Nightmares" or "Angel" or "the Pack" than they think of "I Robot" or the pilot two-parter.

        These episodes are not "BAD" on their own, but when looking in context of all 7 seasons of the show, they are certainly at the lower end for most people, because of all the other stuff.

  • I'm glad you like TPS and Nightmares (Nightmares being my fave season 1 episode followed by Prophecy Girl). The fandom is very split on season one, true, sadly :D I also like your thoughts on the Buffy/Hank (her dad) scene, which is basically the reason for it being my favorite episode of S1. I won't comment on anything else cuz I might spoil it a little for you. I really enjoyed this recap and I look forward to your next ones. :)

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