B+

Mr. Mayor finds some much-needed balance as it places "Hearts Before Parts"

TV Reviews Mr. Mayor
Mr. Mayor finds some much-needed balance as it places "Hearts Before Parts"
Graphic: NBC

“Hearts Before Parts” may be a saying that Mayor* Neil Bremer just makes up to remind his daughter Orly about all the (many) times he’s taught her about sex, but it’s also an integral component of what makes this episode of Mr. Mayor work so well. Of the constant internal battle (workplace sitcom versus family sitcom) that the series has going on, this is the episode (that fully includes both components) with perhaps the most obvious separation of proverbial church and state, with barely any bleedthrough between the two worlds. That separation is especially glaring—in an absurdly funny way—when Bremer brings Nicole (Missi Pyle) to his office, immediately after his staff runs off to do their whole thing.

*Yeah, he’s the Mayor.

Yet somehow, with such a clear separation of plots, it all works. It’s not a surprise the workplace sitcom half of the plot works, especially as it’s both a tried and true co-workers-to-friends story and another “Respect In The Workplace”-style combination of (nearly) everyone being given something to do. But it is a surprise for the family sitcom half to work as well as it does, especially so divorced from the other half. And “Hearts Before Parts” ends up providing the show’s best argument so far for the father-daughter dynamic to be so prominent (outside of the way it affects Bremer’s political career). It’s especially surprising as the Bremer/Orly A-plot even veers “dangerously” into TGIF-meets-The Parent Trap territory at a certain point. That certain point is specifically the scene where Nicole meets Orly, which thankfully doesn’t go on for too long before Bremer realizes what his daughter is doing. That realization is, of course, due to her reaction to Nicole (who Bremer has had a thing with for years) not realizing that Bremer is the Mayor.

Or, in Nicole’s mind, works for the Mayor.

The biggest reason this plot works so well is because of what it pivots into for the elder Bremer. (Unfortunately for Orly, while her father gains catharsis out of this plot, she… does not.) Once again, Mr. Mayor strikes gold with a guest star to the point where it’s difficult to not just wish they’d stick around. Sure, Missi Pyle’s “age-appropriate” Nicole makes perfectly clear all the reasons she isn’t the one for Bremer to try and enter into a serious relationship with… but would that she could stick around, solely for the vibes and comedy she brings to all of this. (And the fact that I want to know more about her father’s secret family.) It’s obvious as soon as Bremer tells Orly that Nicole now thinks their relationship is more serious that that’s not the case, which leads us to Pyle’s big scene, with Nicole dumping Bremer, psychoanalyzing him, setting him on his new personal path, and leaving us wanting so much more. This allows Bremer the aforementioned catharsis—and Ted Danson to have another great scene partner to play off of—that allows him to seek out a real relationship for the first time in eight years.

But, again, the biggest reason the family sitcom plot works here isn’t because of the younger half of that equation. While it’s really nice to see Orly help her dad out in the end, the plot is missing the part where they actually sort things out and we get any of Orly’s thoughts on her father dating for the first time in her life. Because while Bremer comes to the realization (with Nicole) that he’s been using Orly as an excuse not to get serious with anyone and to sneak around, the last scene we see between father and daughter before the conclusion is Orly freaking out over the fact that her dad’s been hooking up with women this whole time. While it’s fun for the emotional work of this plot to be done in the scene with Nicole, Nicole isn’t the character sticking around past this episode. Mr. Mayor clearly wants to tell this home and work-life balance story, but in making the home part of the story about a 72-year-old father to a 16-year-old girl, it really has opened itself up to a number of issues in telling said story.

This week’s B-plot is also a pretty standard story, though the runner of the trivia host’s (Kurt Braunohler) horrible relationship with his children is definitely its own thing. But “Hearts Before Parts” plays with the character combinations and established dynamics by doing something as simple as pairing up Tommy and Arpi against Mikaela and Jayden. It’s two previously unexplored relationships, though Tommy and Arpi immediately deciding to pair up—despite rarely interacting—together makes sense based on what we know about these characters so far. After returning to obscurity last week, Tommy is allowed to exist once again here. This episode, “Dodger Day,” and “Respect In The Workplace” all feel like the key to fully cracking the Tommy code—and it’s now clear that this character, in particular, is only as strong as the character dynamics he gets to play off of. Tommy and Arpi getting antagonistic over being terrible at trivia is just as strangely on point as Arpi showing the different types of smiles for women in “Respect In The Workplace,” as they both embody two of the most annoying trivia partners you can have: the one who “knew that one” after it’s already been answered by someone else and the one who no one will ever “let” answer.

And while this is a co-workers-to-friends story, it’s extremely refreshing that it doesn’t start as a way to just pile on Jayden. That the catalyst for this story is the other three realizing that it’s Jayden’s very sad 40th birthday and deciding to go to the restaurant of his choosing is something that, even a few episodes, wouldn’t quite track. So when Mikaela ends up taking credit for the wins and she and Jayden fracture—and then all four of them decide to face off in trivia—it doesn’t come across as more of Jayden being a comedic punching bag. Instead, it’s clearly the result of the absurd “power” corrupting. All of that on top of Jayden being a surprise trivia savant feels like it’s Mr. Mayor finally being right in the pocket when it comes to this character: He’s weird, but he knows things. So when he brings his stuffed animals (so, unlike Mikaela, he didn’t come alone) to the final trivia showdown, it feels “normal;” as does Mikaela reacting negatively to the gossip he’s telling these stuffed animals.

While “Hearts Before Parts” is pretty much the epitome of Mr. Mayor being two completely different shows, Amina Munir’s script does what no other script has done so far: It actually finds balance in these two different shows. So while Danson is separated from most of the cast, he still gets great stuff to do with both Kenedy (in what is—even with its issues in sticking the landing for the Orly character—the show’s best father-daughter plot so far) and Pyle. The balance here is in terms of both the plot and the comedy, which allows the cast to really just go for it in both halves, whether going for “it” involves revealing all of your sexual trysts (or “slurshing”) to your teenage daughter or fighting over a brand new glow-in-the-dark samurai sword.

Stray observations

  • Just to be clear, I have no problem with TGIF or The Parent Trap, but considering how standard both of this week’s plots are, it really sticks out when one of them is something you’d expect to see in ‘90s programming for children. Though I suppose there is something to a kid in 2021 thinking this kind of plan is new and inventive. Also, Kyla Kenedy does well in that scene (“Is it scary to be in love?”), especially as someone who was just recently on (and was great on) a “TGIF” show, ABC’s Speechless.
  • Bremer: “Nicole is a very nice, age-appropriate lady.”
    Arpi: “She’s young enough to be your daughter.”
    Bremer: “I’m rich and it’s L.A.” This is actually the least L.A. joke-heavy episode of the series so far, but this is a very good one.
  • Bremer (reading Orly’s text): “‘Wow, Dad. Nice photo, hypocrite.’”
    Jayden: “Who’s it from?”
  • Jayden: “Porgis again?! My birthday wish came true!”
  • Tommy (storming off): “Fine. Forget. I don’t even need another bassoon.”
  • I still never quite know how this show wants us to see Orly, but I do know that no teenage girl in 2021 knows who Cheryl Tiegs is, even if their dad is 72. “Who’s Cheryl Tiegs?” was a question from TV teens when I was a teenage girl.
  • Mikaela (after “playing” the bassoon): “That was ‘Shallow.’ By Bradley Cooper and Stefani Germanotta.” Honestly, Mikaela is a treasure.
  • Nicole: “You’re in my phone as ‘Short Neil.’”
    Bremer: “You have a taller Neil?”
  • Nicole: “And you’re still just hooking up? You’re, like, 60.”
    Bremer: “…yes.”
  • Hehe. City “Bulget.”
  • All four of them having four very different interpretations of what “seniority” means when it comes to the budget is honestly one of the most surprisingly clever bits to come from the show so far.
  • Technically, both Pyle’s Nicole and Braunohler’s Jax could return to the show. Hopefully they do. And hopefully Jax listens to Jayden’s parental advice because the kid knows what he’s talking about.

15 Comments

  • hawkboy2018-av says:

    The whole discussion between Orly and Neil about him posing with his wife’s urn in his dating profile pic was my favorite part of the episode. 

  • kerning-av says:

    I was very much a Negative Nelly on the show’s first episode and was ready to give up altogether. Thankfully with my friends’ prodding to keep watching for few episodes longer, I have found Mr. Mayor to be consistently funny as hell from second episode to this one.Never stop acting, Ted Danson. You were perfection in The Good Place.

  • cyrils-cashmere-sweater-vest-av says:

    Was Nicole not knowing he was the mayor an LA joke?

    • elforman-av says:

      Trust me, you could walk right by Eric Garcetti and not even know it was him. And the Nicole character could realistically not follow the news that closely. She probably didn’t even know Neil’s last name.

      • cyrils-cashmere-sweater-vest-av says:

        Apparently the show was originally envisioned as a 30 Rock spinoff with Alec Baldwin’s Jack Donaghy running for mayor of New York. I don’t see that joke working in New York. Even the uninformed know who the mayor is if only so they can heckle him.

  • elforman-av says:

    The dynamic of a much older father with a teenage daughter is something I don’t think we’ve seen much of on TV before and I hope they do more with it. But I could honestly see Orly knowing who Cheryl Tiegs is because her father is rich and likely hob-nobbed with other celebrities of his era, and it’s not inconceivable that Orly remembers some of the people she’d met in passing.

    • jomarch49-av says:

      Uh, I hope they do less with the old man/young daughter story line. It’s creepy. It’s not normal just because it’s LA. Neil showed himself to be completely shallow by cringing when his daughter says his age group on the dating site was 55-75. What an insult to women in that age group. Actually 55 is WAY too young for a 72 year old. I don’t tune in to see a show about teen age problems. Yawn! Stay with the office; it works better.

      • elforman-av says:

        Yes, because every show should cater to exactly what you want. I happen to live in LA and I have a daughter who was born when I was 31 and a son when I was 34. When I started meeting the parents of their friends I was stunned to see how many of them were significantly older than I was, and yes, mostly the fathers. Sure, it’s a cliche, but that doesn’t mean it’s not real. There is an odd dynamic I’ve observed in those relationships and I’ve like to see it portrayed on screen. It’s bad enough my kids don’t get my reference with our age difference, it’s entirely different for the older parents, especially when they try to relate to their kids. Granted, these characters are clearly exaggerated for comedic effect, but there’s still a kernel of truth to a lot of it.

        • jimmygoodman562-av says:

          Orly would have been born when Neil was 56. It’s old to have a child but it’s likely due to being rich he did not marry right away and was a playboy for awhile. So he was likely already well into his 50’s when he finally got married. The mother was likely younger which is a sad story I’m sure. Unless he was married for a while and perhaps he has some adult children in their 30’s or even 40’s that have yet to be mentioned. Maybe had them from a first wife that we have not talked about and Orly is the product of his later “trophy” wife.

      • sunnydandthepurplestuff-av says:

        prettty judgmental, no? you remind me of those gossipy old fashioned ladies in the music man

  • hrhduchessofnaps1-av says:

    A thing that has bothered me about Mr Mayor is that it doesn’t seem like Michaela, Tommy or Jayden’s jobs are really fleshed out or believable. Like . . . the speech writer isn’t reading a 400 page budget, someone in the communications department is and then preparing talking points. Obviously this show isn’t going for Highly Scientific Realism or anything, but it does bug me.Other than that, I really enjoyed this episode.  Orly finally had a purpose and any focus on bar trivia and the social intricacies thereof speak to me deeply.  God, I miss bar trivia.

  • idle-poor-av says:

    I’m surprised there’s no mention of ‘chocolate babies’. I must be the only one who remembers this SNL classic:

  • jofesh-av says:

    I loved Nicole telling it to Neil straight. Big Capricorn whatever energy, all over it. I loved that Jayden is weird and complicated, not just dumb and inappropriate, and I loved that everyone decides to be nice to him and go for chicken and have some fun. It was good to see them working together.I didn’t love that Neil would ask Nicole to come over, and chose to surprise her with Orly. I loved the *idea* of Orly tormenting him to get him to confess his hypocrisy, but I didn’t enjoy watching how they did it. It felt first drafty. I think that sequence could be great, but wasn’t, and I also thought the camera placement was weird. Is this a “working during covid” symptom? Are they putting out eps out of order because they are shooting everything however possible, in a highly compromised way? They for sure have my appreciation for providing new TV right now.That was a tangent. 🙂 I meant to say, if Neil had colluded with Nicole, it could have played out as more of a bluffing escalation game, or at least, an amusing improv exercise. I can’t decide if I like this idea, but I keep thinking that Nicole could’ve surprised Neil with being good at this, and he might decide he really likes her, to his surprise, only to have her splash metaphorical water in his face over how incompatible they are.(And to me, there’s nothing wrong with dating between fully enthusiastically consenting adults, who are not deceiving anyone, and who are made happy, and I’m sad about how judgey people get.)But overall, it was okay. As usual, I generally agree with our kind & insightful permanent temporary reviewer :)I appreciated the bassoon love. It’s a wonderful, magical instrument that is extraordinarily hard to get in good shape for playing, is totally strange in how it works, can go as low as a bass and as high as something like a viola, and doesn’t get nearly the recognition it should!C+ from me, upgraded to B- for how much I appreciate having something new to look at, and for name-dropping Canter’s too. 🙂

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