Cape Argus

'Atlanta' back with new Robbin' season

- Hank Stuever

Two cultures meet and fail to connect in Donald Glover’s ‘dramedy’, writes

IHESITATE to conjure some overreachi­ng take on Atlanta, Donald Glover’s richly imagined and deservedly praised dramedy, a hazy and half-stoned collage of a young African-American man’s unhurried life in the inner suburbs of the Southern megalopoli­s, where he works, sometimes, managing his cousin’s rise as a local rap star. Twice now I’ve seen Glover, with his

Atlanta cast mates and co-producers/ writers, sit in a roomful of journalist­s and seem genuinely baffled and even slightly perturbed by any attempts to dig too deeply into Atlanta’s intent, theme or meaning. The rave reviews and awards are fine, but that still doesn’t mean everyone watches Atlanta the same way.

While meeting with critics to promote the show’s long-awaited second season, Glover and company claimed that much of what they’re trying with Atlanta this time was partly inspired by Tiny Toon

Adventures, a syndicated children’s cartoon show from the early 1990s. They giggled among themselves while serious-minded reporters asked them to elaborate on the cartoon’s merits.

There was a vague sense that it’s fun to watch white people – so desperate to appear “woke” in an intensely woke moment of popular culture – project too much on to Atlanta. In fact, the Q&A session played very much like a scene from the show.

Atlanta, after all, functions and succeeds entirely on its own terms, even though in structure and momentum it isn’t all that different from Pamela Adlon’s Better Things, Aziz Ansari’s

Master of None, or even Lena Dunham’s Girls – all of which rely on a disjointed, slice-of-life narrative style and their creators’ particular ways of seeing the world. The half-hour cable dramedy has become television’s most consistent expression of experiment­al film techniques, its own little exercise in 21st century new-wave cinema. Last year Atlanta toyed surprising­ly with talk show formats, commercial­s and cartoons. Some also compared the show to the meandering genius of David Lynch. Atlanta returned to US screens on Thursday after an extended hiatus (Glover has been busy playing Lando Calrissian in an upcoming Star Wars movie), Atlanta has acquired a coy subtitle, Robbin’ Season, which, as explained by Darius (Lakeith Stanfield), the show’s resident cool cat, is the wary time of year in the weeks leading up to Christmas.

In this unsettling inverse of Advent, the first minutes of the show include an armed robbery of a fast-food restaurant that ends with bullets flying in a Tarantino-like way of twinning violence to wryness. “Christmas approaches,” Darius explains to Glover’s character, Earn Marks. “Everybody’s gotta eat.”

Based on the first three new episodes made available for review, Atlanta appears to be buckling down for a more serious moment with a more linear story line.

Earn’s life is noticeably more marginal and depressing – the storage unit he used to sleep in with his belongings has fallen out of his possession. His cousin, Alfred Miles (Brian Tyree Henry), now better known around town as the rapper Paper Boi, is perpetuall­y unhappy with the state of his career, which has plateaued.

Earn’s attempt to boost his cousin’s profile leads them to a branding agency – a modern, open-floor-plan warehouse teeming with mostly white, bright-eyed millennial­s, who, hoping to appear doper than they’ll ever be, nervously patronise Al and Earn while spit-balling ways to market Paper Boi. When Earn pulls out a CD of some of Paper Boi’s recordings, he’s told that there aren’t any disc players in this ultrahip office; emailing a file doesn’t work either.

It’s two cultures failing in every way to connect – and, I think, it is what

Atlanta is about, at heart. The show welcomes us into the world of Earn, who happens to be a Princeton dropout, and his closest friends and associates, all of them living apart from an America that is all too willing to leave them behind in the 21st century’s fairy dust – an America that craves their music, mostly as means to marketing.

As Earn eats a bag of chips and waits for a disgruntle­d Al to record a series of promos in a sound booth, he suddenly realises that the office is watching him. When he turns around, they all pretend to go back to work. Viewing it, I couldn’t help but think of that room-full of critics trying to wrest more introspect­ion from Glover than he was willing to give.

Part of what sets the show apart is its unapologet­ic portrayal of Earn’s awareness of himself in the world – especially in the white world, where the indignitie­s and dangers are endless and range from subtle to direct.

Robbin’ Season also comes with a heightened danger of black-on-black crime and other cruelties, from a scene where Al gets robbed at gunpoint to another scene where an acquaintan­ce sees an opportunit­y to swindle Earn out of a newfound and sorely needed payout.

All of which is to note that Atlanta might be a more depressing show than it used to be – and it wasn’t exactly euphoric to begin with. A viewer’s laugh come less from its covert commentary and more in exasperate­d gasps, as Earn endures repeat disappoint­ments, always holding the short end of society’s stick.

Beneath all its current cultural cachet, it’s not a Tiny Toon. It’s an excellent and deceptivel­y precise show about the human condition. – Washington Post

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 ?? PICTURE: GUY D’ALEMA/FX ?? Donald Glover and Zazie Beetz, above, and Lakeith Stanfield, left, in scenes from Atlanta.
PICTURE: GUY D’ALEMA/FX Donald Glover and Zazie Beetz, above, and Lakeith Stanfield, left, in scenes from Atlanta.
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