American Duos

"American Duos" is the first episode of the second season of Psych, and is the 16th episode overall.

"American Duos"
Psych episode
Shawn and Gus perform in the finale of American Duos
Episode no.Season 2
Episode 1
Directed byJohn Landis
Production code2001
Original air dateJuly 13, 2007
Guest appearance(s)

Plot synopsis

When the latest incarnation of American Idol shows sets up shop in Santa Barbara, the requisite cruel British judge Nigel St. Nigel (Tim Curry) finds himself in a panic after a series of near-miss attempts on his life and hires Santa Barbara's most reliable psychic detective to protect him. Nigel believes that the police are in on the conspiracy, so to protect him Shawn and Gus go undercover on American Duos. While exiting his trailer, Nigel is stopped by Shawn before he walks in an electrified puddle when Shawn notices a live wire in the puddle. Shawn then stops Nigel from eating a specially ordered sandwich when he notices that the toothpicks aren't the ones the hotel uses. When the toxicology report comes back from the police, it turns out the sandwich was poisoned with prescription drugs.

The culprit turns out to be repeat contestant Bevin Rennie Llywellen (Perrie), who would flop on purpose in spite of his amazing singing voice, for the sake of being able to audition in another city should his attempt on Nigel's life fail in the current city. The plan was orchestrated by Zapato (Dulce), one of the other judges. Zapato was a Latin pop star and singer of "Mírame," whose comeback was ruined by Nigel, who would never let him speak during the judging—Nigel actually believed Zapato could not talk or think at all. Zapato was so overshadowed by Nigel he even received fan mail addressed to other Latin artists such as Ricky Martin. After this revelation, Nigel is not shocked, and becomes an even bigger jerk, calling Zapato the "worst murderer ever."

The episode ends with Shawn and Gus performing an above average musical number, only to have Nigel, no longer having to force them through the competition, calling it one of the worst performances he ever saw.

Production

Star James Roday, who plays Shawn Spencer, co-wrote this episode. It is a send up of American Idol, and Tim Curry plays the Simon Cowell-esque British judge Nigel St. Nigel. Gina Gershon plays Emilina Saffron, who is a caricature of Paula Abdul. In the episode, Gus says (of Randy Jackson), "That guy's not black, he's Latino. There's a difference," comparing Jackson and the third Duos judge, Zapato. According to Roday, "American Duos" has the highest production values of any Psych episode.[1]

Reception

Richard Keller of TVSquad.com felt that the first half of "American Duos" was stronger and produced more laughs than the second. Keller also thought that the case was weak, and took a backseat to the other events in the episode.[2] Sheldon A. Wiebe of Eclipse Magazine gave the episode a B+. He felt that part of the mystery was easy for viewers to solve, but that determining both killers was difficult.[3] He said that the two stars kept the "show moving at all times," but that "American Duos" poor writing made Psych's Friday night partner Monk look like Seinfeld.[4]

gollark: Like how even though H.265 is better than H.264 in basically every way, half the internet is stuck on H.264 because ??? licensing ????? Chromium.
gollark: Anyway, obviously the round earth is a superior technical solution, but you can bodge the flat-earth thing into *kind of* working and the patent issues make it much cheaper.
gollark: No, a point is dimensionless.
gollark: Round things were patented, so they can't use oblate spheroids without paying the ruinous royalties.
gollark: Most physics treats them as point masses or weird probability-clouds.

References

  1. "'Psych' catches 'Idol' fever in season two". Archived from the original on September 27, 2007. Retrieved August 5, 2007.
  2. "Psych: American Duos (season premiere)". Archived from the original on September 19, 2008. Retrieved August 5, 2007.
  3. "Monk & Psych: USA's Friday Night Crimetime Duo Return!". Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 2007-08-06.
  4. "Psych TV Review". Archived from the original on May 16, 2011. Retrieved August 6, 2007.

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