Five Smiling Fish

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New Girl (Tuesday Meeting & Lillypads): Movies about Writing

This brings us to the end of the “New Girl” blogs by looking at two episodes from the final season. The season takes place three years later with Nick and Jess returning from a European book tour, Cece and Schmidt raising a precocious girl named Ruth Bader Parikh-Schmidt, and Aly and Winston are pregnant (which makes Aly very grumpy).

In the episode Tuesday Meeting, Nick is in the middle of a writer’s block. His latest book is not meeting with the high standards expected by his publishing company, but he’s trying to cover that up with new social media shots and using a great deal of fake confidence. All of this bravado is replaced by Nick burning his manuscript after his editor tells him to start a new series.

Nick and Winston run into Schmidt whose daughter hasn’t slept in days, meaning Schmidt and Cece haven’t slept in days. Nick is in search of new ideas outside of the Pepperwood Chronicles. The friends try to rebuild his inspiration by telling Nick that he wrote good quotes in his idea notebooks when really they stole the first thing they found from the Communist Manifesto.

In a Three Men and a Baby moment, they all work for hours trying to get Ruth to fall asleep. Meanwhile, Jess and Cece are going to a lunch where CeCe keeps falling asleep and Jess is considering leaving her new job because it’s nothing but busy work. Nick tries to tell Ruth a story at her request and he starts giving colorful versions of childhood memories. He decides that this will be his new book.

In Lillypads, the main plot is a delightful romp of attempting to get Ruth into a prestigious preschool. Seriously, this whole thing is a brilliantly written example of how amusing yet terrifying children can be.

Nick’s plot line involves him going to the bar that he used to own in order to write. In order to meet his deadline, he hired a man to punch him in the face if he doesn’t have 20 pages by a certain time. Of course, he found this gentleman on Craigslist and Winston points out that he would have punched him for free.

Winston comes to Nick for help with being on the stand as a police detective then realizes that he’s given Nick a way to procrastinate. Winston makes a nice speech here.

“Nick, you procrastinate when something is important to you, because deep down, you don’t think you’re good enough to get it done . . . So, of course when you get the opportunity to write something about your own life, the first thing you do is choke. You know how I know? Well, because for some reason, I’m your oldest friend. So I hope you get punched in the the face today. I really do. And then maybe you’ll finally see that you are good enough to be everything you want to be.”

I’m just gonna leave that nice thought there.