The Standard (St. Catharines)

Sitcom is about a gay kid who never knew the inside of a closet

- HANK STUEVER

NBC’s “Champions,” an appealing if uneven comedy from co-creators Mindy Kaling and Charlie Grandy (premièring Thursday), is about the underachie­ving owner of a struggling Brooklyn athletic club who meets the teenage son he never knew he had.

Scratch that. Vince (Anders Holm of “Workaholic­s”) always knew he had a kid with Priya (Kaling, in a recurring role), but the unplanned pregnancy stood between him and a college baseball scholarshi­p, so the couple decided to part ways. Vince never played a part in raising his child — nor, as it turned out, did he play much baseball. Instead he returned to Brooklyn to run his late father’s weight gym, which he’d dearly love to sell.

The situationa­l part of “sitcom” presents itself in the form of Michael (J.J. Totah), Priya and Vince’s hyperaware, showbiz-obsessed, proudly gay theatre nerd. Hoping to attend an exclusive performing-arts school, Michael, 15, needs a place to live in New York and Priya, who lives in Cleveland, is out of options. So mother and son show up unannounce­d, where Priya informs Vince that it’s his turn to step up as a parent.

After meeting his father, Michael isn’t happy about moving into the bachelor pad Vince shares with his affably dim-witted brother Matthew (Andy Favreau). “What is that?” Michael asks, pointing to the brothers’ beloved arcade-style hoops game. “It looks homophobic.”

If he thinks a machine looks homophobic, he should have seen television sitcoms two or three decades ago, in which precocious, smart-alecky boys had audiences howling at their clever quips and deeply sarcastic eyerolls — only to grow up and tell People magazine of the myriad struggles they endured as teenagers, including addiction, depression and, in more than a few cases, hushed-up homosexual­ity.

“Champions” knows better than to kick off with a self-satisfied pride parade. It simply presents the idea that Priya raised her son to be entirely himself — meaning he’s one of those lucky 21st-century gay kids who don’t dwell inside the metaphoric­al closet. Totah camps his scenes up without old-school inhibition­s; that he’s front-and-centre on a sitcom is presented merely as a post-post-”Will & Grace” opportunit­y for laughs, not agendas.

Vince hardly flinches at the news that his son is gay, nor does his brother, nor do the supporting characters who populate the gym, including a comically overconfid­ent (and lesbian) trainer named Ruby (Fortune Feimster).

Removed of messaging, “Champions” instead has to rely on the lightning-quick style of humour that defined Kaling’s previous show “The Mindy Project.” The results in the first few episodes are mixed. Most of the best jokes are totally in Totah’s court. “Can I plz go 2 the bodega across the street?” Michael texts his father. “I feel like the kid in ‘Room,’ except I don’t have a Brie Larson to talk to.”

“Huh?” Vince replies. “Brie Larson? Is that a cheese?”

“Yes,” Michael texts back with disdain. “A cheese gave Casey Affleck his Oscar.”

Such get-with-it-Dad jokes don’t land with as much impact when Dad is already with it. And even with strong performanc­es from the supporting cast, “Champions” is much better when Kaling is in front of the camera as well as behind it, even if her intent here is mainly to produce. If Michael is as clever as Totah makes him seem, he’ll figure out a way to get his mother more screen time.

“Champions” premières Thursday at 8:30 p.m. on NBC.

 ?? NBC ?? Andy Favreau, left, J.J. Totah and Anders Holm star in “Champions.”
NBC Andy Favreau, left, J.J. Totah and Anders Holm star in “Champions.”

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