Once a day, for the next 25 days, we'll be highlighting a specific small, good thing that happened in popular culture this year. And we do mean small: a moment or image from a film or TV show, a panel from a comic, a brief exchange from a podcast, or a passage from a book.
It's an elegantly composed shot, but it's showy in a way nothing in the previous five episodes in Atlanta's first season has been. But its placement, here at the opening of episode six, "Value," sends an important signal.
It tells us we're no longer looking at the world from inside the head of the show's main character, Earn (Donald Glover), a smart kid who's trying to get his life together. We'll instead spend the next 30 minutes with Van (Zazie Beetz), Earn's long-suffering ex-girlfriend and the mother of his child.
And that? Is very smart.
Until this episode, Van's been portrayed sensitively — we understand her frustration with Earn's underachieving, directionless ways — but thinly. Every time we see her, she's tired, impatient, sounding the same mildly exasperated note. Just that one note.
We began to suspect that the show didn't know what to do with her — that this smart, emotionally resonant show might, in its focus on the travails of Earn and his buddies, be content to portray Van as Nagging Mother #1.
But then, that ponytail. That restaurant. And that opening scene, in which Van has a frosty dinner with the ponytail's owner, her old friend Jayde, whose globetrotting lifestyle differs sharply from her own. Over the course of the night, the old bonds between the two women will stretch and contract and stretch again, Van will make a decision that impacts her teaching career, and all of it will take place in an episode in which Earn never puts in an appearance.
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