Display title | Stella |
Default sort key | Stella |
Page length (in bytes) | 9,435 |
Namespace ID | 0 |
Page ID | 77166 |
Page content language | en - English |
Page content model | wikitext |
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Page creator | prefix>Import Bot |
Date of page creation | 21:27, 1 November 2013 |
Latest editor | Robkelk (talk | contribs) |
Date of latest edit | 23:53, 4 October 2020 |
Total number of edits | 7 |
Recent number of edits (within past 180 days) | 0 |
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Description | Content |
Article description: (description ) This attribute controls the content of the description and og:description elements. | Watching Stella is a jarring experience. Featuring three guys from The State, one of whom teaches romantic comedy screenwriting at NYU, one who is a permanent fixture on VH-1's I Love the <decade>s' series, and another who plays The Warden on Superjail!, you can only watch it expecting a very specific, very strange sense of comedy. Stella is about as close as American television gets to absurdist Britcoms like Father Ted, Black Books and Spaced, while still maintaining its own sense of pseudo-Borscht Belt Vaudevillain shtick that only Americans can appreciate fully. The comedy of Michael Showalter, Michael Ian Black and David Wain is definitely not for everybody, and if it's for anybody at all, they're not really enough to keep a television show running for very long. |