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Fucking Day: Ally McBeal's Ass CPR Episode 🌭

If there were a Yikes That Didn't Age Well Olympics, Ally McBeal would be a shoe-in for the gold. Earlier this year, I was so out of feel-good television, and still not at all feeling good, that I thought I should watch the series and write something about this classic '90s show as a whole. But I only made it through a little over two seasons before giving up completely.

The biggest hurdle on my Ally McBeal triathlon was Season 1 Episode 6: "The Promise," in which Ally almost lets a man die rather than give him CPR because he's fat. Then she cock blocks him, and tells him no one will ever love him, so he might as well marry his girlfriend that he's not attracted to or in love with because she's also fat. I wish I was exaggerating even a little.

I just want to start with the fact that, in general, there are so many problems with Ally McBeal. No one even Googled, "Law how work?" a single time before creating this show. There's a weird recurring thing where the entire cast will be out at a bar at night, and someone will get a phone call, and they'll all have to rush to the courthouse at 11 PM because the judge or the jury has a verdict. Courthouses typically close at 5 PM. No insane judge is forcing everyone into a courtroom in the middle of the night because they thought of a ruling in the shower.

Also, all of the women on the show are famously gorgeous, Lucy Liu, Portia De Rossi, Calista Flockhart, Jane Krakowski, Courtney Thorne-Smith, who you might not have heard of, but she was beautiful enough to play the nagging wife to a male comedian on According To Jim, so you know she's super hot. The male lead of Ally Mcbeal that everyone calls hot so often that at one point they call him a "Ken Doll," looks like an extra-large suit salesman who insisted on cutting his own hair for the first two seasons.

The hotness disparity on this show is a travesty. Nell, played by Portia De Rossi, is the acknowledged most beautiful person on the show. She's got waist-length blonde hair, is super thin, and generally looks like what beer and underwear commercials tell us is the human ideal. This is what women were expected to aspire to, while men get to aspire for mediocrity. If a man has limbs, and a mouth, and 56% of his hair, he's a God in Ally McBeal world.

If you're not aware of the overall premise, Ally McBeal was a show where hot lawyers try sexual harassment cases and sexually harass each other. The overarching theme is, "haven't these silly sexual harassment laws gone too far, and shouldn't we all just shut up and kiss each other since we are all hot. (Please note once again, only the women are hot, and they do kiss each other occasionally but only for those sweet '90s Gay Panic laughs). These are the other two men on the show.

Anyway, "The Promise" opens with Ally being told she's going to court against Harry Pippen, who is described as "a fat man, no wind, moves like continental drift." So, right away, a very charitable reading of the person whose love life will become the focus of this episode.

Ally meets Harry Pippen, who immediately has a heart attack, which is played for big laughs and then gets weirdly sexual. She tries to give him CPR but isn't strong enough, so she starts bouncing up and down on his chest with her ass, causing everyone in the gathered crowd to gasp but no one to help.

As this man continues his hilarious heart attack, Ally's like, "Oh God, oh ick, here we go." She can't believe she's actually going to put her mouth on this loser so he doesn't die. Luckily she scraped together enough human decency to give this guy CPR even though he's fat, and she saves his life. Of course, we immediately cut to her gargling just in case you forgot how terrible the experience was for her.

"You saved his life!" her friend says.

"Not before he ate a Spanish omelet. Oh God, the onions!" We all laugh at what a loser this guy is again—eating breakfast? In the morning? Ugh, what a fat person thing to do.

Harry Pippen's fiancé, Angela, shows up at Ally's office and thanks her for saving Harry's life. They're getting married in a week, and Harry is her whole entire world! That's probably going to go great for her, as you can imagine.

Angela feels so indebted to Ally for giving her fiancé ass-CPR that she invites her to their wedding! Ally agrees to go, even though she clearly hates everyone in this situation, and we're all supposed to think it's funny because, again, I think the punchline is just haha Ally has to go to a fat wedding for fat people. They're like regular people but fat. It's hilarious. Maybe I'm not explaining it right.

This is probably a good spot to note that David E. Kelly, the creator of Ally Mcbeal, single-handedly wrote every episode of the first season while also writing for his other TV show, The Practice. That's a lot of writing to take on. Usually, it takes a room full room of people to write an episode of television, and that's a good idea because if a single other human person had looked at this script before it went into production, they might have noticed that even in 1997 "fat guy has funny heart attack" was the Yellowstone National Forest of well-trodden comedic territory.

We cut to the C-plot for a while, which is about how all of the men in the office think the mail girl is so hot they can't stop staring at her open-mouthed when she's around. The other women in the office blame the mail girl for being too hot and want her fired. It sucks!

Then Harry comes to Ally's office and says he's called off his wedding because "he's never been kissed like that before." He was literally completely unconscious during their "kiss", yet it has changed his life. Previously he was marrying Angela only because they were "good friends with limited options." Kissing Ally while nearly dead has made him believe in love again! For some reason? Not in an "I can only get a boner if I'm in danger now" way either; he's just in love with Ally.

Of course, Ally tells him to get the hell out of here with that love shit. She tries to picture the two of them on a date, and the fantasy sequence is the car tipping to the side when he gets in. The joke is, in a hilarious turn of events, that this man is fat.

Harry accepts Ally's rejection at first but then returns, asking for her advice. He explains that he's considering marrying Angela after all because he wants kids and she'll make a great Mom, plus she's a nice person, but she's never made his heart bounce, and he doesn't even think about her during sex. "Do you think it's wrong for a person to marry someone not because she's the one but because she's the only?" He asks.

"Why the fuck are you asking me, a plucky TV lawyer and not like, I don't know a therapist or someone you've known longer than three seconds while you were actively dying, Harry?" Is not what she says, which is a real bummer.

Instead, she comes down hard on the side of waiting for true love. She makes a big speech about it. Love is the most important thing! It's very on-brand for the show. Ally McBeal is obsessed with two things: the sanctity of love and her married ex-boyfriend Billy "The Ken Doll."

So, Angela comes back and tells Ally that Harry broke up with her to hold out for his one true love. She's not super thrilled about Ally ruining the wedding she JUST got invited to.

Angela tells Ally that no one else is going to want to take care of Harry and, "Sometimes when you hold out for everything, you walk away with nothing." A pretty big dunk on the guy she wants to marry.

"Remember that the next time a fat man walks in asking you for advice," Angela says before sadly walking out to a Vonda Shepard song. Don't worry, Angela; this show is never allowing a fat person on it again unless it's to comically roll down a staircase with their hands full of jelly donuts. Sorry, I'm looking at a list of bits cut from the show David E Kelley released with the script notes entitled "groundbreaking bits from visionary genius David E. Kelley."

Ally sees Harry flirting with a client of hers who is a sex worker at the courthouse between cases and immediately cock blocks him. "Hey, remember all that stuff I said about how love is the most important thing, well apparently, you didn't hear me whisper (for skinny people). You should marry Angela!" She says. This is creative paraphrasing, but she literally does say, "last night, I was thinking of all of my friends who might be right for you, and I realized none of my friends would go out with you."

Yay! Ally successfully bullies this guy into settling for a woman he doesn't love by telling him that, realistically, no one else will ever love him. I'm sure this set them up for a long and happy marriage, Mazel Tov!

He looks up at Ally like he's very much still in love with her and regrets his decision.

Ally flashed him the peace sign because she's completely checked out of this entire situation. She's planning her grocery list right now. She has not a care in the world about ruining this man and woman's life. PEACE!

This might not actually be the worst episode of Ally McBeal. It's insane to think about, but I have no idea what lies in the black hole of episodes beyond season two. I vaguely remember something about Christina Ricci having a diving board in her bedroom for sexual purposes? And I know there was an episode that mixed the happy vibe of small town Christmas with a 9/11 tribute, so...it definitely doesn't get better.

Lydia will never ever discuss this again, but if you want to hear her talk about other TV shows, check out her Twitter.

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This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Adrienne Hisbrook, who has never been called on to revive a life with their ass, but is pretty sure they would if nobody else stepped forward.

Comments

I remember Ally McBeal being this black comedy show about evil lawyers fucking up their and others' lives with their stupidity. Nice to see my memories seem to be still correct!

Libluini

I would have just asked Jeeves

DeltaFoxtrot

if this was every episode the better question is why would you ever stop watching

DeltaFoxtrot

I've never had a desire to watch this show until you said there's an episode where Christina Ricci has a cool sex thing and now I might have to.

Bill D

This was one of those shows I never watched and I am very glad I didn't after reading this. Thank you for the education, Lydia!

Jeff Orasky

Ha ha ha! The car tips over! Because he's fat! Brilliant!

Sebben

My spouse watches Futurama every night before bed as comfort entertainment. I absolutely got that reference, and you totally have the thighs to pull off a miniskirt.

The Altinutt

I watched way too many episodes of that show. In one of the later seasons one of the guy lawyers falls in love with a trans woman. It is full of the kind of joke you might expect from that description. The lawyer even says the phrase "I know I can never have sex with her". I remember another one in which she flirts with a guy, discovers he's bisexual and ends the episode rejecting him because she can't get over the fact that he touched another dude before. And this is just what I remember from Ally McBeal. The Practice and Boston Public are also full of fucked up shit...

foxtrot

Single female lawyer fighting for her client wearing sexy miniskirts and being self-reliant (no-one will get that _Futurama_ episode in 20 years. perhaps no-one gets it now)

Daphne Lawless

They could have Lycos'd it. Lycos had a dog in that one ad. Makes it a good search engine by 90's standards.

Flippant Sausage

Ah, the 90's. Bereft of the 80's manic cocaine energy but doubling down on the soulless spectacles. So far, no other decade I've lived is more divided on "stuff I really love" and "OH GOD I'M SO SORRY! WE DIDNT LISTEN!".

Flippant Sausage

Alta Vista was the shit, man. That and HotBot

Jacob W

Pretty much everything that happens in a workplace on any David E. Kelley show would get you fired immediately in real life. I'm sure kids fresh out of law school were disappointed that lawyering was more than fucking your coworkers, smoking cigars and mocking the ugly or mildly odd.

Jacob W

To be fair, TV in the nineties was a different animal entirely. In comparison to everything else that was on back then, Allie McBeal seemed really clever and endearing. Of course, now that good TV is a thing that we've gotten used to, there's no going back to the state of mind where we could watch that kind of nineties brain vomit and be happy about it. And good riddance.

Steven Clark

Remember how the ‘90s had even more trashy, shock-value, cheap, sordid “news” and “celebrity/pop culture” (thank you, Jerry Springer and Hard Copy and A Current Affair)? You could shit-spray the word “SCANDAL” onto a hot Southern California sidewalk and the media would show up to gleefully lap that diarrhea into their mouths, moaning thanks for the opportunity to sell that press. One example was every celebrity magazine devoting way too many fucking issues to how short Ally McBeal’s skirt was. AND THEN IT GOT SHORTER. While a few voices were concerned that it wasn’t exactly empowering for a supposedly independent young female lawyer to wear increasingly short miniskirts to the office, let’s face it, this wasn’t a show for the socially progressive anyway. Most of the issue seemed to arise from pearl-clutchers who were afraid that a woman in a short skirt signified that smut was on television when their kids might walk in the room, oh and fake manufactured rage by marketers, agents, and the like wanting to sell magazines. Vastly the latter. Personally, I thought it was bullshit that this was basically a law firm of ditzy models and the men who stared at them, so her skirt was always bullshit to me, too. It was a whole case of bullshit; every corner and notch had been contaminated.

Stephanie Reinheimer

Yeah but saying “no one Alta Vista’d it” would just confuse most people.

Zach Dewoody

Same. Is it even in reruns now? Or is it like one of those things that aged so badly, we just prefer to not be reminded of it?

Stephanie Reinheimer

Is the joke about "no one googled" for a show from the 1990s on purpose? Because in 1997, this was what google looked like: http://infolab.stanford.edu/pub/voy/museum/pictures/display/GoogleBG.jpg

Matthew Harris

fuck yeah.

LyraV

No no no, Lydia! It's not that eating breakfast is a fat people thing. Obviously all men and fat people of all genders can eat breakfast! But fat people should always comfort themselves because the pinnacle of their life could come at any moment - having physical contact with a hot woman or an average white man! Brush your teeth, floss, keep your nails clean not for yourself, but for the Real People who may need to interact with you. Don't make it harder for them, especially by eating anything other than bland gruel that may leave food residue smells. It's okay, Ally McBeal clearly operates on many different levels. This episode didn't even touch on how sometimes non-blonde and even non-white women may be hot, after all.

Ingrid Atkinson

Seems like the message is that if you are too fat you don't deserve love, and if you are too hot you don't deserve a job in the mail room.

Mike Metzler

Did the “Ken Doll”’s hair recede even further between those two pictures? By the end of season three, would he look like present-day Kevin Macdonald?

FancyShark

They say the 80s is the cocaine-fuelled delusion decade, but the 90s in some ways is somehow worse. Like, everyone had just started to sober up/run out of money for cocaine but still wanted to keep up appearances that can only be upheld by unhealthy habits, like drugs, bulimia and neoliberalism.

Swift Justice

A LOT about the 90s makes sense realising that the ideal female body type (and also maybe the male one) for the decade was described as 'heroin chic'.

Swift Justice

If you got any of that jelly in your blood you're part donut now. It'll show up on your ancestry.com chart.

1900HOTDOG

Two points real quick. 1). As a reasonable simulacrum for a fat guy, I came to terms with taking one for the comedy team decades ago. 2). The rictus of Ms. McBeal/quasi-Mrs. Harrison Ford in the opening image is...haunting.

Dean Costello

I'm glad to know I'm not the only one who hates 90s "comedy." And these are the "hot" women? I guess if you're into dullards who can barely smile and think the sexy face is just vacantly looking like someone slapped them with a fish.

Talking Alpaca

Your brain spends 20 years re-wiring itself to make you forget, and then *TWING* 1-900-Hot-Dog makes it snap right back.

Dave Dalrymple

Well, scratch that off the list of TV shows I'm sorry I never watched. Consider my curiosity both satisfied and thoroughly punished.

Pablo Rodriguez

All my sympathy to large-bodied actors who dream of wrenching stories of the human condition out of their passion for acting, but know 80% of their jobs will be opposite Hollywood's smallest woman gawping out punchlines about livestock.

Brendan McGinley

This is one of those shows where I look back and think "Why did I watch this?".

Max Rockatansky

Well, good thing the only real 90s TV obsessions of back then I recall was X Files

Devon the Rogue Supreme

Excellent article, Lydia!

petertron

When I saw the title of this I thought that she used her ass to give the man CPR in a very different way and I'm so, so sorry that my mind works the way it does.

petertron

well don't they say that a sense of humour is laughing at it when it's someone else but when it's your own jelly donuts that you brought to share at the site for your birthday and it's those anti-skid stairs that are pretty sharp and so your blood kinda gets mixed up with the jelly and even the secretary you thought was nice is laughing so hard she pees a little and nobody even thinks to say "thanks for the donut gesture" now it's not very funny is it

sissyneck

Ally McBeal is a show I know I watched a lot of when it was airing, but could not tell you the content of a single episode. Until now. Dammit, Lydia.

Joshua Graves

It’s funny because most of the actresses on the show had eating disorders. Get it? Because fat shaming can lead to severe body image issues? Haha, the ‘90s were a wonderful decade…

Zach Dewoody


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