The 15-minute absurdist Adult Swim comedy Childrens Hospital had its third season premiere last night, delving back into the world of solemn medical dramas to mine for more humor. Season 3’s first episode picked up right where the show left off, delivering everything fans have come to expect from Childrens Hospital: big-name cameos, rapid-fire meta-jokes, and a complete disregard for plot, continuity, and basic standards of good taste. Also, Rob Huebel’s bare ass.
“Run, Dr. Lola Spratt, Run†begins with a cold open typical of the procedurals it’s parodying but new to Childrens Hospital, in which we get a short glimpse of the terrible accident that leads this week’s patient into the lives of our favorite Brazilian hospital staff. In the opening, a 13-year-old boy is manipulated into chasing a soccer ball into a fenced-off portion of a quicksand farm by two teenage girls who promise they’ll let him “play German soldier girl prisoners†with them, only to find himself encased in quicksand seconds later. After doing a little research, I found that this plotline was inspired by an actual Grey’s Anatomy episode, in which the staff must treat a boy trapped in a block of concrete. It must make Rob Corddry and company’s jobs easier when the show they’re parodying is so over-the-top in the first place that they can just slightly tweak an actual episode to turn it into a great comedy premise.
The premiere featured snazzy new opening credits, complete with the hilarious faux-names for the actors playing the characters on the show within the show. We learned many of these false names in the Season 2 episode “End of the Middle,†but there are some new ones here that are quite amusing. At the bottom of this recap, you can take a look at the full roster of names, complete with screenshots. My favorite is Ken Marino’s “Just Falcon,†but they’re all pretty funny. These credits were a nice touch and I wouldn’t mind seeing them each week if this was a full-length show, but continuing to use them would eat up too much of the show’s scant 11 minute runtime.
The medical emergency at the center of this episode occurs on a Saturday, so hospital administrator Sy Mittleman (returning Henry Winkler) calls the Childrens Hospital group in from their weekend activities. Cat Black is rock-climbing, Owen Maestro is piloting a jet without any pants on, hospital founder Derrick Childrens (played by Jon Hamm, who is back for a surprise cameo) is summoned by his butler to don his Batman-esque guise of Dr. Valerie Flame, Blake Downs rides a lightcycle out of “a Tron-like world,†Dr. Glenn Richie is in bed with House star Lisa Edelstein, Chief is watching over a city as an attractive, able-bodied superhero, and Lola Spratt is working with a voiceover coach, apparently looking to be Childrens Hospital’s new narrator. This “getting the gang back together†montage is a very dynamic sequence full of funny visual gags, and it’s a great way to reintroduce put the show’s main characters back in action for the new season.
Dr. Lola Spratt may be the only one who can save the teen boy from drowning in quicksand — and she’s the one staffer missing from the hospital. Lola’s quest to arrive in time is made near-impossible by her car’s dependence on fossil fuels and a run-in with her disturbed ex-boyfriend Greg, who’s been drinking a lot lately and wrote a book in his head after his whole family committed suicide. Lola rises to the challenge, though, passing through a trippy cartoon world to save the boy’s life just in time. The episode’s B-plot (if you can call it that) plays off the doctors’ trademark incompetence nicely to find Drs. Maestro and Flame spending the episode trying to figure out why Nurse Dori has gained so much weight over the past nine months.
At 11 minutes in runtime (without commercials), Childrens Hospital is a snack, not a meal, but it’s a very fun and enjoyable little treat. As Rob Corddry’s character notes in a meta-gag, “Nothing here, no story, no sense of continuity, interchangeable characters, mostly a lot of bathroom jokes.†That’s exactly what’s so great about Childrens Hospital. The show’s refusal to play by the rules makes it feel unlike anything else on TV. Childrens Hospital’s wanton disregard for what we’ve come to expect from a weekly series is a refreshing break from the monotony of the television landscape. If the season premiere is any indication of what to expect from the rest of the third season, then the show is back in full form, promising a memorably-ridiculous 14-episode run.
Next week (spoilers ahead):
Sarah Silverman guest stars as a Blake’s ex-girlfriend, and Nick “Ron Swanson†Offerman returns as Detective Chance Briggs, policeman and former partner of Dr. Maestro. After a significant presence in the initial web series that composed Childrens Hospital’s first TV season, Offerman was underrepresented in Season 2, only appearing in one episode. This may have been due to Parks and Rec’s hectic shooting schedule to cover for Amy Poehler’s pregnancy last summer. With Parks’ schedule running normally this time around, we’ll hopefully get to see a little bit more of Offerman on Childrens Hospital this season.
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Bradford Evans is a writer living in Los Angeles.