Saturday, July 18, 2020

The Roommate Years: Ranking #Shea’s Smaller Moments (Part 1: #21-15)





Batteries.

The road trip.

“You’re such an asshat.”

First tequila shots. First karaoke.

The hug in the hallway. The kiss outside the motel room door.

The sad goodbye, the mixed emotions reunion, the lightly tangled path to a shared apartment.

Most #Shea fans know these moments by heart… and if they didn’t by the end of S3, they’re getting PLENTY of time to reminisce via YouTube and other ports of flashback heaven.

And when they’ve had their fill of those early memories, they apparently keep spending time with that final 1:47 from 3.20 “I Love You”—it’s up to 1.2 million views now, as Tony mentioned in last week’s comments.

So we know how they started, and now we finally know where they are headed. But in between those two eras lie “The Roommate Years”… that spread of time that started after Shaun and Lea (and Hubert the Fish Albert the Fish) had worked out their living arrangement kinks, and ended just before the “Superbass” karaoke night catapulted them to The Next Level, whether they were ready for it or not.

That’s 24 episodes of TGD history, minus 9 of those 24 where Lea didn’t make a single appearance… 15 episodes worth of the smaller moments between these two. Fifteen episodes that got us through the lean times. And, by my count, 21 lesser-recalled scenes from those 15 episodes that deserve renewed acknowledgement!

Here’s how I’m doing this:

1)      In true countdown form, I’m starting at the bottom of the list (21st) and working my way up… 21-15 in this post, 8-15 in a later post, and 7-1 in a post after that.

2)      These are just MY rankings; your mileage may vary, as they say. Comments, as always, are very welcome! (But don’t take the “rankings” too seriously… we all know any #Shea scene is a scene of value!)

3)      I’m only counting scenes that involved Shaun and Lea exclusively… I might make a very minor exception to this here and there, but scenes involving, say, Glassman or Jake (Lea’s boyfriend in the back half of S2) are excluded from contention.

4)      I realize Shaun and Lea were no longer roommates as of the “Mutations” episode, and that they may very well become roommates-of-another-kind, again, in the future. I’m calling this The Roommate Years anyway. Just go with it.


Ready? Let’s go—

21) “I have to change his mind” (from 2.17 "Breakdown")

IN SHORT: Lea attempts to sneak home after spending the
night with Jake, but Shaun is already awake -- pre-occupied (and still unhappy) with Dr. Han moving him to Pathology. Lea tries to boost his spirits, but Shaun is un-boostable. (This is the episode where Shaun walked to work instead of catching the bus, resulting in that hilarious “did he see us??” situation with Lim and Melendez.)

BEST REMEMBERED FOR: That’s the real reason I have this one down at #21… I didn’t remember this scene. At all. Maybe because it seemed to be more about setting up the comedy with Limlendez than it did about advancing anything with Shaun and Lea? Just a thought.

20) “You said you found the pattern ‘soothing’” (from 3.12 “Mutations”)

IN SHORT: Apparently as a reinforcement of his decision to continue things with Carly (and try to bury his feelings for Lea), Shaun agrees to end his roommate situation. And, faster than #Shea fans can say Wait, why does SHE have to move out??, they are divvying up dishware as Shaun insists that everything with Carly is about to be perfectumundo. (It’s easy to be “short” about this particular scene; it lasted around 45 seconds.)


BEST REMEMBERED FOR: The tailspin in which it left us. My original post about “Mutations”, which came down hard on TGD for treating Paige Spara only slightly better than a Hollywood extra in this particular episode, can be found here.

19) “Shaun… you need to text her back.” (from 3.7 "SFAD" )


IN SHORT: With Carly out of town attending a conference, Shaun finds himself struggling to communicate with her “the right way” via text. After this brief exchange with Shaun… well, suffice to say Lea was struggling a little as well.

BEST REMEMBERED FOR: The satisfied look on Shaun’s face as he sent the perfunctory  I have received your message to Carly… and the Oh, dear look on Lea’s face that followed.

(Which is cut off in the clip I included, so here it is...)



18) “When you start a new life event, you get pancakes.” (from 2.16 "Risk and Reward")

IN SHORT: It starts as an early-morning-in-the-life-of-Dr.Murphy episode, but the catch is clear: he’s not going in to St. B as a surgical resident this time. Lea (acting a whole lot more like a wife than a roommate in this situation, BTW) makes a batch of “fresh start” pancakes in an effort to encourage Shaun to embrace his new role in Pathology.

 
BEST REMEMBERED FOR: two things… 1) the way Shaun brushes his hair before exiting the bathroom, then steps back in and gives the front of his head a little tousle as if to say I’m still me, no matter what department I’m in at work. 2) the fact that Shaun seemed pleased to see the pancakes until the moment Lea explained what they were for; he ended up leaving the house without so much as a bite of his favorite food. (I know it was to symbolize his deep disdain for the situation at hand, but I couldn’t help but feel for Lea… Dude, she went through all this trouble! Can’t you at least take a few to eat later?)

17) “Commencing a hang.” (from 3.11 “Fractured”)



IN SHORT: Shaun comes home from his first day back at work following the Wyoming trip. Lea, perched on the sofa with her laptop, tries to check in with him… but with his head swimming in confusion over feelings for Lea vs. feelings for Carly, he quickly takes Lea up on an offer to “just hang” (silently). But in the meantime, he’s taking something Dr. Andrews said very literally, trying to gauge if his heart truly does beat faster when he’s close to the one he loves.

NO, they didn’t lay it out quite that explicitly. But did he attempt this experiment with Carly? He did not.

Anyway, his experiment did little more than puzzle Shaun further, and generate some curious looks from Lea… until, of course, a phone call from Morgan sent him back to work.

BEST REMEMBERED FOR: Since this was Lea’s only appearance in the episode beyond the opening still-in-Wyoming scenes… and since she was suddenly the subject of multiple conversations (Shaun/Carly, Shaun/Glassman, even Shaun/Morgan)… I think we were all hyper-curious as to what would happen next with #Shea. We knew better than to expect a full 180 with Shaun and Carly at that point, right? So the unknowns persisted… until the ending minute of the episode, that is. (See #20 on my list.) As a stop-gap scene, I think “Commencing a hang” did the job just fine. But as a device to leave us wanting more (much more!) from Shaun’s interactions with Lea, it did the job SUPREMELY well.

16) “Maybe pathology won’t be that bad after all…?” (from 2.17 "Breakdown")


IN SHORT: Shaun and Lea are having dinner together at the apartment (at least it appears that they are both eating the same thing at the same time). As Shaun relays some details about one of the Cases Of The Week (a case that he’s still connected to, though now from the Pathology lab), the conversation bends so that Lea can point out the current positives of his situation: solving medical mysteries with “a co-worker you like who's nice to you” (Carly, who was just his colleague at the time). But Shaun, still unable to accept his situation as final, abruptly cites work to do and leaves the room.

BEST REMEMBERED FOR: Little things. The fact that they were sharing a meal together, chatting about work (at least to start). The way Shaun’s voice took on that more intimate tone when he said “(Carly) says we make a good team.” The frustration Lea for him at the scene’s end. (BTW, I think this was the last exclusive scene they shared until the final minutes of 2.18 “Trampoline.”)

15) “You never used to do that.” (from 3.15 “Unsaid”)

IN SHORT: For the second time in the episode, Lea (now a
new employee at St. B) finds her way to Shaun’s cafeteria table and, while venting about Glassman’s less endearing habits, starts eating food off Shaun’s plate. When Shaun tells her that Morgan has likened this behavior to “peeing on his leg” (!!!), Lea tames her annoyance with Morgan just enough to become the model of platonic reassurance… and just long enough for Shaun to have a medical epiphany and flee the scene (leaving Lea with his largely unfinished breakfast, heh heh).

BEST REMEMBERED FOR: There were several steps the “Unsaid” episode had to take in order to set up the climactic karaoke scene properly. We knew Carly’s jealousy issues seemed to be more under control at this point (evidenced most vividly with the elevator sequence between her and Lea), but as usual, we had very limited direct info about Lea’s true feelings. (Hell, even her sought-after advice to Shaun about handling the press in the “Influence” episode prior to this had been delivered off-camera.) So the TGD writers bring her to Shaun’s cafeteria table. Morgan talks about her in the OR. Lea and Carly share an elevator ride. Lea comes to Shaun’s cafeteria table AGAIN. That was already almost twice as much as we’d see Lea in any recent episode, and I didn’t even include the karaoke bar sequence!

What does any of this have to do with Lea’s “true feelings” being made clear? On the surface, not much—which is why we were truly on the edge of our collective seats wondering what she’d say when Shaun laid it on the line at the end of the “Autopsy” episode. But as TGD built up the “just friends” argument, they did a sly thing in this scene: what Lea said was (I’m partly paraphrasing) “I assure you, my voice and my actions are saying the same thing right now, which is pure, non-threatening, platonic friendship.” My thought: yes, she was saying all the right things in the right manner, but that’s hardly the same thing as speaking from the heart… and she stated as much in that exchange.

It’s all water under the bridge now, but still a distinction worth noting.

SO! You may be wondering hmm, that other cafeteria scene must be ranked higher on Kelli’s list. I wonder why?

I’ll tell you in future countdown posts!



4 comments:

Rose Amelie said...

A few weeks ago I started a fan fiction about Lea’s POV in some episodes. I did the exactly what you wrote in this interesting post (selected all Shea scenes) because I consider necessary to understand some aspects about Lea’s story. I saw again those scenes, and it’s interesting confirm how patient and good friend that Lea is. Her conection with Shaun is unique not just for her initial friendship, also because she understands him so well, never pushing or doing anything that make Shaun unconfortable. I remember “Unsaid”, when Carly insist that Shaun must to finish his dinner when he was so concerned about the medical case of the week. Lea would’t do that.

I have a theory (that I want to writte in my fan fiction): all we know that Lea have self esteem issues and many fears. I think she accept move out to the department (without any protestes, at least we didn’t see anything about that) because she wants to scape of her “new” feelings to Shaun. For me, the Wyoming trip was the moment when Lea realizes that Shaun is more important to her that she really think is, and that could conduce to romantic feelings (she’s terrified about that.. she doesn’t want to hurt him again - Glassy predice this to her in “Trampoline”).
When Lea says to Shaun that she only feels “platonic friendship” for him in the hospital is the way that she wants to buried her initial romantic love. But everything that she wants to hide “floats” in that controversial karaoke night (even Carly noticed that she’s in love with Shaun)

Thanks Kelli! It’s always a pleasure read your blog. I usually responds to you in twitter, but this idea was more extensive, and this space is perfect to that. I’m sorry if this post have gramatical mistakes 😅. See you soon!


Tony said...

Ah, Kelli. You managed to combine two things that bring me great happiness:
- Shea, of course :-)
- Countdowns (which remind me of my growing-up days listening to Casey Kasem and other now-gone greats).

Much thanks!

Even in these smaller moments, there are a few things that wind up being "sneaky big". In other words, things that speak largely to their characters even if it's not the most obvious. I'll add a few thoughts of my own for the three Season 2 moments you provided (#s 21, 18, and 16).

For #21 (the beginning clip from 2.17), this was the only mention of Jake since "Faces" - and his last overall. For those who watched in real-time, that was a whopping four weeks prior (since there was a rerun one week)! I remember people wondering in the lead-up to 2.17 if Lea's thing with Jake was still a thing!

For #18 (the opening scene of 2.16), I love how this establishes that Shaun and Lea have a Saturday morning routine that involves pancakes! I also remember Lea smiling very brightly when Shaun was looking at the pancaked. She really wanted him to feel at least a little better about the situation - and she really tried her best!

And for #16 (the dinner scene from 2.17), I look at this as VERY telling for how Lea would see the presence of Carly in Shaun's life. Lea's #1 question to Shaun when he started talking about Carly was "How does she treat you, is she nice?" As hard as things were for Shaun the professional at that point, Lea made sure that Shaun the person was taken care of.

One mild criticism I had of the 2nd season's back-four episodes is that the "Shaun's feelings for Lea" buildup had been totally dropped after that teary-eyed revelation at the end of "Faces". I'm not saying it needed to be the focal point of those four episodes. But
the total absence of what 2.11-2.14 set up seemed to make Glassman's "talk-down" to Lea in 2.18 somewhat random (why say anything if Shaun hadn't mentioned it in over a month?) and seemingly only there to set the audience up for the episode's "twist" ending.

But I wonder if the de-emphasis was the plan all along? If so, it made the Season 3 journey a memorable one - with a very satisfying ending / new beginning.

As for your question in #15 about the first 3.15 cafeteria scene, I just assumed it would be a "Countdown Extra" and not a ranked moment since it involved Morgan and her very first direct dialogue with Lea. I guess this could be one of your "very minor exceptions" (as might be the "Hubert is bored" scene). Either way, I look forward to seeing the Top 14 revealed over the next month or so (interspersed with more Playlist songs)!

Amy D said...

I LOVE the idea for this countdown! I enjoyed Shaun and Lea as roommates, and honestly, I'm not in any hurry for them to move in together again as a couple. Of course, I don't know what the show has planned for them, but having already lived together, they are aware of each other's idiosyncrasies and quirks and have proved able to make the necessary adjustments (the toilet paper is one of my favorite Shea moments).

Lea making pancakes WAS a very wifely/girlfriend-y thing to do before Shaun went off to Pathology, although he hated it there. And yes, it's a pity he was too upset to eat any of them, but also understandable WHY he was too upset to eat any of them.

Proving Dr. Andrews wrong yet again ROCKED! (Andrews is low on my list of characters when I'm ranking them from most favorite to least favorite.) Of COURSE Shaun isn't going to feel like a neurotypical person feels when they're in love. Okay, so his heart rate didn't spike and his stomach didn't have butterflies when he was sitting next to Lea on the couch. But there's no denying he's in love with her, and his heart rate will absolutely spike around her depending on the activity.

And Lea was saying one thing in the cafeteria but absolutely feeling something else, and she couldn't hide her true feelings at karaoke any more than Shaun could. I thought Jake was no big deal, but Lea's date in that episode not only had no lines, he didn't even rate a name! It's Shea all the way! Looking forward to the rest of the countdown.

Tony said...

Rose, I agree 100% with your assessment that there was so much more of a "juggle" of Lea's feelings than we ever got to see. And if this were any other show, we probably would have spent at least a little time seeing her perspective. I also think it's why some of Lea's non-fans feel the way they do; though perhaps at least some of them will be willing to ease up if Season 4 gives us some of that "missing" perspective. Missing to the "common person", that is, not to us. :-)

Amy, I'm right there with you on the roommate thing. Whenever that does happen, I'm not overly fearful of the show recycling its Season 2 "compromise / learn to live together" arc. In my opinion, it'll be because they've reached that place in their relationship and they're taking a step of commitment.

I thought I'd throw a few of my own tidbits on the Season 3 clips in this section of the countdown, just as I did for the Season 2 clips.

#20 (opening from 3.12). Like you, I questioned the show GREATLY after this. They could have taken a whole episode side-plot to determine who moves out and why! I figured there must have been some greater plan, and that they weren't REALLY dropping one of their regular characters so unceremoniously. Especially after her powerful scenes in "Friends and Family". I remember seeing a social media post from Paige in her dressing room in the days following "Mutations", which I remain convinced was at least partially done as damage-control to help keep angry fans at bay.

#19 (opening from 3.07). Like we've alluded to about the opening of "Fractured" (with the Mallomars), this scene shows Lea mentioning something that occurred during an episode she wasn't even in! In the case of this scene: Shaun's struggles from the previous episode about not feeling included in Carly's social circle. It shows that (1) Shaun has kept a strong, regular bond with Lea, even if we did not always see it; and (2) these weren't just tips Lea was giving for Shaun to improve things with Carly. These could come in handy for Shea at some point!

#17 (pulse scene from 3.11). I, too, thought it was peculiar that Lea was so lightly-used in this episode, given how much she really came through in the previous episode. As an alternative to Andrews simply being "wrong", I offer this alternate interpretation. He told Shaun that his heart still beats for his wife "not in the same way" - as in, not in a literally-racing fashion. This is what I believe Shaun missed out on, and I hope Andrews gets another chance to chime in - and hopefully better connect to Shaun - during Season 4.

#15 (second meal scene from 3.15). I agree with Kelli and Amy on the saying/feeling thing. I think the hunger issue was legit, but there was certainly more going on than what was being said.
Also, we got an interesting reverse from Season 2's "Faces". In that episode, Glassman brought up Lea to Shaun - in an episode Lea wasn't in. This time around, it was Lea who brought up Glassman to Shaun - in an episode that Glassman wasn't in! Ah, the parallels!