“I hate to see what the future will be if you don’t make this happen.”
The opening scene deals with his reluctance when he meets up with ex-wife Janet to discuss the offer. Louie sits across from her at a local diner practically begging her to be ‘the bad guy’ and say he can’t do it. All he wants is a reason for it to be okay to not want to do it. But that’s Louie’s problem is that no one is going to think it’s acceptable for him to not want to do it. God forbid that anyone doesn’t take the chance to ‘move up’ in this life even if it’s not something suited for that particular individual. If he doesn’t do it all then it will be chalked up as some wasted opportunity that he’ll never be able to reach the heights of again. But if he goes through with it and fails even though the job they want him for is in no way a good fit for him, (remember Jerry Seinfeld is the man they really want and they would never presume to change him as much as they want to change Louie) then he’s still made a horrible mistake. The creation of this conflict is what so successfully propels this story into needing the full three-act structure of a three-part episode. It’s smart to split up the offer, the conflict, and then presumably next week we’ll find out if it was all even worth it or not.
It’s the ultimate in damned if you do, damned if you don’t scenarios to give Louie no way to really win. So instead of this opportunity being played as a career triumph it’s being presented as this dismaying occurrence in Louie’s life–something he never asked for and it’s going to affect him deeply no matter what he chooses. It’s all the more difficult for Louie to navigate when you see just how happy he is with the way his life is already going. Sure, Janet doesn’t see what he does as worthwhile at this stage in his life, but Louie’s in a comfortable groove where he can play shows and still be a part of his daughters’ lives. That can be mistaken for a sort of complacency, however to me it looks more like Louie knows what he really wants right now. He also knows deep down that this Late Show experiment is not going to work out.
Jay Leno, in a surprisingly self-effacing appearance, tries to warn Louie against going through with it. He claims that what Louie has now, his ‘hipness’, is something that will be lost the moment he goes on stage five nights a week. I can’t say I disagree with the man and even though it could be construed as an attempt to keep Louie out of the competition, as Chris Rock claims in his own appearance in this episode, I think that Louie will regret not taking Leno’s advice. Especially when the episode closes out on the announcement that Rock himself is now apparently in the running for the hosting gig thanks to Louie telling him about the job being open. Acts like this one are truly the reason why the term “late-night wars” applies in the talk show biz.
Do you want him to fail or succeed when he gets in front of a true test audience?
Would you rather this whole storyline remain self-contained and not affect the rest of the series?
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