Mork Goes Erk

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"Mork Goes Erk"
Mork & Mindy episode
Episode no.Season 1
Episode 17
Directed byHoward Storm
Written byLloyd Turner
Gordon Mitchell
Cinematography byStephen H. Burum
F. Bud Mautino,
Meredith M. Nicholson
Production codeEpisode 018
Original air dateFebruary 8, 1979 (1979-02-08)
Guest appearances
Morgan Fairchild as Susan
Conrad Janis as Fred "Fredzo" McConnell
David Letterman as Ellsworth
Episode chronology
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"Snowflakes Keep Dancing on My Head"
Next →
"Yes Sir, That's My Baby"
List of episodes

"Mork Goes Erk" is the seventeenth episode of the first season of the television sitcom, Mork & Mindy. The episode premiered on ABC February 8, 1979.[1] It was issued on VHS January 1, 1998, as part of a two-episode special release that also included "Mork's First Christmas".[2][3] It was issued on DVD September 7, 2004, as part of the Mork & Mindy - The Complete First Season boxed set.[4]

In the episode, David Letterman portrays a self-help group leader named Ellsworth who offers "erk" (Ellsworth Revitalization Konditioning). The episode has been called a parody of the Erhard Seminars Training, or "est" course. The episode received mostly positive reviews, and was highlighted as one of the season's best episodes. David Letterman's performance also received good reviews.

Plot[edit]

Mork, Mindy and Mr. Bickley are all feeling depressed. Mindy has just learned that Mork's supervisor, Orson, has arranged for Mork to be transferred to another planet, and Bickley is suffering from writer's block. Their friend, Susan, visits and suggests that they all attend a seminar on Ellsworth's Revitalization Konditioning. As they arrive at the seminar, Ellsworth nervously asks Susan if all of the attendees' checks are in order. He lays out the rules for the duration of the training, which include no leaving and no alcohol consumption. When Bickley hears this, he promptly gets up to leave.

The seminar's attendees are given Ellsworth's harsh version of reality. Ellsworth preaches self-adoration, which he says will get rid of emotional highs and lows. He centers this goal around the notion of "finding our own space", while utilizing an authoritarian style of control as a therapeutic method to solve problems. The other attendees are shown to be passive consumers who seek any way to fix their personal issues. However, Mork begins to question the foundation of the course's rules, as well as the nature of the philosophical material that Ellsworth has put forth, by pointing out hypocrisy among Ellsworth's contradictory statements. In the end, Mork triumphs over Ellsworth's philosophy with universal humanistic moral values. Ellsworth dismisses Mork's victory, exclaiming, "I've got my Rolls-Royce!". However, Ellworth has had his Rolls-Royce stolen.[1][5][6][7]

Cultural references[edit]

David Letterman portrays Ellsworth, a parody of Werner Erhard.

In a 1982 article in the journal, Theory & Society, Lewis & Clark College sociology professor, Robert Goldman, compared and contrasted Letterman's "Ellsworth" character and his training program to that of Werner Erhard's course, Erhard Seminars Training. Goldman noted that the episode spends time "lampooning Werner Erhard and est-like commercial pop psychologies". However, Goldman went on to note that the inherent problem with "Ellsworth Revitalization Konditioning" is not the training, but Ellsworth.[5]

Ellsworth is seen as a parody of consumerism. "As the self-help entrepreneur, Ellsworth is portrayed as a walking collection of lifestyle-status points and sign-values... Conspicuous consumption and commodity fetishism define his personality." Goldman explained that this Mork and Mindy episode succeeds in distinguishing between criticism of Ellsworth's training, and criticism of Ellsworth, citing Ellsworth's character traits of "tyranny, selfishness, open greed, and flaunting of the accoutrements of his vulgar money-making".[5]

Reception[edit]

TV Guide's 2005 book, TV Guide: The Ultimate Resource to Television Programs on DVD, highlights "Mork Goes Erk" as one of three "classic episodes" of the first season (including "Mork's First Christmas" and "Mork's Mixed Emotions").[7]

Matthew Tobey of Allmovie wrote that the episode was most notable because of David Letterman's appearance before he became more well-known.[1] The Dallas Morning News also praised Letterman's performance as a "shady motivational speaker", commenting that the episode was a way for Letterman to hone his "smarminess" before his later work on Late Show with David Letterman.[8] Jonathan Boudreaux of tvdvdreviews.com described Letterman as "a flakey EST-like guru", and called the episode "disjointed".[9]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Tobey, Matthew. "Mork & Mindy: Mork Goes Erk". Allmovie. All Media Guide, LLC. Archived from the original on 2006-04-26. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
  2. ^ Staff (September 10, 1995). "Laugh Again With TV's Top Comedies". The Washington Post.
  3. ^ "Mork & Mindy Volume 2: Mork's First Christmas/Mork Goes Erk (1978)", Paramount Studios, January 1, 1998, 50 minutes.
  4. ^ "Mork & Mindy - The Complete First Season", Paramount Studios, September 4, 2004, UPC: 097360537949
  5. ^ a b c Goldman, Robert (May 1982). "Hegemony and Managed Critique in Prime-Time Television: A Critical Reading of "Mork and Mindy"". Theory & Society. 11. Hosted, Lewis & Clark College: 363–388, Part 4. doi:10.1007/BF00211662. S2CID 140808952. Archived from the original on 2007-11-02. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
  6. ^ ""Mork Goes Erk" (1979)". Internet Movie Database. Amazon.com. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
  7. ^ a b TV Guide (2005). TV Guide: The Ultimate Resource to Television Programs on DVD. St. Martin's Griffin. p. 166. ISBN 0-312-35150-X.
  8. ^ Staff (November 5, 2004). "Mork & Mindy". The Dallas Morning News.
  9. ^ Boudreaux, Jonathan (September 2, 2004). "Mork & Mindy: The Complete First Season DVD Review". tvdvdreviews.com. 2003-2007 tvdvdreviews.com, in association with Amazon.com. Archived from the original on September 4, 2004. Retrieved 2007-10-29.

External links[edit]