Ally McBeal
Work Com-slash-Dramedy by David E. Kelley about a neurotic lawyer and the wacky people she works with. The series lasted from September, 1997 to May, 2002. A total of 112 episodes in five seasons. Ally herself was played by Calista Flockhart.
The series went for 'nutty' in a very big way, with preposterous lawsuits (man is fired for having bad comb over and sues, dying boy sues God, etc), dream and fantasy sequences all over the place, spontaneous dance numbers and the like. Probably best known in its early years for the CGI baby dancing to the "ooga-chaka" chorus from Blue Swede's "Hooked On A Feeling", and in its later seasons for a surfeit of "daring" "lesbian" kisses among various women in the cast. Achieved a kind of brilliance in the legal arguments made by the character John Cage. Achieved retch-inducing horror in its mundane romantic complications.
The show was the second-most popular program on FOX when it was around, and was such a huge part of pop culture that Time ran a cover story on it, accusing it of killing feminism. However, after its cancellation it vanished off the public radar, and now it's most known for being the subject of a Futurama episode.
- Ascended Meme: The dancing baby is one of the earliest internet memes.
- Back for the Finale
- Bait and Switch Credits - The opening promised a smiling and happy women most of the time, downplaying the show's dramatic moments.
- Bathroom Stall of Overheard Insults - The trope swirls around this series like a cgi-baby circles Ally. There was one time Ally looks under the door of the stalls before she starts, only to find later that Elaine put her legs up.
- Bilingual Bonus - Ling's argument in a Chinese restaurant, although it's still funnier when you have no idea what's being said.
- Bittersweet Ending
- Black Best Friend - Renee seems to thrive on setting Ally up.
- Bunny Ears Lawyer - (a whole office full of them)
- Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: Renee.
- Cloudcuckoolander - Ally.
- Courtroom Antic
- Cousin Oliver: The daughter Ally had years before the series began tracks her down and moves in with her in the final season. Does this change Miss McBeal's worldview? Does it heck.
- Crossover - Season 1 had one with The Practice. Strangely, some characters are actually seen watching the famous "head in a bag!" scene later.
- Dramedy
- Freudian Slip - Many, many characters many, many times. Ally sometimes slips into a Freudian Slippery Slope when flustered.
- Hallucinations - Ally has a lot of these.
- Head Desk - At one point, Ally makes her head meet desk a few times, saying "I have my health" every time.
- Hello, Attorney! - Found in all of David E. Kelley's legal shows, but probably reaches its apotheosis here.
- The female attorneys are dismayed to learn that this is actually a central part of the firm's business strategy... as highlighted on their official PR material.
- Imagine Spot
- Indulgent Fantasy Segue
- It's All About Me: Three guesses as to who "me" is.
- Ivy League for Everyone
- Littlest Cancer Patient - He decides he wants to sue God.
- Musical Episode
- Nietzsche Wannabe - Richard Fish.
- The Nineties
- No Fourth Wall
- Only Law Firm in Town
- Pet the Dog - Ling, despite her abrasive personality and wildly offensive comments, likes to volunteer at an old folks home.
- Rant-Inducing Slight - Ling hates it when people mispronounce her name by putting emphasis on the G or using a hard L.
- Ratings Stunt - The good old 90s lesbian kiss stunt.
- Really Gets Around - Elaine or so she claims.
- Record Needle Scratch - Constantly.
- Refuge in Audacity - Ling convinces a boy with leukemia that he can sue God. Well, actually his church so he can get the money for treatment. He wins, then promptly dies.
- Rich Bitch - Ling
- Softer and Slower Cover - The show regularly features various famous songs redone by Vonda Shephard in a slower, quieter style. For example, Bing Crosby's "Swing On A Star" was covered with a slower tempo and emphasis on the "Pig" part of the song.
- Sweeps Week Lesbian Kiss
- Theme Music Power-Up - Ally's therapist advises her to think of a song she can sing to make herself feel better. She knows "this one song" and starts to sing it. It happens to be the show's theme song. The therapist cuts her off before she even reaches the first chorus and tells her it's an absolutely terrible song.
- Two First Names - Larry Paul, Ally's main love interest in Season 4