Showing posts with label gossip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gossip. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

'Gossip Girl' recap: 'A troubled young woman'

Gaslit No matter how bad your Thanksgiving was, the "Gossip Girl" crew's was almost certainly worse. By now, these dark holiday episodes have become something of a tradition, and after all the turkey and togetherness that most shows force us to stomach every November, they're always a refreshing palate cleanser. This year's model wasn't the best I've seen (I'm partial to Season 2's "The Magnificent Archibalds"), but it may well have been the most twisted.

The episode opens with our Upper East Siders preparing for Thanksgiving. Serena hasn't shown her face since the Saints and Sinners ball, but no one is particularly worried. While Blair assumes she's hiding at Lily and Rufus', Lily decides Serena's out having some kind of temper tantrum, as usual, and resolves not to go looking for her. The preparations for a lavish Humphrey-Van der Woodsen Thanksgiving go on as planned — until Blair and Lily compare notes and realize that Serena is missing.

That's when we cut to the heiress herself, waking up groggy in an unfamiliar room littered with pills and alcohol bottles, still wearing her Saints and Sinners dress. She gropes for her bedside phone, calls 911, and rasps that her name is Serena van der Woodsen, and she doesn't know where she is. With the ambulances en route, she's out cold again and doesn't wake up until she's at the hospital, where Lily has already decided to send to her to rehab.


It's an odd choice, to be sure. Although the doctor tells Serena's family that she called them from a motel room in Queens, where she suffered a minor overdose, the story just doesn't add up. One of the drugs in her possession was an antidepressant that would most likely have been used in a suicide attempt. The idea that Serena — who hasn't had a drug problem in a good, long time — would choose to end a bad night out with a deadly bender or by purposefully offing herself doesn't make much sense to me. Everyone on "Gossip Girl" is always acting like Serena's a time bomb, liable to explode at any second, but if all we ever see her doing is acting confused and stealing people's boyfriends, then how are we supposed to believe she's dangerous?

When Eric and Lily come to visit her in rehab, Serena still can't remember what happened to her, but she's sure she isn't responsible and lashes out at her mom for having her committed. (I was kind of excited to see her express a strong, clear emotion, for once.) "Your daughter wakes up alone, drugged in an empty motel room, and you don't call the cops?" Serena demands. "You don't ask if she's OK or what happened? You just have her committed? What kind of mother does that?" It's a good question. Lily has never been the world's most sensitive or attentive mother, but she's really gone off the rails this season.

Only Dan believes Serena, and his support probably has more to do with his undying love for her than anything else. Leading with his hero complex, he breaks her out of rehab. They head to the Brooklyn apartment to regroup and plan a temporary escape from the city, but when they open the door to leave, they run right into Blair and Lily. Perhaps Lonely Boy should have realized that home was the first place the family would come looking for them. Lily briefly maintains that her daughter is "a troubled young woman" before admitting to Dan that her own insecurities are stopping her from listening to what Serena has to say.

Clearly, this kind of rationality can't last. Cue Gossip Girl! As soon as the clan converges to figure out what to do about Serena, the scourge of the Upper East Side is back with a damning photo of her snorting a line with her mask still on. Now, even Serena is convinced she's out of control and goes willingly back to rehab.

Of course, the photo isn't of Serena. It's the final element of Juliet's set-up. And it's kind of strange that no one — including Serena! — realizes it. They may be wearing the same dress and mask, but Juliet and Serena aren't twins!

Another surprise: It isn't Vanessa who cracks under the pressure of Serena's tragedy and confesses the Saints and Sinners plot to Rufus — it's Jenny. And later, when she goes looking for Juliet, she finds her co-conspirator's apartment abandoned. Only a few trash bags remain, along with the mask in the photo. When she figures out what has happened, Jenny runs straight to Blair before heading home to Hudson to extricate herself, once again, from the machinations of Manhattan's elite.

This also strikes me as a weird decision. Why would Jenny, who's supposed to be done with scheming, go to her enemy with the information instead of enlightening her family and getting Serena out of rehab? Obviously, it will be more fun to watch Blair ruin Juliet than to see Rufus and Lily call the cops on her. But is this a decision any real person, even Jenny Humphrey, would make? I don't think so.

Before the episode is out, we do learn something interesting about Juliet: She didn't let Ben in on her plan to drug Serena. In fact, when she visits him in prison, proud of her success, even he thinks she went too far. So, Juliet has gone rogue and is about to disappear, but not before extorting some cash from Lily for keeping Serena's secrets, warning her that she'd better send a new bribe check each month and wishing her a happy Thanksgiving. That's the closest we get to holiday cheer on "Gossip Girl," and I, for one, continue to like it that way.

Other scattered thoughts:

-- How symbolic is the moment when Vanessa walks into Lily and Rufus' apartment to celebrate Thanksgiving only to find that everyone's gone but Dorota and her baby? If that is not a metaphor for the character's diminishing place on the show, I don't know what is.

-- Dorota and her baby! They are wonderful! I may be a coldhearted lover of dark holiday programming, but even I cannot deny the adorableness of that child.

-- Now that Juliet is finished manipulating Nate, the writers seem to have no idea what to do with his character. Hence the totally random (and utterly shrug-worthy) subplot about his attempt to reunite his mother with his incarcerated father. Sadly, even in throwaway scenarios, Nate is stupid and gullible. It turns out his dad only wants his mom back because it would look good for his parole.

-- Finally, an episode where Chuck and Blair's star-crossed love is reduced to less than five minutes of screen time. Let's have a few more of these, shall we?

Your weekly "Gossip Girl" fashion top five:

1. Jenny's silver Tania Spinelli boots.

2. Blair's orange, yellow and brown plaid dress.

3. Chuck's rich, brown suit and plum shirt.

4. Vanessa's gold earrings with the enormous, dangly black stones.

5. Lily's belted camel coat.

— Judy Berman
twitter.com/judyberman

Photo: Jenny discovers Serena's mask at Juliet's apartment. Credit: Giovanni Rufino / the CW.

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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

'Gossip Girl' recap: Everybody hates Serena

Gg masquerade

Is Serena van der Woodsen a selfish, manipulative, unrepentant party girl or an indecisive college kid who can't fathom her own sexual power? Or is she simply an empty-headed cipher, a pretty projection of every man's desire and every woman's insecurities? Asking these questions may mean taking Serena more seriously than I'm inclined to, but they have fast become the theme of "Gossip Girl" Season 4.

In the past, we've been led to assume that Serena is merely a victim of fate -- the girl who ended up in the wrong hotel room on the wrong night, who can't stop loving either of the guys who had her heart in high school, who fell for a guy who she didn't even know would end up being her professor. Now, everything is starting to change. Her refusal to choose between Dan and Nate has gone on for so long it's become infuriating. The fact that she pouted her way into Colin's professional life and then dropped him as soon as he quit his job for her? Mystifying.

And, as of this week's episode, we're finally learning the history between Ben and Serena. When Lily meets Juliet and bribes her to leave Serena alone, Juliet reveals something I assume only she, Serena, Lily and Ben know: that Colin wasn't the first teacher Serena's been hot for. Lily pretends not to know what Juliet's talking about, but Juliet presses her: "Boarding school? Serena was a minor." Well, it sure looks like Serena got Colin's estranged cousin locked up for what may or may not have been statutory rape -- and that's likely why she left boarding school and returned to the Upper East Side over three years ago. (Of course, it's hard to imagine that Serena actually forced Ben to get physical with her.)

So, not only did Serena's pre-"Gossip Girl" life include witnessing a drug-related death, but it also featured a torrid affair with a boarding school teacher that her mother went to great lengths to cover up. No wonder Lily has such a hard time trusting Serena!


To be fair, though, all of this happened years ago. Basically, all Serena has done since is flit around in expensive dresses, flaunting her privilege, breaking hearts and stealing other people's boyfriends (namely, Vanessa's). As she reminds Eric at this week's masquerade party -- for which, tellingly, she had trouble deciding whether to dress as a saint or a sinner -- Serena has changed. Can she help it that she's irresistibly beautiful and impossibly wealthy? Surely, if Jenny and Vanessa (who don't have Juliet's demented, single-minded goal of destroying the girl who ruined her brother's life) want to attack one of the insiders, they could find a better target. How about Blair, for instance, who has twice banished Little J from New York and won't let Vanessa forget she's an outsider? Serena doesn't even care about that stuff!

But is she really so above it all? As Jenny notes, the trouble Blair makes often has something to do with getting Serena out of her most recent mess. Maybe people are starting to realize that Serena only looks so carefree and innocent because she has friends who aren't afraid to get their manicured hands dirty.

Whether she deserves it or not, Serena loses just about everything by the end of this week's episode. (Well, everything besides her looks and money.) At the masquerade, in a move Jenny already got away with at a different masquerade a few seasons ago, both Juliet and Jenny wear exactly the costume they spotted Serena wearing on Gossip Girl. Despite the fact that Serena, Jenny and Juliet don't actually look that similar and only part of the girls' faces are covered, the outsiders manage to pummel Serena's reputation. After Juliet-as-Serena smooches both Dan and Nate in full view of a roomful of willing Gossip Girl informants, Jenny-as-Serena pulls back a curtain to reveal Blair and Chuck secretly making out. Meanwhile, Vanessa has passed Nate's mom, Anne Archibald, an application indicating that Serena would like to be considered for a position she knows Blair covets at a powerful charity organization.

By the time the evening is over, Nate and Dan have both dumped Serena. Again. And Blair has decided that Serena is out to steal everything she's ever wanted. Again. And that's all before Juliet takes the plan even further than she let on to Jenny and Vanessa, throwing a woozy Serena into a cab to the middle of nowhere and using the passed-out girl's phone to e-mail a notice of withdrawal to Dean Reuther. At the end of the episode, it certainly looks like Juliet is planning to imprison Serena in her home.

These are all exciting developments, considering that the most wonderful moments on "Gossip Girl" tend to occur when someone comes completely unhinged. But do they tell us anything more than we already knew about whether Serena deserves her suddenly bleak fate? Not really. As far as I'm concerned, we still don't know her much better than we did the first time we spotted her making her way through Grand Central Station in the series premiere. Four seasons in, are we finally going to learn what (if anything) makes Serena van der Woodsen tick? And when we find out, will we even care?

Other scattered thoughts:

-- I continue to be bored with Chuck and Blair. This week, they were on again (as friends with benefits), then off again, then on again (romantically), then off again. At some point, during sex, Chuck said "I love you" to Blair and meant it. But other flimsy obstacles blocked their way to what would have undoubtedly been a mature, mutually respectful relationship, and they went their separate ways. Well, until next week. Yawn.

-- With Jenny and Juliet helming the outsiders' schemes, Vanessa is back to being her boring, morally uncertain self. I'm starting to feel for poor Jessica Szohr, who was great as a surprise mean girl last week but whose character just can't sustain a fun story line.

-- Did everyone notice the surreal moment when "Make Me Wanna Die," the single by Taylor Momsen's band, The Pretty Reckless, played as Jenny pulled the curtain on Chuck and Blair? I'll go on record as saying the song is far better than I ever expected it would be. But the convergence of Raccoon-Eyed Rock Star Taylor Momsen and Raccoon-Eyed Upper East Sider Jenny Humphrey has really gotten out of control.

-- It is high time we addressed the tumultuous bromance between Dan and Nate. Wouldn't we all feel better if the two of them would just start swapping spit already? Serena would be so confused!

Best line of the episode: "As long as I'm with you, I'm Hillary in the White House, and I want to be Hillary, secretary of State -- but with better hair." -- Blair to Chuck

Your weekly "Gossip Girl" fashion top five:

1. Serena/Jenny/Juliet's floaty, lavender Carolina Herrera masquerade dress.

2. Serena's sparkly, blush sweater dress.

3. Blair's devilish red slip. (I also loved that yellow bra-and-panty set she had on earlier in the episode but would somehow feel dirty listing it.)

4. Dan's light gray masquerade suit with the slate-colored tie.

5. Jenny's black sequined dress.

-- Judy Berman
twitter.com/judyberman

Photo: Blair realizes that Serena has betrayed her. Credit: Giovanni Rufino/The CW

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Wednesday, November 10, 2010

'Gossip Girl' recap: Insiders vs. outsiders

Gossip girl juliet blair The promos may have teased about the newest incarnation of Chuck and Blair's dysfunctional romance, but their "hate sex" was almost completely beside the point of this week's episode. Sure, the show kicks off with Chuck amusing Blair under the covers as she tries to give Serena some distracted advice. Yes, they get it on in public. Chuck even orders his chauffeur to pick him up a lifetime's supply of condoms and booze, in anticipation of the marathon sex-fest he imagines will help them tire of each other.

I won't deny the fun of watching Blair and Chuck lustily paw at each other. But now that we've acknowledged it, let's move on to what really happened this week: War broke out on the Upper East Side. Though there have always been insiders and outsiders -- or Manhattanites and Brooklynites, or new money and old money -- in this rarefied world, the two factions have never been so clearly and completely at odds before.

The big surprise is who incites the war. After a few weeks of licking her wounds in Brooklyn, Vanessa returns with a vengeance. I can't tell you how happy I am to finally see her make some trouble! Joining forces with Nate to expose Juliet's lies, Vanessa is disappointed once again when Juliet hits him with yet another sob story about how "poor" she is and -- in classic Archibald form -- he believes her. (Living on 126th Street and building her own IKEA furniture is a fate worse than death, and as his family once had no money for a few minutes, he can totally relate!) Luckily, by the time Nate calls her to cancel their plan, Vanessa's already snuck into Juliet's real apartment and found something even better than she was looking for: photos of Serena and Colin canoodling.


Sick of constantly being shoved aside for Serena -- a girl we actually believe when she coos, "All I can think about is how much I want to be on [Colin's] arm at the ballet" -- Vanessa shows up at the ballet gala with a stolen memory card full of Juliet's pictures to show the Columbia dean who suspects S of trading sex for grades. And although Juliet has apparently resolved to cut ties with Ben and abandon her scheming for Colin's sake, Vanessa reveals that she's already told Nate about the photos -- and he's telling Blair, and the Upper East Side "insiders" are coming together to smack both of them down. "At the end of the day, you're an outsider, just like me," Vanessa says. As she's exhausted all of her other allies, Juliet has no choice but to back up Vanessa.

What's really impressive -- not to mention creepy -- is the way the original Upper East Siders rally when threatened with a coup. Nate doesn't know much, but he does realize that Blair is the go-to schemer for plotting a response to Juliet's spying. Suddenly, B's taking the bullet for S, dispelling suspicions that Serena is giving it away to anyone who will give her a good grade by claiming that she's the one hooking up with Colin. A moment later, Chuck's there to drawl about how he can corroborate Blair's confession, as he's stalking her and she tells him all about her sexual exploits.

They may have (sort of) vindicated Serena in the eyes of the increasingly weary and disgusted dean, but the rich kids don't stop there. Outside the gala, Blair, Chuck, Nate and Serena surround Juliet. In a comically intense 360-degree shot, we follow along as each one verbally rips into her, the insiders finishing one another's thoughts as though they all share a single hive mind. (Hey, it's possible.) Of course, most of the jabs are class-based: "You don't belong there, anyway," Blair sniffs, referring to Columbia.

Later that night, in her final feat of Waldorf-caliber manipulation, Vanessa introduces Juliet to another scheming outsider we haven't seen much of this season: Jenny Humphrey! A conspiracy is in the works, and though Blair and Chuck working together are nearly impossible to beat, they and their less intelligent friends may get more than they bargained for from this angry, desperate trio. (And I can't help but thinking about how interesting the plots could get if they bring Georgina Sparks back.)

Now that the Upper East Siders have split into two camps, outsiders vs. insiders, I'm left wondering what will happen to poor Dan. As usual, he's caught between two worlds. On one side, there's his old friend/recent ex Vanessa and his humble, Brooklyn roots. On the other, there's his mystifying devotion to Serena, who for some reason has broken it off with Colin and gravitated back to Dan. (Reminder: She is still his stepsister.)

As the class war heats up, I expect to see some major pathos from Lonely Boy. But what I'm really interested in is whose side you're on. Readers, are you Team Insiders or Team Outsiders? And who do you think will come out on top?

"Gossip Girl" highbrow reference watch:

"Let me see: writing a paper on Hannah Arendt or a secret mission that might help me clear my name?" -- Vanessa to Nate

Your weekly "Gossip Girl" fashion top five:

1. Blair's blue, flowered Ralph Lauren gown.

2. Vanessa's pink-and-purple, leaf-print Christian Cota dress. Her first great outfit of the season!

3. Blair's black blouse with the gray-and-white bird print.

4. Colin's simple, sexy Dior suit. J'adore!

5. Serena's gray sweater with the metal arrows.

-- Judy Berman
twitter.com/judyberman

?Photo: Juliet and Blair plead their case to Dean Reuther. Credit: Giovanni Rufino/The CW

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Wednesday, November 3, 2010

'Gossip Girl' recap: The beautiful and bland

Gossip girl truce

Around this time of year, most shows are busy celebrating Halloween. But in the "Gossip Girl" universe, Blair's birthday -- traditionally observed with champagne, fussy hors d'oeuvres, a handful of cameos by minor celebrities and a climactic showdown -- tends to outshine that vulgar holiday. This year, all of those elements did indeed figure into B's big 2-0, but the result still left me hungry for the truly humiliating surprises and showstopping standoffs we could expect from a birthday party in "Gossip Girl's" golden years.

In fact, this week's episode only highlighted Season 4's biggest problem: Blair -- who, has become "Gossip Girl's" protagonist solely because she is its only semi-complex character -- no longer has a worthy foe. She has gone back and forth with Chuck so many times that every possible permutation of their power games has been exhausted. The Serena-Blair "frenemy" story line is so stale the characters themselves lampooned it a few episodes ago. Eva was never a match for Blair. Jenny is so scared of B that she's back to hiding out in Hudson after last week's Tim Gunn disaster. Georgina Sparks is out of the picture, at least for the moment. And no one else in the regular cast is even worth mentioning as a possible foil for Blair's scheming.

But, despite his strictly amateur status, it is Dan (and, for awhile, Eric) who steps up to destroy Blair's birthday this time. In an attempt to repay them for banishing Jenny from Manhattan again, just in time for Rufus and Lily's first wedding anniversary, the kinder, gentler Humphrey initially tries and fails to turn Chuck and Blair against each other.

Although Eric is eventually wise enough to see that nothing good can come of trying to beat the Mr. and Mrs. Smith of the Upper East Side at their own game, Dan won't be satisfied until he inflicts some pain. So he calls in a favor and recruits Swedish pop singer Robyn to show up at the party with a video of Blair getting sloppy drunk in Stockholm and squawking "Stand By Your Man" as Chuck tries in vain to get her off the stage.


Yes, that is the extent of Dan's espionage. And instead of letting Blair and Chuck, who she assumes pulled the stunt, continue to shred each other, Dan steps in quickly to confess what he did and make sure they both understand the moral of the story.

What "Gossip Girl" really needs isn't new love interests for Serena. We don't have to see Jenny yo-yo back and forth from Manhattan to Hudson, her smudgy raccoon eyes atwitter with anxiety. And let's face it: A lot would have to change for any story line focusing on Dan, Nate or Vanessa to put this season back on track. If the show wants to get out of its current rut, the writers are going to need to dream up a new character who is Blair's equal -- one who isn't just a Chuck surrogate. (Don't be fooled by the exes' "enemies with benefits" arrangement, either. Nothing remotely novel is going to come of that.)

At least there's still some potentially enjoyable drama in whatever is happening between Juliet, Ben, and Colin. This week, we learn that although Colin is their cousin, he isn't in on Ben and Juliet's conspiracy. In fact, he and Ben aren't on good terms. We also find out a vague, new tidbit about Ben's motivation to bring Serena down: "It's because she's responsible that you have to do this," he tells Juliet. "It is the only way to make things right. It is the only way for our family to ever move on."

As of now, Serena and Nate are the only characters who are tangled up with Juliet in a major way -- and they're not likely to clean up the mess that will inevitably ensue all by themselves. But if Blair, Chuck, and even the Humphreys wind up joining forces with their friends to destroy the outsiders who are trying to destroy Serena, we may still find a temporary respite from this season's frustrating wheel-spinning.

Other scattered thoughts:

-- The celebrity cameos are really starting to get old. This week, Robyn, a great performer, was totally wasted, with minimal dialogue and a throwaway song. And yet, who can deny the cathartic glee of seeing Rachel Zoe covered in chocolate sauce?

-- I'm enjoying Blair's ongoing fascination with powerful women. Madeleine Albright and Patricia Ireland are supposed to have appeared at the party, and Cyrus sends her a signed copy of the Eleanor Roosevelt memoir "This I Remember" for her birthday. Her best line of the episode: "I suppose, as I leave my teens, I should start to think about my legacy."

-- On the implausibility tip, I found it pretty hard to believe that a Columbia dean would attend her student's birthday party. But even if she did, she certainly wouldn't stand idly by as a gaggle of underage college kids got loaded on fancy cocktails.

-- Did anyone notice that even Gossip Girl now sees fit to editorialize on Nate's stupidity? As she says, "Nate's just thick."

"Gossip Girl" highbrow reference watch:

"I'm just dropping off a copy of my favorite book, 'The Beautiful and Damned.'" -- Serena to Colin

"If I want to hear fiction, I'll go talk to Jonathan Franzen." -- Blair to Serena

Your weekly "Gossip Girl" fashion top five:

1. Blair's flowery, green-and-tan shirt with the neck cutouts and green bouclé suit.

2. Serena's big, sparkly, blue necklace with the chains.

3. Nate's black suit with the dark red tie.

4. Serena's chartreuse empire waist dress.

5. Lily's dark purple halter dress.

-- Judy Berman
twitter.com/judyberman

Photo: Serena and Nate broker a truce between Blair and Chuck. Credit: Eric Liebowitz/CW Network

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Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Summary of gossip girl': Tim Gunn and Taylor Momsen encounter finally

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Tim gunn jenny humphrey

Were you anticipating this week's episode as anxiously as I was, Upper East Siders of the world? After the CW taunted us with a rerun last Monday, I was curious for the return of Taylor Momsen, who seemed to transform into a rebellious teenage punk in real life soon after she started playing one on "Gossip Girl." (For a recent example, read all about the 17-year-old's boob-flashing stunt at her band the Pretty Reckless' New York performance last week.) But what I really wanted to see was Momsen sharing the screen with wonderful "Project Runway" mentor Tim Gunn, who has said that when he was on the "Gossip Girl" set to film his guest spot, he couldn't stand working with her.

For those who haven't been following Gunn's telling-it-like-it-is tour, in which he's told us how he really feels about everyone from Anna Wintour to Lady Gaga, here's a quick review of his thoughts on the actress who plays Jenny Humphrey: "What a diva!" he told E! Online. "She was pathetic, she couldn't remember her lines, and she didn't even have that many. I thought to myself, 'why are we all being held hostage by this brat?' "

Them's fighting words! So I went into episode wondering what their onscreen chemistry would be like — and whether it would reveal anything about what happened between them that so deeply disgusted the classiest man ever to appear on reality TV.


The moment when Jenny finally meets Tim comes halfway through the hour, after Blair has quarantined Little J to her apartment for the duration of her one-day visit to New York and Chuck has manipulated his stepsister into showing up at his hotel for B's minions to photograph. Even before all five of Jenny's models walk in wearing short, black dresses, each with a letter of the word "WHORE" scrawled across them in red, care of Blair, her meeting with Tim is stiff. And since there's no reason Tim-the-character would be nervous around a high schooler looking for a recommendation, it seems like the tension between Gunn and Momsen made it to the final cut. Both spit out lines like they're reading them for the first time.

The script doesn't do them any favors, either. "This is quite a statement, Jenny. We're done!" Tim blusters, simultaneously prudish and tyrannical, as he banishes Little J from his office. "I don't know if this is your idea of a joke, but it's not funny!" Whether the dialogue, Momsen or both are to blame, I barely recognize in this character the Tim Gunn I've grown to love in eight seasons of "Project Runway."

Even later in the episode, when Chuck contrives to have Tim and Jenny meet up at a party and he suddenly becomes his empathetic self, something feels off. It's as though, by the time they actually made it to filming, Gunn just couldn't deal with being in the same room as Momsen. At some moments, he looks positively twitchy! A question for those of you who watch both "GG" and "Project Runway": Am I blowing this out of proportion, or did you find the Gunn-Momsen awkwardness unbearable too?

When all is said and done, Gunn racks up just a few minutes of screen time, and we don't see what becomes of his promise to give Jenny another chance. In fact, by the end of the hour, she's on her way back to Mom in Hudson — and that's the episode's biggest surprise. Is it possible that Little J's return could be this brief? Will Momsen's hiatus be even longer than we've been led to believe? If Gunn is right about the way she acts on set, perhaps that wouldn't be such a shock.

The other big news this week is all Juliet-related. She and Nate run into each other outside the Staten Island prison where Ben (who we now know really is Juliet's brother) and Nate's dad are both serving time. Awkward! Again, Nate starts to suspect something's up with Juliet ... until she spins a few more unconvincing lies, which the poor, simple blue blood eventually believes. But she's been lied to as well: Ben tells her it's fine she's starting to fall for Nate and then beats up his father to send the message that it is not, in fact, OK.

The last revelation — and the most exciting for me, because I predicted it in my last recap — is that Colin, the businessman and newly minted professor Serena spent the night with, is in cahoots with Juliet and Ben. In fact, he's paying Juliet for something, so he may just turn out to be the real ringleader. Is he the third sibling or just an interested party? Could this possibly be about something as boring as Serena's family's business dealings? Does anyone out there have guesses to keep us going till next week?

Other scattered thoughts

— Blair's Hitchcockian Jenny Humphrey nightmare is brilliant. The costumes, the soundtrack, the lighting — all perfect. A great Halloween touch.

— I continue to be displeased with Blair's new minions. Why do they make their first appearance on this episode dressed in red and yellow, Ronald McDonald style?

— Although realism has never been "Gossip Girl's" strong suit, there were a few moments this week where I just could not suspend my disbelief: Why would tabloid fixture Serena think going to a media party with her new professor was a good idea? Why wouldn't Jenny send someone else to pick up her portfolio at Chuck's hotel? Blair is watching her, and she knows it. Why would Chuck be so upset by the idea of Jenny revealing that they slept together? Sure, she's his stepsister, but it's not like he doesn't actively promote his own libertine reputation. And finally, Nate's dad gets attacked in the prison library, a place that would clearly have supervision of some kind, and no one knows who did it? Really?

— About five minutes before the end of the episode, I realized Vanessa hadn't made a single appearance. Was she missed? Nope.

"Gossip Girl" highbrow reference watch
"I'll just grab these blueprints Lily left for me and let you get back to your Hemingway complex." — Chuck, referring to Dan's protectiveness of Jenny

Your weekly "Gossip Girl" fashion top five:

1. Serena's tan Porter Grey scarab top and black, tribal-patterned Tibi skirt.

2. Chuck's gray double-breasted suit. (Never mind why he's wearing it to class at Columbia. He's Chuck Bass!)

3. Jenny's beaded, one-shoulder Pucci dress.

4. Dan's all-black suit. Where did that come from?

5. Blair's gold Victoria Beckham dress. Simple, elegant, mature — the perfect counterpoint to Little J.

— Judy Berman
twitter.com/judyberman

Photo: Jenny Humphrey makes amends with Tim Gunn. Credit: Giovanni Rufino/The CW.

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