Crazy Ex-Girlfriend: “Josh and I Are Good People” (1.05)

From the start of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Rebecca has been pursuing Josh with a breathtaking singularity of purpose, selfishly using every other character as a means to an end: Paula enables her, Valencia is the competition, and Greg gets her one step closer to her true love. That leaves her boss Darryl whom she, not coincidentally, has ignored this entire time despite his plea in the premiere for help dealing with his divorce.
But, when she’s prompted by Greg’s anger to prove that she’s a good person, Rebecca finally agrees to help Darryl (Pete Gardner) with his custody battle, setting the stage for a strange, uneven, but still clever episode of Crazy Ex. Musically, “Josh and I Are Good People” is one of the finest episodes since the premiere. Narratively, it struggles to build to a thesis. But it gets there in the end.
First, the music. If you haven’t noticed or recognized his name in the credits, much of the music in Crazy Ex is co-written by Adam Schlesinger of Fountains of Wayne fame. Schlesinger has also crafted poppy earworms for movies like That Thing You Do and Josie and the Pussycats, so it’s no wonder that the Crazy Ex songs are so catchy week in and week out.
The big winner this week is an opening country number in which Darryl attempts to explain his immense love for his daughter without sounding creepy. Father-daughter culture is easy to skewer, and Crazy Ex certainly has fun at its expense, but this song also gets credit for having its character be self-aware about how “songs like this can come off” while trying, however haltingly, to put his feelings into words. On one level, the song works as parody, but it also reads as an awkwardly earnest attempt to capture the complexities of that relationship, summed up by Darryl with the closing lyric, “Having a daughter is… [cue falsetto] weeeeeeird.”
And, after Rebecca successfully helps her boss gain temporary full custody, she returns triumphant to Greg to gloat about her altruism with a catchy, dancey tune, in which she declares herself “Mother Teresa Luther King.”