Written by Max Thornton.
There is a delightful Freaks and Geeks special in Vanity Fair this month, with set photos, a cast reunion, and an interview in which creator Paul Feig discusses what would have happened had the show not been canceled. I recommend savoring all of it, but be warned – you may find yourself compelled, as I was, to hasten to Netflix and marathon the whole series once more.
There is a delightful Freaks and Geeks special in Vanity Fair this month, with set photos, a cast reunion, and an interview in which creator Paul Feig discusses what would have happened had the show not been canceled. I recommend savoring all of it, but be warned – you may find yourself compelled, as I was, to hasten to Netflix and marathon the whole series once more.
![]() |
| The Vanity Fair reunion. |
Not that a Freaks and
Geeks marathon takes very long.
For the uninitiated, F&G is
one of the great unjustly-canned, widely-mourned, single-season
shows, right up there with Firefly in
terms of squandered brilliance. Set in a Michigan high school in
1980, it focuses on sister and brother Lindsay and Sam Weir and their
respective groups of friends, the freaks and the geeks.
To some extent, F&G
feels like an improved version
of My So-Called Life –
not that My So-Called Life couldn't
be charming, or speak the truth of the adolescent condition, but it
undeniably succumbed to schmaltz and caricature in a number of ways.
Freaks and Geeks nails
absolutely everything it tries.
I
do wish there were more female characters. Of the eight core
characters – five freaks, three geeks – only two are women. The
more general lack of diversity, particularly in terms of the
overwhelming whiteness and straightness of the characters, can be
attributed to the fact that the show is based on Feig's personal
experience of an overwhelmingly straight, white Michigan suburb in
the late seventies and early eighties. This, of course, feeds into a
larger and still
ongoing conversation about whose experiences get put on
television; but, assuming we can accept the show's premise and the
whiteness and (ostensible) straightness inherent therein, I still
think there could be more female characters.
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| Kim isn't even in this picture, dammit. |
The
female characters that are included are fantastic. Lindsay Weir is
one of my all-time favorite TV protagonists: blisteringly intelligent
and world-weary, yet still a vulnerable and confused teenager
searching for an identity and a place, Lindsay kicks off the series
with a paradigm shift brought on by her grandmother's death. Losing
her religious faith and quitting the mathletes, Lindsay ditches
long-time best friend and inveterate goody-two-shoes Millie in order
to befriend the “freaks,” the “burnouts,” a laid-back group
of stoners who cut class to hang out and passionately discuss their
favorite bands (something that resonates with me personally: I may
have attended high school 20-25 years later than these characters,
but I was just as enthusiastic about the Who, Pink Floyd, and Rush!).
Lindsay doesn't truly fit in with the freaks, but the more her
parents and her guidance counselor and Millie press her on this, the
more determined she is to make
a
place for herself among them.
Lindsay's
place among the freaks becomes secure once she makes a true friend
out of Kim, the only other girl among them. The episode in which
their friendship solidifies, “Kim Kelly Is My Friend,” was
supposed to be the fourth, but was shelved from airing because of its
intense subject matter. Lindsay rolls her eyes at her parents' narrow
suburban existence and hopeless squareness, but witnessing Kim's
violent and abusive relationship with her mother causes her to
reassess her own life. Most of the freaks have difficult home lives,
and they expand Lindsay's horizons even as she expands theirs. Kim –
fierce-tempered and hotheaded, unashamedly sexual, a total spitfire –
shows Lindsay that a person's worth is not dependent on the school
system's assessment of them, but Kim also gains from Lindsay a sense
of ambition and motivation.
![]() |
| "You're like my only friend, Lindsay, and you're a total loser!" |
The
relationship between Lindsay and Millie is one of the most
beautifully observed and painful aspects of the show. Millie, who
initially seems like a caricature of the strait-laced
goody-two-shoes, proves to be an unfailingly loyal friend who loves
Lindsay enough to let her go. In my favorite episode, number 13,
“Chokin' and Tokin',” Lindsay smokes pot just before a
babysitting job, and Millie steps up to care for both the child and
an increasingly paranoid Lindsay. During the comedown, the following
conversation ensues:
“I
love you, Millie. Why aren't we friends anymore?”
“I
thought we were friends.”
“We
are. But just, you know, not really. But we're still the same people
we were when we were five. It's just different now.”
“You're
different now.”
“Yeah,
you're right. But I'm not gonna be different anymore. I'm gonna be
the same. And we're gonna be best friends.”
“You
know what, Lindsay? I feel sorry for you.”
“Why?”
“Because
tomorrow, when you're not loaded anymore, you're not going to believe
in God, and you're not going to want to be my friend anymore.”
It's
heartbreaking.
![]() |
| Awww, Millie. |
I
don't think Freaks
and Geeks has
a hidden feminist agenda, but it has a core of real decency and
generosity toward its characters. It tries to walk the line of
portraying
kids honestly, warts and all, without necessarily condoning their
behavior. They're high-school kids; they can be misogynistic,
essentialist, bigoted, and the show portrays this honestly,
sympathizing for them in their ignorance while gently revealing the
flaws in their thinking.
Nowhere
is this clearer than in two storylines that dovetail neatly in the
penultimate episode, “The Little Things”: geeky Sam's courtship
of his dream girl Cindy, and sarcastic freak Ken's relationship with
Amy. Sam has long been the Nice Guy™,
worshiping all-American cheerleader Cindy from afar and slowly
becoming the friend she can talk to “like a sister.” When Cindy
tires of her jock boyfriend and decides to give Sam a shot, it seems
like every little geek's (and every Nice Guy™'s)
dream
come true – except that they turn out to have nothing in common, to
bore each other, and to have no fun at all. It's a nifty subversion
of what initially seems to be a straightforward idealized Nice Guy™
trajectory from friendship to dating: without any kind of
heavy-handed moralizing, the show suggests that the Nice
Guy™
routine is not
the
way to a happy relationship.
![]() |
| It could never have lasted. Look at the terror on his face. |
Ken,
on the other hand, doesn't spend too much time mooning after Amy
before asking her out. They click immediately, and seem very happy
together. In pursuit of full disclosure, Amy tells Ken that, although
assigned female and comfortable in her gender identity, she was born
intersex. Ken reacts the way you might expect a teenage boy ignorant
of all things intersex to react: by freaking the fuck out. He worries
that this makes him gay (and experiments, hilariously, with disco and
a dirty mag) and figures he will have to break up with Amy. It's only
on hearing Sam list the reasons he has to break up with Cindy (“we
don't have anything in common... she thought The
Jerk was
stupid... we don't have anything to talk about... she doesn't like
anything that I like... we never have any fun together”) that Ken
realizes that he's being ridiculous.
The
handling of the whole intersex storyline is wonderfully sensitive
(this episode actually got nominated for a GLAAD award). Ken's
initial insistence that “It's over, move on” is not how Amy views
her intersex status. He has to go through the stages of denying it
completely and then letting it take over completely before he can
come to acceptance: “I'm sorry, and I don't care, and I'm sorry.”
Had the show lasted, I don't doubt that there would have been other
queer or queer-adjacent storylines, and that they would have been
handled with a similar tact and delicacy.
Freaks
and Geeks is
long dead, but with each rewatch I find new things to appreciate about one of the best television shows ever aired. Long live Freaks and Geeks.
Max
Thornton blogs at Gay
Christian Geek, and is slowly learning to twitter at
@RainicornMax.






3 comments:
Dangit, I was planning to review Freaks & Geeks! Oh well.
Sorry, Myrna! One of my New Year's resolutions is to be better about advance planning and updating the Bitch Flicks calendar with my plans.
@Myrna, you should write about 'Freaks and Geeks' too!! I know I love reading multiple perspectives on the same films/shows.
@Max, planning my posts (and sticking to those plans) may be the bane of my writing existence!
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