Nothing But Star Wars: Ewoks S1E5 – “The Travelling Jindas” (1985)

A still from the "Ewoks" cartoon. Latara, a young girl Ewok, is on stage with two members of the Jinda tribe of travelling performers. A group of Duloks sit and watch in the audience.


Capitalism requires indoctrination to perpetuate itself. Objective analysis of capitalism shows it to be an ultimately destructive force, and so to survive it must avoid analysis by the laboring class, who sacrifice their happiness so that capitalists might enjoy ever greater profit. As David Foster Wallace pointed out, fish don’t know they’re in water, so indoctrinating laborers into taking the systems and beliefs that support capitalism for granted is a great way to keep them from asking what the hell kind of muck they’re swimming through day after day.

“The Travelling Jindas,” the fifth episode of the Ewoks cartoon, puts Latara in the spotlight. She’s part of Wicket’s gang of friends, and all we know of her so far is that she plays the flute and flirts with Teebo. It’s her flute-playing, not her flirting, that’s important to this story, as she’s frustrated that nobody wants to listen to the new song she’s written. (Her song is identical to the music that plays over the closing credits, so maybe nobody wants to tell her it’s a little derivative.) As if her friends’ rude avoidance wasn’t bad enough, her father wants her to clean the hut, and her mother wants her to babysit her younger siblings. Latara’s had enough! Does no Ewok appreciate true artistry?

Fortunately for her, the Jindas, a travelling troupe of performers, have passed through the village, and she runs away with them, making her friends promise not to tell. Hilariously they immediately break this promise, telling shaman Logray where she’s gone off to. Sadly, the Jindas are notorious on Endor for always being lost and never being able to find their way back to a place once they’ve left it, so Latara is in danger of never being seen again. Her friends set out to rescue her.

The Jindas being perpetually lost is a pretty good summation of how this episode presents them. They’re nice enough folk, but a little dim, a bit irresponsible, and very egotistical. They live off of the charity of others, or at least that’s how we’re meant to see them. Freeloaders, Aunt Bozzie calls them; never mind that they’re skilled artists and the Ewoks universally love their show. They can be allowed to provide a night’s distraction, but Chief Chirpa makes it clear that this is a one-night-only event, and these vagabonds need to be on their way in the morning.

To Latara, the Jindas’ life is initially an attractive one, but she quickly finds it’s not all it’s cracked up to be. Travelling with them, she has to do even more drudge work than she did at home, and she never gets a chance to practice her music, let alone perform it. After the Jindas help her friends rescue her from the Duloks, she bids them a fond farewell, having learned an important lesson. The life of a performer is okay for some people, but responsible little Ewoks know that chores come first, art second.

The other Ewoks don’t learn any lesson at all, and will presumably continue to dismiss Latara’s artistic talent and passion.

If you want to perpetuate generational capitalism, you must indoctrinate not just current laborers, but future laborers as well.


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Distant Falls is live!

Distant Falls, the soap opera comedy web series I wrote, directed, and appear in, is now live! You can watch the first three episodes now, and new episodes are released every Tuesday night at 8pm EST, until the grand finale on February 13.

Distant Falls stars a bunch of friends I made while studying improv at the Upright Citizens Brigade, plus one friend I made a long time ago while studying at the National Shakespeare Conservatory. I wrote it to give us something creative to do during lockdown, since we couldn’t do live improv anymore. Because we were all isolated, the story is told entirely through video calls the characters make to one another. It was a challenging way to write an ongoing story, but I think it worked out! Take a look at the first episode, at least – I’m really proud of it. And if you enjoy it, like, subscribe, share, all that stuff to help art get seen in our modern dystopic era!

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Nothing But Star Wars: Droids S1E4 – “A Race to the Finish” (1985)

A still from the "Droids" cartoon. The bounty hunter Boba Fett stands with his arms crossed.


For a Saturday morning cartoon from 1985, Droids was surprisingly ahead of its time. For one thing, it’s serialized. There are a lot more Saturdays in a year than there were new episodes of any given show, which means animated series were going to be repeated quite a bit. This often meant that episodes were made to be shown in any order, for ease of scheduling. That meant episodes had to be self-contained, with the reset button hit at the end of each. (Kids’ cartoons were far from the only shows made this way – plenty of live-action sit-coms and dramas were made with no strict episode order, to make syndication easier.)

But the first four episodes of Droids form a neat little arc, telling the story of C-3PO and R2-D2 meeting new friends Thall, Jord, and Kea, helping them take down the Fromm crime family and win the Boonta speeder race. Both the gangster and the race plot strands come to a head in this episode; in the end, the droids choose to leave their friends so that they won’t have to pass up an exciting job opportunity (space capitalism!) that doesn’t allow droids. The episode ends with our mechanical heroes drifting through space in an escape pod, ready for a new adventure. 80s aesthetics abound, but the structure is recognizably modern.

And of course, there’s another aspect of Droids that’s much more common now than it was then – continuity! A very key element of the Star Wars mythos makes a surprise appearance in this episode: 3PO being a complete and utter dick to R2.

No, wait. That’s a key element of the Star Wars mythos, yes, but not very surprising. No, actually, it’s everyone’s favorite badass bounty hunter, Boba Fett! The makers of Droids knew their audience – kids obsessed with Star Wars – and they made good use of that audience’s knowledge of the films, and how that knowledge can be utilized to build anticipation. I imagine many a 1985 child staring in disbelief at their TV when the shadowed figure stepped out into the light, then screaming in delight when that trademark armor was revealed in all its glory. I mean, that’s what I would have done, if I hadn’t been so stupid as to pass up this cartoon the first time around for being kids’ stuff.

And of course, Boba’s appearance, apart from being oh-my-god-so-awesome, brings with it a cornucopia of continuity to sate the hungriest of geek appetites. We already knew this show took place pre-A New Hope from references to the Empire, but Boba – last seen being slowly digested over a thousand years in Return of the Jedi – showing up alive and well clinches it. And what’s more, the show trusts its audience enough not to spoon-feed them the timeline. Adults might need to think it through, but the kids get it.

And he references Jabba the Hutt! Oh my god so awesome!


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Distant Falls Coming November 7th!

During lockdown, way back in the dark times, I wrote, directed, and appeared in a comedy soap opera web series. I’ve been editing ever since, and it’s finally finished! Distant Falls will launch Tuesday, November 7th, at 8pm EST, with new episodes weekly! You can watch the trailer right now – be sure to subscribe at youtube.com/@DistantFalls so you don’t miss it!

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Nothing But Star Wars: Ewoks S1E4 – “To Save Deej” (1985)


I’m only four episodes in, but I’d say “To Save Deej” is a pretty run-of-the-mill episode of Ewoks, in that it features imaginatively designed creatures, has a by-the-numbers plot, and adds yet more major characters to its already massive cast.

Nelvana is at its best with non-human characters, and Ewoks allows its animators’ creativities to run wild. My favorite are the Dandelion Warriors, who are literally giant dandelions, standing motionless in their field until intruders approach, at which point they tilt their heads back and hurl their dandelion spears. We also meet the frosch, lizard-like creatures with huge circular mouths and limbs like crawling bipeds. They’re creepy as hell, looking like they just slithered out of a Hieronymus Bosch painting, or possibly Yellow Submarine.

The imagination of the designs doesn’t quite extend to the plot, unfortunately, which is a standard quest for a MacGuffin. Wicket’s dad Deej is poisoned by a mushroom and the three Warwick sons have to retrieve three ingredients for the antidote. The mushrooms are razor sharp and grow right by the Ewoks’ river; you’d think they’d keep the antidote on hand, but I guess there’d be even less of a story if they did.

In grand Ewoks tradition, we are given more characters to remember. The story focuses on Wicket’s family, so his dad Deej and his brothers Weechee and Willie take center stage, but his mom, Shodu, is also there, and his sister, Winda, makes her first appearance in the show. Also crowding the stage are Kneesaa, Wicket’s girl friend (but probably not girlfriend); Logray, the shaman trying to heal Deej; and Teebo, another of Wicket’s crew, all of whom we met before, and none of whose names I remembered. Yes, I’m looking them up. I find it so hard to keep these characters straight that I thought Kneesaa was another of Wicket’s sisters, and she is the second-most main character on the show after Wicket.

New to our tale is Mring-Mring, who looks like the mascot for a cereal you’ve never heard of. He’s a Gupin, whatever that is. Wicket says “it’s a long story” and glosses over it, which honestly took me by surprise, as if I’ve learned one thing about Ewoks it’s that its writers loooooove complicated backstories. Anyway, Mring-Mring can shapeshift into animals that other people picture in their minds, or something? I think that’s how it works. I wasn’t paying attention. I said the writers love complicated backstories, not me.

I am, admittedly, finding it harder and harder to write anything interesting about individual episodes of Ewoks, but, like the show itself, I’ll just keep going. At least I get to watch Droids next…


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