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Gossip Girl (TV Series)

Episode 4 (I think)

‘Gossip Girl’ Gets Lost in New York

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"Dan, it's not you. It's your sideburns!"Photo Courtesy CW

In this week's episode of Gossip Girl, aging-hipster spawn Dan is pumped for his date with Waspy blonde Serena van der Woodsen. He's so excited, in fact, that in the beginning of the episode he forgets he's supposed to be cool and modern and morphs into the Eric Stoltz character from Some Kind of Wonderful. "It has to be perfect," Dan tells his dad as he empties his piggybank. "I can't just take her to a movie." Wait a second. He was okay with taking her to a movie just last week! Twice! Are we the only ones who remember that she stood him up at the theater? Isn't it weird when a show's writers forget their own plotlines? Isn't it weird we're paying such close attention? That's because it's our job — no! — our duty to make sure that this show does not pass unnoticed into the dustbin of history, to ensure that future generations will look upon Gossip Girl not just as a television program but as a meaningful artifact from The Year 2007–2008, a record of a wealthy, decadent, morally barren society with a penchant for teenagers dressed like painted whores and convenient socioeconomic and racial stereotypes.
Plus! Last week in the New York Times, Josh Schwartz said New York City was a character in Gossip Girl, and if this is true, we're here to make sure she's not just one of those fake-looking b*tches whispering in background. Below, our completely subjective guide to what in this week's episode looked true enough to life and what was as fake as the smile Kim Cattrall wears whenever she's photographed next to Sarah Jessica Parker.
Worth Every Penny:
• In the establishing shot of Blair's sleepover, the camera passes over towering stands of pastel-frosted cupcakes and jars full of cookies. But what are the girls clustered in the Waldorf's living room eating? Grapes. Plus 2 for a subtle reference to teenarexia.
• Actually, now that we think about it, we've only ever seen Blair eat grapes, which makes her one of those rexies who only ever eats one thing, like this girl Sophie we went to school with who every day made three meals out of one bagel. Plus 4, for nodding to a specific yet common form of dysfunction!
• The big fancy date Dan planned for Serena is not panning out. He's taken her to a place with damask-covered walls and lobster bisque on the menu (which Serena, in all her Upper East Side glory, actually knows how to pronounce. Bisque! It's practically Shakespeare). But she doesn't like it and ends up paying. Plus 2, for finally making everybody recognize that Serena's crush on Dan is little more than a twisted Lady and the Tramp fantasy.
• Jenny tells Blair she just loves Truth or Dare. "This one time, I had to eat a full bag of marshmallows!" she says. "That's nice, little Humphrey, but that's not how we play." True that. We hear Truth or Dare is the new-old rainbow parties these days. Plus 5.
• After kidnapping Eric from the hospital, Blair and Jenny take him to Marquee, where they hook up with their usual Greek chorus of bimbos. A "hedge fund" guy hits on Blair. "Hey baby, you want to show me the way to the bathroom, get lost somewhere around coat check?" Plus 8, for capturing the horde of human nightmares that populates that club.
• Did anyone notice that during truth or dare, the unnamed Asian and black sidekicks made out? That was as inevitable as Blair's eventual dramatic second-season "hair change" will be — it just felt right. Plus 3.
• Mrs. van der Woodsen carries an Hermès Birkin bag to Brooklyn with her. Quite frankly, it would be embarrassingly fake if she didn't. Plus 2.
Total: Plus 26
Logically Bankrupt:
• More on Marquee: As abhorrently anti-reality as the club's door policy may be, even Lindsay Lohan wasn't allowed in when she was 14, like Jenny. Also, the club has never once in its history been quiet enough to have a cell-phone call (much less one with the subtlety of a relationship-ending prank). And in the real club, it would be so crowded that there wouldn't just be one ***hole hedge-funder, there would be dozens. Don't even make us get into how many dance-floor erections that means. Minus 10 (And we won't deduct more points, but how is it that they emerge from Marquee and find themselves in the meatpacking district?)
• Now that we've gotten a good look at Erik's room at the mental institution, we get why he hates it so much. The place is a Pottery Barn nightmare — all lavender walls and chocolate-brown accents and a woody sleigh bed. If this room — in the fake, "Ostroff Center" named for the CW's president, noted party animal Dawn Ostroff — were actually a real room a plush recovery center, wouldn't it be covered in teenage-boy stuff like video-game cords and skateboarding magazines? Minus only 2, because what do we know about rehab centers? No really, what are you implying?
• After his planned date bombs, Dan and Serena go to play pool at a dive bar. Dan, of course, is naturally really good at pool, because that is just something that's in your genes when you're rough trade. See also Mystic Pizza. Minus 1, because come on, high-school dudes are never good at pool — that's what your first terrible year out of college when all your guy friends want to do is hang out at sports bars is for.
• Blair's sleepover is "the most important event of the season." Wait, wasn't the big brunch the most important event of the season? Also, the Ivy mixer? And, we're just hazarding a guess, but isn't the masquerade ball we saw in the ads for the next episode also going to be the most important event of the season? Minus 3, because even Upper East Siders can count higher than one.
• When Mr. Humphrey and Mrs. van der Woodsen hang out, they do some cooking because Mr. Humphrey is apparently something of an amateur chef. Except all he seems to be cooking is marinara sauce. Why is that the go-to for people making food on television? Does that even count as cooking? Mr. Big was always making pasta sauce on Sex and the City. Doesn't anybody know how to make microwave popcorn anymore? Minus 2.
Total: Minus 18
So that puts us a full eight points on the side of reality. Which really should be more, considering the fact that the show is beginning to go in the direction of The O.C., where there was a lot of drama but everyone was essentially friends. Oh, and also, they should probably get a bonus ten points just for keeping Chuck offscreen for an entire episode.
 
Episode...I lost track

‘Gossip Girl’: There Are Only Eight Colleges in America

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Wait a minute … This scene hasn't happened yet, but look at Serena! Denim vest, small fluffy dog, ridiculous extensions … Are they taking her to the Britney place?Photo Courtesy of the CW

In perfect sync with the Times Magazine's college issue last weekend, it's Ivy Week for the girls at Constance Billard and the boys of St. Jude's, and everyone's all gussied up in their navy blazers trying to impress the reps from various schools so that they don't screw up the rest of their lives. The characters don't look like they're having that much fun, and frankly, neither are we. The competition is meant to be all intense! And cutthroat! But in reality everyone looks sort of blasé about getting into college. This is mostly because they are not very good actors, but also, it sort of makes sense. The show up until now been delightfully implausible, but the underlying fiber of last night's episode rang uncomfortably true: As much as they b*tch and moan and stress, rich kids don't really need to worry so much about getting into college — they're pretty much going to do okay anyway. Other things, however, seemed a little more questionable–slash–patently fantastical. (Though, man, the end of the episode was awesome, huh?) After the jump, our vaguely researched, but mostly completely subjective, guide to what in this week's Gossip Girl was as fake as Melania Trump's face, and what could pass for real.


We'll Buy It!
• Blair: "My father left my mother for a 31-year-old model. A male model." Plus 10 for awesomeness.
• "Super-successful parents expect nothing less from their offspring. And when it comes to college, that means the Ivies. It's more than just getting into college, it's setting a course for the rest of your life. And those who aren't legacies are no exception. When parents have sacrificed for their children, what kid would want to let them down?" Plus 5. It may not be how your parents would have put it ("Your mother and I didn't work this hard just so you could make it up as you go along," snapped Nate's dad), but the sentiment is uncomfortably still the same.
• Blair's two unnamed sidekicks donned fake Steve Urkel glasses for the Ivy Mixer. Who hasn't tried to look geek-hot when the situation fits? Plus 3.
• An underclassmen a cappella group sings Fergie's "Glamorous." In chapel. Okay, singing it in a house of God may be a stretch, but high school a cappella is just that absurd. Plus 2.
Total: 20
That's a Bit Rich
• "Brown doesn't offer degrees in sl*t." Wait — you can make your own major at Brown. So, Blair, Serena can major in sl*t if she wants to. And she can do it Pass/Fail! Minus 2.
• It's beginning to be offensive how every time they cut to the Humphrey's "Williamsburg" apartment, they show a building directly Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass. Minus 1.
• Blair wears a Marni belt during field-hockey practice. Even she knows grass stains don't come out of white leather. Minus 1.
• Dan is number two in the class at his snooty Upper East Side private school? Then why does he want to go to Dartmouth? Minus 3
• After Serena stands up for her brother and makes it seem as though she's the one in rehab, someone purrs, "''I Was A High School Addict' is not an ideal college essay." Um, actually, that would be the BEST COLLEGE ESSAY EVER. She'd definitely get into Yale with that. Minus 3, for total misunderstanding of the application process.
• Nate's dad wants him to go to Dartmouth. He actually calls it the "old alma mater. But Nate, face flickering impressively from "blank" to "blank/tortured" — acting! — says he wants to go "out West." Presumably so he can join the cast of some other show. We swear the crap about his "future" was cribbed straight from the script of Freddie Prinze Jr. movie She's All That. (How gay is it that we know that?) But more important, what would Nate's chances of getting into Dartmouth really be, especially after he told the rep he wasn't so sure he wanted to go? In the Times Magazine, Winthrop Pearce Rutherfurd, whose family legacy at Princeton dated back to the 1770s, totally didn't get in. And he actually gave a sh*t! Minus 10.
• Serena and Dan are flirting together again. Yay! Oh, and their little siblings are flirting with each other, too. Hm. And wait, their parents have already slept together? Uh-oh, we smell something gross. Minus 1, for a little too neat incestuousness.
• Wait a second. There's no Ostroff Center in New York. Oh! Ha. Dawn Ostroff is the CW's president of entertainment. Minus 2 for accuracy, plus three for inside joke that lets everyone know that Dawn totally parties.
• Nate is always waking up on Chuck's hotel-room couch. But Chuck (who also implausibly drives to school in a stretch limo, so tacky) owns the hotel. Can't he get a suite with two beds? Or are we just preparing ourselves for some excellent bonus features on the unrated DVD set of the first season? Minus 3.
Total: -26.
So in the end, we come out with negative six points on the plausibility scale. Which is really off-balanced, considering that really, the only thing realistic about this particular episode was that the actors were pretending to be human beings. But if they can keep pulling it together in the end like they did last night, we'll keep watching and rating!
 
I think that is all of them. These recaps are all from NYMag.com

I think they are pretty fun.. Enjoy.
 
Does anyone know where I can watch episode 6 online (I've managed to find downloads but I cant download things atm) :flower:
 
You can watch them on cwtv.com. Im not sure if you can see them if you are out of the US though.
 
Hahah those articles are funny and i totally agree,but man i still cant help but watch this show. :blush:
 
I love those reviews. :lol: With this show, I feel like I can laugh at the criticism but still have fun watching it.

And I actually don't think Blake has a typical look -- she has some unusual qualities to her (which I love :heart:)
 
Some on-set Gossip...

US Weekly has an article in this week's issue about how Leighton and Blake can't stand each other off-camera. They can't even sit near one another at events...
 

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