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30 Rock The Fighting Irish (2006–2013) Online

30 Rock The Fighting Irish (2006–2013) Online
Original Title :
The Fighting Irish
Genre :
TV Episode / Comedy
Year :
2006–2013
Directror :
Dennie Gordon
Cast :
Tina Fey,Tracy Morgan,Jane Krakowski
Writer :
Tina Fey,Jack Burditt
Type :
TV Episode
Time :
22min
Rating :
8.0/10
30 Rock The Fighting Irish (2006–2013) Online

Eddie, Jack's brother, comes for a visit, who tells him that their father died. It turns out that Jack hasn't seen his father in 17 years and that Eddie took care of him for the rest of his life and is now broke and his now to live in the YMCA. While their first meeting ended in a fight, it is now time for them to reconcile. Liz is supposed to fire 10% of her staff and, as everyone finds out, the staff tries to please her as much as they can to not get fired. During aerobics Liz meets the guy who accidentally send her flowers on Valentine's Day and his girlfriend. Tracy is on the search for a church and asks everyone for advice.
Episode cast overview, first billed only:
Tina Fey Tina Fey - Liz Lemon
Tracy Morgan Tracy Morgan - Tracy Jordan
Jane Krakowski Jane Krakowski - Jenna Maroney
Jack McBrayer Jack McBrayer - Kenneth Parcell
Scott Adsit Scott Adsit - Pete Hornberger
Judah Friedlander Judah Friedlander - Frank Rossitano
Alec Baldwin Alec Baldwin - Jack Donaghy
Nathan Lane Nathan Lane - Eddie
Lonny Ross Lonny Ross - Josh
Katrina Bowden Katrina Bowden - Cerie
Maulik Pancholy Maulik Pancholy - Jonathan
Brian Murray Brian Murray - Jack's Dad
Siobhan Fallon Hogan Siobhan Fallon Hogan - Patricia
Boris McGiver Boris McGiver - Patrick
Anna Chlumsky Anna Chlumsky - Other Liz

Liz's repeat proclamation "I am the decider!" is a reference to George W. Bush, who infamously proclaimed the same thing in 2006 in his defense of Donald Rumsfeld.

Nathan Lane stars as Jack's brother Eddie Donaghy. At various times, Jack mentions Disney, associating it with Eddie. This is a reference to Lane role as Timon in The Lion King (1994).

Frank's trucker hat reads "Liz Rocks".

Liz eats what look like Peanut M&Ms but the package says "Covered Candies"

Jack says he hadn't seen his father for 17 years. In an earlier episode, Jack says he and his ex-wife had been separated since 1989, which at the time would have been 17 years earlier. In another episode, it says that Tracey had been married for 17 years.

Anna Chlumsky and Dan Bakkedahl would later costar in Veep: Die Vizepräsidentin (2012).


User reviews

Yozshunris

Yozshunris

The Fighting Irish is one of those adorable Jack-centric episodes of 30 Rock, which let Alec Baldwin do whatever the hell he wants with his character and get away with it superbly. And if you thought one Donaghy was funny, just wait and see.

Things heat up in the workplace when Jack tells Liz she has to fire 10% of her staff, although she does kind of enjoy that sort of power when it turns out Liz Lemler, whose boyfriend she has a crush on, is eligible for sacking. Pete is in trouble with his wife because he lied to her about getting a vasectomy, and now the plan appears to have backfired (awesome). Tracy has been advised to find a religion before his next lawsuit, and considers becoming Irish Catholic after a "heartfelt" discussion with Eddie Donaghy (Nathan Lane), Jack's brother, who has shown up to report the news of their father's recent death. Turns out Eddie is broke and might be exploiting the grief to get some cash out of Jack.

All plot strands are hilarious, as always, but for sheer vitality and cruel irony the crown goes to Baldwin and Lane's double act (later joined by former SNL star Molly Shannon and other as the rest of the Donaghys), which gives a lot of new meanings to the concept of "brotherly love". And if there has to be a contest between the two, then the absolute winner is Baldwin. Why? Just check out the episode's conclusion - Jack's the man.
Dalallador

Dalallador

The seventeenth episode in the first season of 30 Rock is more sitcom-like than previous episode, but because the plot mostly revolves around Jack, all can be forgiven. If you thought one Jack Donaghy was funny, wait until you meet the rest of the family. This episode brings together the Donaghy family for the first time and ends up with ensuing hilarity.

This episode, "The Fighting Irish," has Jack seeing his brother for the first time in seventeen years and he finds out he was taking care of his father before he died and is now broke. Meanwhile, Liz has been told she has to fire ten percent of her staff and Tracy is trying to find a church.

Overall, this is a funny episode and has some really good moments. I still can't believe how Alec Baldwin gets away with half the stuff he does on network television. But I ain't complaining. His moments with his family, including guest appearances by Molly Shannon, are the best part of this series. I rate this episode 9/10.
September

September

A great episode that introduces us more to Jack's family. His brother Eddie (Nathan Lane was a great choice for this part) comes to say that their father died and we see a great selection of other Donaghys come together. Great ending for this storyline, nice spin.

Liz has to fire someone and she goes for Liz the girlfriend of the flower guy. This all escalates so Jack has to rehire her but he makes sure she is relocated. Was very sweet of him to do, a nice moment in their friendship.

And Tracy looks for a new religion.

Another great episode with fun story lines and great acting. Alec Baldwin is especially great in this episode.
Andriodtargeted

Andriodtargeted

This will be the last 30 Rock to air until late April as the next several weeks will have "Andy Barker, P.I." show in its stead. Another funny episode has Jack telling Liz she has to fire some of her staff. Liz doesn't know who to let go and everyone around is extra nice to her as a result. Then she meets the Flower Guy who she has a crush on and his girlfriend, the other Liz that was supposed to get the flowers Lemon got instead on Valentines Day. Turns out the other Liz works under Lemon as an accountant. Tracy wants to find a religion. Jack's brother comes back to mention their father is dead. That's all I'll mention of the plot. Kudos to guest stars Nathan Lane as Jack's brother, Anna Chlumsky as the other Liz (remember her in the title role in My Girl?), current SNLer Jason Sudeikis as Flower Guy, and former SNLers Molly Shannon and Siobhan Fallon (no relation to Jimmy) as the Donaghy sisters. Loved Pete mentioning Liz's eyes after firing the other Liz looking like "that astronaut woman on diapers who attempted to kill the other woman" (not a direct quote but you know what I mean) and Jack insisting his last name is pronounced DON-A-GY (hard g instead of an h). Keep up the good work, Ms. Fey. Hope ratings improve when you come back.
Jan

Jan

30 Rock

With a sensational triumph of six Golden GLobes, 30 Rock is undeniably critics' choice and the buzz pays off with Fey; the creator, at the heart of it, whose vision is crystal clear and on the mark.

It is a single camera sitcom about a writer of a TV Show and the behind-the-camera chaos it goes through before it goes on air. The somewhat distorted concept isn't what the series relies upon, its ideal vacation is to reach for a mature audience with wise and not funny writing.

It is rich on technical aspects like the production design but fails completely on cinematography and background score. As mentioned earlier, the humor isn't forcibly imputed which allows the makers to visit unknown places without any restraints and communicate fluently with the viewers.

The soul of the series is certainly its huge cast who can easily charm their way out of anything but Baldwin and Fey does invest a lot in it and are flat out hilarious in it.

Layered, satirical and thought-provoking writing, ironical humor and injected with enough content to run for its twenty minutes are the high points of this brilliant sitcom. Few cameos and a knack of taking bold moves factors a lot on keeping the audience tangled in its exhilarating world.

Season 01

Even though it takes around 21 acts to attain its adequate closure, the writers haven kept plenty on cards under their sleeve, as in it does offer an intriguing insight on each character's perspective but doesn't give away the equation of theirs with one another; a slick move.

The Fighting Irish

The morality conflict that power breeds in here is an apt example of the dirty politics that goes behind the camera and it involves new characters that are fishy too; a cherry on top of it.