Episode Number: 9
Boy Meets World Episodes Borrowed From: Oh, any of the time travel ones. I suppose Season 2's "I Was a Teenage Spy" is the closest chronologically, while Season 5's "No Guts, No Cory"had a similar way of doing time travel where no one specific character actually time traveled, we just saw the characters as they'd be back then.
Cory's History Lesson and Relevance: Cory's teaching them about the '60s and they time traveled to the '60s, so, sure, very relevant.
"How Ya Doin'?" Count: I don't know, and don't want to rewatch this one to count.
Episode MVP: Sabrina Carpenter... but.... faint praise.
Episode Review:
As predicted, this was a bad episode. The time travel
episodes from Boy Meets World almost never worked, and even still this episode
was worse than them. Because in addition to being a stupid time travel episode,
it also came about way too early. “I Was a Teenage Spy”, the first time travel
BMW episode, came about midway through Season 3. The other time travel
episodes, “No Guts, No Cory” and “As Time Goes By” were in Seasons 5 and 7,
respectively. By then, the show and characters were well established, so you
can at least understand the thought process that it might be fun and
interesting to explore them in a different time period. It largely wasn’t
(especially in “I Was a Teenage Spy” which just isn’t very funny, and “As Time
Goes By” which is sheer pointless
nonsense, like many episodes in Season 7) but
there were at least elements in “No Guts, No Cory” (the strongest of the time
travel episodes, in my opinion, which isn’t saying much) where I did kind of
think it was funny to see those characters in that situation.
The problem is, we’re on only the ninth episode of Girl
Meets World. We barely know these characters as they are, it’s way too soon for
an alternate universe version of them. Their relationships don’t mean too much
to me (well, maybe Maya and Riley’s does, but certainly not them as a
foursome), so I don’t find anything heartwarming about the fact that their
great-grandparents all met once at a cafĂ© in 1961. I don’t care about their
great-grandparents when I barely care about them.
Speaking of great-grandparents, let’s deal with the
existence of Rosie McGee. I imagine many, like myself, had the knee-jerk
feeling that Rosie McGee probably doesn’t make any sense with the established
chronology. Let’s examine it, shall we? First off, we must acknowledge that
Rosie McGee is from the Lawrence branch of Riley’s family tree, and few sitcom
families are more rife with continuity issues than the Lawrences of Boy Meets
World, so if Rosie McGee DOESN’T fit with what we’ve already seen, she’d be
carrying on the one family tradition they have.
But, okay. So Rosie McGee is Topanga’s maternal grandmother
– i.e. the mother of Rhiannon (Chloe) Lawrence. If she had to be Riley’s
great-grandmother this is probably the best possible option. Her being a
Matthews would have been an immediate problem – we’ve met both of Cory’s
grandmothers, and they weren’t Rosie, and Amy and Alan both were absolutely
already born in 1961, both based on the ages we’ve heard Alan refer to himself
as in the show, and the fact that by 1978 Eric would be born, and Alan and Amy
were not teenage parents.
Now, while Amy and Alan absolutely have to have been already
alive in 1961, I suppose that’s not necessarily
the case for Jedediah and Rhiannon. Let’s say one or the other was born just
one year later in 1962 – this would make them 31 in 1993 when Boy Meets World
began, and 38 by the final season, which is when they were the most central to
the storyline. Topanga, in the final season, should have been roughly 20. This all remains
technically possible. We have heard that Topanga’s parents got married very
young – and with Nebula long erased from existence, Topanga is now their first
child. Hell, maybe Rhiannon was pregnant
with her and that’s why they got into their ultimately doomed marriage in the
first place? Now, can you buy Peter Tork, Michael McKean, or Mark Harelik (the
three Jedediahs) as being only in their 30s when we saw them on Boy Meets
World? I can’t, particularly Tork and McKean. So, thankfully, GMW made the wise
decision of not making Rosie be his mother either.
She’s Rhiannon’s mom, and while I couldn’t buy Annette
O’Toole (lovely as she is) as being a thirtysomething in her episode, it’s
Marcia Cross that I suppose we should take as the currently canon mother of
Topanga, because she’s the one we saw last. And Marcia Cross is significantly
younger than all the other parents Topanga’s had and, in fact was born…. In
1962. Though Jed and Rhiannon got married young, if we imagine Rhiannon was
also even younger than Jed at the time, and maybe Rhiannon was 18 when Topanga
was born, and Jed was maybe…. 21 or 22? That makes her 38 in Season 7, him
42-ish, and I can buy Mark Harelik’s Jed at that age.
Any other problems? Well, we did hear that Topanga’s
grandfather proposed to her grandmother on Pearl Harbor Day in “No Guts, No
Cory” and this was back in 1941 – a whopping 20 years before the events of this
episode. But, we don’t know exactly which grandparents they were. If this was
Grandpa and Grandma Lawrence, Jedediah’s parents, we’re still fine. Jedediah
could be a late-in-life kid for them, the youngest of 10 for all we know.
So, no, there’s not
technically a continuity issue here. It feels off. But it’s all possible. A problem lies in the fact, I
think, that they had to make these characters be the great-grandparents of
Riley and gang in order to make it work, because of the fact that Riley’s
grandparents are all people we definitely know. But, someone Riley’s age is
highly unlikely to have great-grandparents who were roughly 20 in 1961. It
would make her great-grandparents in their early 70s now, and it’s unusual for
anyone to have great-grandparents that young, especially someone from her
(forgive me) social class. And it’s not just her, it’s all four of them! They
were all great-grandparents. You’d think at least some of them would have been
regular grandparents. Riley, Maya, and
Farkle all have young parents who had to be in their very early 20s when they
had them, but there’s no reason, at the moment, why Lucas’ parents couldn’t be
a more standard fortysomething, with grandparents in their early 70s. As it
stands, it just is kind of a stretch that all four of these roughly
20-year-olds in 1961 would wind up with great-grandchildren
Frankly, what I think they should have done, is have made
Rosie actually be Rhiannon, and make this episode take place in the early ‘70s
instead. There’s no reason it couldn’t have been about the ‘70s and not the ‘60s.
Furthermore, flower children like Clutterbucket weren’t really very common in
1961 (which was still a lot more like the 1950s than what is commonly thought
of as the 1960s) while they were still going strong in the 1970s. It also makes
the Topanga Canyon thing more poignant, since it would be Topanga’s own mother
hearing the name for the first time and loving it which would mean more
(because Rosie ultimately does not
name her daughter Topanga, she apparently just… tells Rhiannon she likes the
name)
But actually what they should have done is not make this
episode. Because it’s garbage. As I said, they attempted something like this
way too early, before we care enough about them, and even if this was later on,
time travel episodes are hokey and lame. Too much of the episode had to be
carried by the main foursome, as Cory and Topanga weren’t in it much, and
Auggie wasn’t there at all. It also wasn’t very funny or well-written, and
involved a lot of questionable characterization – like Riley, Farkle, and Lucas
all being anti-History Class. Which doesn’t sound like them. Also, having these
12-year-old bop around like hippies and beatniks looked stupid. And was. Only
Sabrina Carpenter really sold it, which is why she’s the episode MVP, but I
still wish this hadn’t happened. Also, wasn't it really cool how, despite apparently being given a guitar for the first time, Maya randomly already knew how to play it? The answer is, no, it was not.
Really, this episode felt to me like a worst case scenario
version of what Girl Meets World could be. A show that screws with the
continuity of BMW, barely features the characters I like, and centers all
around characters I don’t care about while expecting me to care about them very
much. And not funny. It’s a terrible, terrible episode (as evidenced by the
fact that I chose to make most of my review an analysis of if there’s a
continuity error in Rosie McGee’s story than actually tackle the episode head
on.)
It’s not good. Don’t watch it. And poor Rider Strong, given such a shitty episode to direct.
Episode Rating: D
P.S. I will say, that Maya and Lucas continue to have better and better chemistry. It was like this week, they didn't even try to have Lucas and Riley interact, and all the good conversation was between them. I still don't like Lucas, but interacting with Maya is the only place he's any fun. They need to get on that stat. And I think that might be a good story, Riley maybe realizing Maya and Lucas are developing feelings for each other and her being torn between her own feelings and wanting her friends to be happy.
P.S. I will say, that Maya and Lucas continue to have better and better chemistry. It was like this week, they didn't even try to have Lucas and Riley interact, and all the good conversation was between them. I still don't like Lucas, but interacting with Maya is the only place he's any fun. They need to get on that stat. And I think that might be a good story, Riley maybe realizing Maya and Lucas are developing feelings for each other and her being torn between her own feelings and wanting her friends to be happy.