Brandon. Basketball. Black People

As you may or may not be aware, I have have been working on a book about the terrible lessons you didn’t know you were being taught when you watched Beverly Hills, 90210.

I love 90210 and all of it’s cheesiness and getting-of-things-wrong. This book is intended to be a loving homage and a scathing examination of what you may have learned if you were paying close enough attention.

It’s also meant to be funny, or at least mildly humorous.

This post is taken from the first chapter where I examine Race on 90210. This is all about the episode One on One from the first season, where after a month in Beverly Hills, Brandon finally talks to a black person.

I am trying something new with this book. I’ve signed up at inkshares.com to try their crowd-funding/publishing approach. I’ve uploaded a second lesson from the chapter on Race over there (Brandon learns about hispanic people). If you like what’s here, head on over there and follow the project.

You can get there from here.

You can comment or keep up with the progress silently. I look forward to sharing this book with everyone once it is completed.

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Race – Lesson One – Brandon. Basketball. Black People.

Five episodes into the first season of Beverly Hills, 90210, or as I like to think of it, First Junior Year, and our sum total of exposure to black people was this.

In the pilot:

  1. During the pilot a black kid gave someone a high five.
  2. There were two black guys walking to school in suits.
  3. The voice of KWBH radio was a black guy. He might have been called The Flash or DJ Mike. And he just wanted to know whether Brandon had done the wild thing, WILD THANG, with Marianne Moore.
  4. There were a couple of black kids doing a choreographed dance on the lawn before school started.
  5. Mr. Clayton, the vice principal was black.
  6. The bouncer at the club Brenda snuck into was black and mean to Kelly.
  7. There was one black kid running with Brandon during what looked like gym class, who wanted to know about Brandon’s sexual conquest of Marianne Moore.

And that may seem like a lot. So many, in fact, that there were none in the next episode at all. Or the one after that. Or the one after that.

It wasn’t until One on One that anyone had a meaningful conversation with a black person. And all of those conversations were about race. Or basketball.

Here’s what happened and what I learned.

Basketball was a very big deal in the Walsh home. They had a goal hung on their garage and everything and it was set at about 8 feet off the ground. Jim and Brandon played a spirited game of horse before school.

First, Jim, despite having terrible form and no follow through on his shot at all once won a high school game against Franklin by making an eight foot set shot from the middle of the lane. Second, based on the very proud look he gave Brandon after a made jump shot, Jim was very proud of Brandon’s basketball skills and was certain that Brandon was set to crack the starting five.

But first, he’d have to make the team. Brandon and Steve both tried out for the basketball team. West Beverly, according to Steve, was a perrenial powerhouse, but the team itself was a pretty closed system. The coach had alread set his starting five and was holding the tryouts just to bolster school spirit. Steve was pretty much a lock to make the team based on his performance on the JV team the previous year. It’s also possible Steve felt very confident that he’d make the team because Steve was confident that he would always get whatever he wanted.

After watching a few minutes of black kids dunking, Brandon was less sure about his own prospects, especially since being 5’6″ and slow is not seen as an advantage on the basketball court.

By the end of tryouts Brandon, and the other short white kids hadn’t even been put in the scrimmage yet and he was getting discouraged. But when he finally got his chance, he promptly got two steals from Steve, hit a jump shot, and dropped two assists to James Townsend, some new hotshot transfer student, who was coincidentally (?) black.

Brandon, because of his ability to play defense and pass the ball to the black kid, made the cut. Steve, because he’s not good at basketball, did not.

Or, according to Steve, it didn’t matter because neither one of them was going to make the team. The whole thing was rigged. None of the good basketball players live in district. But black people get into West Beverly to play basketball as part of some entitlement program called the Applied Learning Opportunity Program, and through no other means.

The ALOP brings in black students from outside of Beverly Hills, again, according to Steve, to improve diversity (how else do you think they get .54% African Americans in any ONE high school?) and the record of the basketball team.

He’s pretty pissed about this program because all black people are better than Steve at basketball and their presence prevents him from attaining his rightful place as the greatest basketball player in West Beverly Wildcat history. He tells Brandon that a lot of the ALOP kids don’t even go to class. Steve, you see, abhors the idea of anyone other than him getting preferential treatment. He also hates it when kids get grades they don’t deserve (until later when he cheats on a test, breaks into school to change his grades and steals one of Brandon’s papers).

Brandon doesn’t see it that way at all. He still thinks he has a chance to make the team because what Brandon understands that Steve doesn’t is that while all black people are better at basketball than all white people, it’s only because they are naturally more athletic. However, slow white players are better than all black players at playing defense and passing the ball to open black teammates. Which Brandon happens to excel at.

But what Steve said is starting to get to him a bit. He tries to tell Jim that all the players are recruited, the starting five is set, and the other kids are like pros. Jim knows different.

Jim, the owner of the single worst jump shot in all of christendom, tells Brandon that the real reason he made the first cut wasn’t because Brandon figured out how to succeed in the one area of basketball black people aren’t good at, it’s because Brandon read Bobby Knight’s book understands that “Winning is a state of mind,” ignoring the fact that Bob Knight would have never written that in a book.

Later in the week Steve, still smarting from his being cut decides to take comfort in the fact that he’s the privileged kid of American’s favorite TV mom, Samantha Sanders of The Heartly House. He almost invited Brandon to go with him to the Lakers v. Celtics game at the Forum, using his court side season tickets. Almost, but instead he just went by himself. Steve goes on and on about how great Bird and McHale were.

“Wait a minute, I thought you were a Lakers fan,” inquires Brandon.

“Except when the Celtics come to town.”

“Why? Were you born in Boston?”

“No, I’m a Beverly Hills native.”

“Well, what were you doing rooting for the Celtics?”

“Us Irish guys have got to stick together. You know how it is.”

Brandon is perplexed by Steve’s random racism, but puts it behind him until James shows up in Tech class to ask for an extension on an assignment. Which is odd, because Brandon is in that Tech class and he’s never seen James there before. Maybe there’s something to this ALOP theory Steve has been mumbling about underneath his white hood.

He asks Andrea to look into James’ records in the ALOP for a story in the school newspaper, confidential student records being something widely available to any student who asks for them. Andrea isn’t buying it, what with Steve being a spoiled rich kid and not a terribly credible source, but she looks into it anyway.

It should be mentioned here, and then promptly ignored, that Andrea lives out of district and lies about living with her grandmother to attend WBHS and Brandon has no problem with that.

It turns out James doesn’t have a GPA, never took the reading or math placement exam, and his previous transcripts were never processed.

Brandon is uber-pissed about this. Steve is right! Black kids get to go to West Beverly without the grades to get into the ALOP, never have to go to class, and get extensions on their assignments. He confronts James who, rather than answer the wild accusations of another student who somehow got access to his confidential records in a calm and reasoned manner, accuses Brandon of being a racist. But this isn’t true at all. Brandon only assumes the worst about black people when he gets one example that seems to support the racist rantings of his best friend who has an axe to grind. If it wasn’t true about all black people why did it seem to be true about this one kid? Answer that James!!!

But then Brandon sees something he never, ever expected to see. James in a library. Why would a black kid be in the library?

Well, it turns out that James isn’t part of the ALOP, despite Andrea’s source inside the program claiming that he was. His dad works for the public library, giving James the right to go to West Beverly. Brandon is shocked by this and starts to apologize to James, who cuts him off. Yelling at Brandon, “Yeah, but you’re white! That’s why your first impulse was to think, ‘Hey, he’s gotta be dumb or a rap singer, or in a gang, or smokin’ crack or whatever stereotype fits your fears, but that’s your problem. That’s not my problem!”

James’ problem, it seems, is that even though his dad works for the library he never learned that it is a quiet place where people just don’t start yelling about smoking crack. Brandon thinks about pointing this out, along with the fact that he never thought James could rap, but thinks better of it, after all this black dude seems pretty pissed. Who knows what he’ll do?

The next day he and James find themselves in the gym prior to practice. They take a few minutes to talk quietly in the one building at school where yelling is acceptable. Brandon has handled this whole thing terribly, but not because Steve is a racist, or because Brandon was looking for a reason why he wasn’t going to make the team over players who are bigger, faster, stronger, and better than he is.

No, it’s because he’s never really talked to any black people or had to deal with issues of race. James gets it. There aren’t too many cowboys in Englewood either.

“See, that’s just it.” Brandon replies, suddenly sure that he’s figured this whole racism thing out and can impart some knowledge. “I’m not a cowboy and you’re not a gang banger crackhead. We’re just two guys from the same school battling for the same spot on the same team.”

Did you get that? We’re the SAME!!!

Brandon learned something: We’re all the same.

And all he had to do was violate student confidentiality, accuse an innocent transfer student of breaking the rules, and get in a shouting match at a library.

Brandon even made the JV team, where there’s a larger need for short, slow kids who can pass and play defense. The other black guys on the team seemed to really like him too. Now that he wasn’t racist anymore.

Steve was still a racist though. He tried one last time to help Brandon understand the world before the end of the episode.

“Don’t let those suckers intimidate you, Brandon,” he said. “This is our school, not theirs.”

“Only in your mind, Steve.”

It’s kind of too bad that it takes an entire basketball team of black kids to stop one white kid from being racist, but that seems to be the case.

Brandon put so much work into making the basketball team and becoming friends with those black guys. It’s odd we never saw them again or heard anything about him playing for the team.

A New Fear Awakens

I’m excited about Star Wars: The Force Awakens. I have been since it was announced. And nothing I’ve seen since then has given me cause for concern.

There have been no pod races. No midiclorians. No one seems to have been told to act as wooden as possible.

So, I’m left with only excitement, or the ability to create brand new things to be worried about right out of my own little noggin. Which, of course, is what I just did. Just now. Five minutes ago. With no external prompting. And rather than keep this nonsense to myself, I want to share it with you.

I was thinking about Harrison Ford, and how exciting its been to see him in the trailers with Chewbacca and with all the younger, new characters. And then I was thinking how unlikely it was that Harrison Ford had signed on to a three-picture deal, which may or may not be accurate.

And then, I thought of 90210.

I was less excited when The CW brought us back to West Beverly High School than I am for Star Wars, but that may only be because it would seem strange to be this excited about that. I was, however, pretty excited.

Especially when I learned that Jennie Garth was coming back. There was going to be a tangible connection to Beverly Hills, 90210.

And then, they said Nat was coming back. And then. Whoa. Whoa. Whoa. Stop the clock! Shannen Doherty was coming back.

There were 1000 ways this could still be terrible, but the idea that they could convince Brenda to return from London was pretty amazing. No one thought that would ever happen.

In much the same way no one ever thought Harrison Ford would play Han Solo again. Largely because both Ford and Doherty (this marking the first time the two have been mentioned in the same sentence in the history of mankind) had said they would never go back to play those roles again.

Scoring Jennie Garth was cool, but it seemed about as hard to do as scoring Anthony Daniels.

Then, you know what happened? Probably not, because the Venn Diagram of Star Wars fans and 90210 fans has about three people in the intersecting segment. The show was almost entirely about the new kids at West Bev. Kelly had some stuff to do, and Brenda and Donna came back for brief story arcs, but after the first season, Kelly had less to do and the focus shifted entirely to Annie, and Dixon, and the rest of the gang.

And that’s when I realized that Star Wars was about to do that too.

I have no idea what The Force Awakens is about, on purpose. I don’t want to know. But it’s going to be about Finn, and Poe, and Rae and by episode VIII, someone may say, “Han had to go back to London to adopt a baby,” or something, and that will be that.

This isn’t necessarily a bad thing, after all lots of kids would be lucky to be adopted by Han Solo. And it’s most certainly necessary to continue the story in perpetuity like Disney plans.

But, I was suddenly filled with the fear that this transition would leave me wanting.

Which is a dumb thing to fear, because I have no power to change this one way or another and the story is what it is. But there it is anyway. Star Wars is about to go all 90210 on us.

You’ve been warned.

But don’t be afraid of that. Because fear is the path to the dark side.

20 Things That Would Have Been Better Than The Unauthorized Beverly Hills 90210 Story

Before I get back to my USA Up All Night mission, I need to take a moment to address the one thing everyone expects me to address. Namely, The Unauthorized Beverly Hills 90210 Story.

Of course I watched it.

I have almost no idea what this was supposed to be. But I can tell you a few things it could have been that would have been better.

  1. An open apology to Douglas Emerson for pretending like he didn’t exist.
  2. An even bigger “you’re welcome” to Douglas Emerson for pretending he didn’t exist.
  3. A two-hour interview with Lucy Liu on what it was like to work at the Peach Pit.
  4. A conversation with Matt Durning’s sweater vests.
  5. Ray Pruit: Behind the Music
  6. The Derrick Driscoll Man hunt.
  7. The lost episode of Oz that was focused on Colin Robbins.
  8. A full concert of all of David Silver’s songs performed in their entirety.
  9. A trial of the hairdresser that did that to Emily Valentine’s hair when she kept Brandon for catching fire with Kelly.
  10. A conversation with Felice Martin on why she’s voting for Donald Trump in 2016, because you know she is.
  11. A full day shadowing Arnold Arnold at work.
  12. Dylan McKay actually reading Byron: The Collected Works.
  13. A 30 for 30 on the playing career of D’Shawn Hardell.
  14. An evening with Tuck, 20 years later.
  15. A lock-in at Shaw High School.
  16. A forensic accounting of all the money every owner of the Peach Pit After Dark lost over the years.
  17. An investigative report into the spray tan machine that turned Donna Martin orange for Steve’s 21st birthday party.
  18. Two hours of Morton Muntz in a sombrero.
  19. Diesel Stone playing the keytar on a continuous loop.
  20. Nat hosting a cooking class

That’s 20 things that would have been better than this lifetime tire fire.

90210 Countdown Number 1: Home and Away

Season 3 Episode 10. I loved this episode so much, I used it to open chapter four of my book about the 07-08 Indiana Hoosiers. This episode has it all. Kelly’s dad standing her up. Black people used to show how they’re not all bad. Brandon and the gang curing one of society’s ills. Black guys and white girls line dancing together. Brandon, smug in his righteousness. And best of all, David. Silver. Rapping. This is episode where David performs “Switch it Up” Oh, the joy of this episode. Here’s how this gem of American film making made it’s way into a book about college basketball.

On a warm, fall, California Friday night in 1992 gunshots rang out in the closing moments of a high school football game. Two students were killed by a rival set from the opposing school. The game took place at Shaw High School, who boasted an undefeated powerhouse of a football team.
An intrepid sports reporter from another high school, a high school from Beverly Hills, with particular interest in the Shaw game, heard the report of the shootings while listening for that week’s scores. He wouldn’t have given much thought to the news of more gang violence in South Central L.A., after all this was mere months after the Rodney King verdict and he’d heard Straight Outta Compton, had Shaw not been his similarly-undefeated high school team’s next opponent. Even then he didn’t think too much of it, until the coaches and school administrators from both schools met in private on Saturday to discuss whether the much anticipated match was going to happen at all. He knew that if you could get school personnel to do anything on a Saturday it must be serious. School administrators from Beverly Hills are not very comfortable with road games to South Central under ideal circumstances, much less the week following football related gang violence.
The game was cancelled, and the dance that was scheduled to follow it was also in jeopardy. Our reporter plus his racially diverse counterpart from Shaw, struck up an uneasy, racially awkward friendship and began working together to not only cover the story and find a way to get the game played (because these things so often hinge on the efforts of the school newspaper staff) but also to end racial tensions.
The Beverly Hills reporter suggested playing the game in Beverly Hills, but the rich white people were scared of the gangs driving up to their neighborhood, so that idea was out. He then suggested a neutral site, but the Shaw reporter told his lily-white counterpart that if the game was played anywhere but Shaw, they might as well hand the neighborhood over to the gangs. White people can be so ignorant sometimes.
Coming to the realization that they had no actual power to make the schools play the game, they decided to really shake things up. They decided to each publish an editorial in the other’s school paper. DAMN!!!! In your face racist establishment!!!
But the Beverly Hills reporter couldn’t let it rest at this incredibly brave and substantive act. He used his column to invite the kids from Shaw to the dance at his High School.
His sister, who was in charge of the dance committee, his best friend, who was repping the musical act at the dance, the musical act and his girlfriend, who were also both friends of the reporter, were all super pissed at the reporter. His sister thought he did this just to ruin her life. She just had no idea of what was at stake here.
On the night of the dance a number of kids from Shaw (black kids, *gasp*) decided to accept his invitation. But they had been drinking *double gasp*. Upset that his grand gesture to heal race relations in California looked to be falling apart and landing on the ground in big drunken pieces, the reporter from Shaw says, “I just didn’t see this coming.”
“No one could have, man,” replied the Ernie Pyle of California High School Sports.
His sister, anger renewed, replies, “Are you out of your mind, Brandon? Anyone could have.”
It turns out that the one thing kids of different races mistrust more than each other is authority. And the one thing they like more than a clash of undefeated football powerhouses is line dancing to a white rapper.
The reporter from Shaw, upon seeing the sudden racial harmony and awkward dancing looks at our hero and says, “No one could have predicted this.”
Brandon, smug once again in his victory over racism and gang violence as well as the ignorance of school authority, says, “Jordan, my man, anyone could have predicted this.”
There was a lot about our next two games in Chicago that anyone could have predicted.

I hope you enjoyed 90210 day as much as I did. It was tremendous fun for me to relive (I didn’t get a chance to rewatch any of them today, this was all from memory) all of these fantastic episodes. I could have chosen to do a lot of things to do to honor today. I chose me

90210 Countdown Number 2: The Dreams of Dylan McKay

Season 5 Episode 10. The highest rated episode from Season 5. And for great reasons. Dylan is in a comma, where according the the pop mysticism of the hot red-headed nurse, a battle is going on for Dylan’s soul. Dylan dreams of a room full of the women he’s slept with + Donna. He makes out with about 10 women in a 2 minute scene. Then, his dealer, Uncle Rico, ruins things by having the girls hold him down and trying to shoot him up full of dope. Uncle Rico also pretends to play guitar. Dylan walks down a tunnel past a bum (who is really his dead father) and he keeps hearing the worst line reading in history, “Dylan, if you ever loved me. If you ever WERE my brother.” over and over again. In the real world, Steve and Brandon are playing the interfraternity flag football tournament. Brandon, who refused to join KEG house, is somehow allowed to play. But the event is nearly ruined for Steve by former KEG man and BMOC Rush Sanders. All the guys, including Muntz, love Rush, but Steve has daddy issues. Leave it Brandon to give Steve exactly the pep talk he needed, finishing it up with the most bizarre and awkward, we’re trying to be super cool hand shake ever. As Brandon throws out the horns using his index and pinky fingers. Steve acknowledges by doing the same. They touch finger tips, then touch those fingers to the edge of their tongue. The newly moisten fingers are then used to smooth out the eyebrows. One arm is cocked back and if to throw a football, while the other is extended forward. Then, in unison, they both say, “The Quan. The Burrito. Ha-cha-cha-cha-cha.” They then March forward onto the field of victory. If I was one who could be embarrassed I would sport a pity blush for the men of KEG house who have to follow these two onto the field of play. But, I’m not, so for years, I made people do this with me. This episode has cheese dripping from both the dream state of Dylan McKay and the burrito near the quan that are fueling the men of KEG house. To be better than this episode, it would have to be something special. It is.

90210 Countdown Number 4: It’s a Totally Happening Life

Season 3 Episode 16. We have now reached the greatest use of the flashback in the history of the world, especially as it applies to unintentional comedy. It’s Christmas 1992. Dylan, Kelly and Brenda are in the middle of the triangle love triangle to end all love triangles. Steve has been suspended for using a freshman to help him break into school to change his grades. Brandon and Andrea come close to making sweet, ink-covered love as they both just got dumped, and they are all, save Steve who is dressed as Santa and already there, are on a bus on their way to the Alvarado Street Shelter to bring Christmas to little kids. We see all of this because an angel trying to get his wings is showing it all to his mentor angel, Clarence, in hopes that they can prevent a drunk driver fromT-boning the school bus and killing everyone on board. It’s the lamest thing in the history of TV. It’s horribly executed, and in the end the angels somehow make the drunk drivers trunk pass through the school bus saving everyone. But you know why they had to do that, because they thought they had taken care of it by rerouting the truck driver and avoiding the wreck, but they rerouted THE WRONG GUY!! They have the power to make two solid objects pass through on another, but they can’t get it together to figure out if the driver is name Craig or Greg? Holy God! Just thinking about it now, 18 years later, still makes me want to punch someone. It’s maddening. It’s incredibly cheesy. It’s EXACTLY why I love to watch 90210.

90210 Countdown Number 5: Something In The Air

Season 3 Episode 28 The West Beverly Class of 1994 were a lucky bunch. The school board passed a resolution requiring uniforms for the next year, their senior year. They were pissed, but didn’t really know what to do about it. Then, like a gift from God, Mel Silver gave the kids some champaign before the prom and Donna got completely bombed. And as we all knew, because they announced it before earlier in the episode, if you get caught drunk at prom you get suspended and are prevented from walking at graduation. In Something in the Air, the Senior class, and the juniors who saw they’re moment and took it, marched on the school board to protest Donna’s punishment and get rid of the uniforms too. They marched out of school during finals, and Brandon lectured Superintendent Eckhart. What a bunch of punks. I feel now, as I did then, every kid that marched out should have been given F’s on those tests and if that prevented them from graduating, then so what. These morons risked having to repeat 12th grade to protect Donna’s right to participate in a ceremony. Not to receive her diploma, she was going to graduate. She just wasn’t going to be allowed to walk. That’s it. She would have missed Andrea’s speech, and what a tragedy that would have been, as Andrea forgot it anyway. The whole thing was preposterous. DONNA MARTIN GRADUATES! DONNA MARTIN GRADUATES! DONNA MARTIN GRADUATES! Yes, she did. And she would have all along. How great would it have been if they’d flunked everyone on their finals and the next year, some of her friends were stuck repeating 12th grade while Donna moved on to California University, all because they were marching for her right to graduate?

90210 Countdown Number 3: U4EA

Season 2 Episode 15. “I’d like to exchange and egg.” Getting into a rave is easy for some, but very. Very. Hard for others. Andrea and Steve spend the entire episode trying to find the right convenience store where they can give them an egg +$10 and get the address of a big rave. It’s moments like everything in this episode that reminds us exactly how uncool all of our West Bev regulars really are. They go to the rave and not one of them looks like the fit in anywhere, except Emily, who is so comfortable there that she immediately spots and cops from a drug dealer in the room. She slips Brandon some U4EA, and he rides the high. Jason Priestley acting drunk is at least a 7 on the unintentional comedy scale, but Dylan, dumping Brandon into the back of his car and calling him “Rico Suave!” rates as a solid 11. It’s a line so horribly lame that Dylan used it in at least one other episode. When Dylan wants to sound with it, he calls people by the title of a Gerardo song. Thank God they graduated in ’93. Two years later he’d likely have been trying to make calling someone Ma-Ca-Re-NA! Sound cool. David is completely drunk, because in the last episode his best friend shot himself right in front of David. He lashed out during that episode and got drunk in this one. By the time Emily sets the float on fire in Brandon’s driveway next episode he will be completely over it. It’s too bad they buried that time capsule the week before, because this episode deserves to be shown to the people who dig that up in 32 years.

90210 Countdown Number 6: Up in Flames

Season 5 Episode 13. There’s a house party, a comical misuse of the internet, a Ray Pruitt sings to stoned college kids room, every lesbian at CU, Emily Valentine and Kelly Taylor, extra-tasty crispy. What more could you want from a 90210 episode? Steve and Griffin throw a house party in a house with faulty wiring. They are told by the guy renting them the sound system and the food “that he thinks the building should be condemned. There is serious metal fatigue in all the load bearing members, the wiring is substandard, it’s completely inadequate for our power needs and the neighborhood is like a demilitarized zone.” So, Griffin just pops in new fuses like they were Quaaludes and the party rages on. Meanwhile Brandon meets Emily Valentine while she is in town on a lay over. Sparks fly (get it. Sparks fly. It’s like foreshadowing and a reference to other story lines) and Brandon never makes it to the house party, leaving Kelly to go to the bathroom with a lesbian in the one room in the whole house that doesn’t look like it’s in an abandoned building, the screening room. Steve and Griffin are using every room in the house. There’s a Ray Pruitt room, a make out room for Steve and Valerie to attempt coitus in, none of them furnished, and there’s a whole movie theatre that they don’t use for the party? That is complete Chewbacca. That makes no sense. But it’s sound proof so when the fire starts, Kelly and Allison (the lesbian. I know isn’t it shocking?) can scream all they want it will do very. Little. Good. This starts the ball rollin toward Kelly’s cult membership which opens the door in her relationship with Brandon for Dylan to get his foot back in. If not for all of this ridiculousness we might never have gotten to see Kelly Taylor “Choose me.”

90210 Countdown 7: Double Jeopardy

Season 5 Episode 25. Brandon and Claire compete for a spot on College Jeopardy. They each have the most ridiculous dreams about being on the show. Claire’s dream involved question categories like “Twins” “Presidents””Minnesota”and “Chancellor’s Lackeys.” Brandon’s place him as a contestant wearing a clown costume. This episode is also the only time Jesse came close to being interesting. He moved out on Andrea and invited himself to stay with Dylan. It’s a Felix and Oscar situation, with Jesse annoying the shit out of Dylan. Never before and never since was Jesse Zuckerman Vasquez that interesting, except for the one time he yelled at Steve and suddenly, briefly, became hispanic. The moment of the episode involves Brandon sitting in the Chancellor’s office while Arnold Arnold called Claire and trash talked Brandon, pretending that Claire was the playing the dozens, saying things like “Claire says, the only way you’ll win is if the category is funny haircuts.” And reminding Brandon how many language’s she speaks. It’s perfect 90210 comedy. An honest attempt to be funny causing displaced laughter. Classic Season 5 90210

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