โ€œEnglish Teacherโ€ takes a while to heat up. But when you get to episode six of the new FX comedy, youโ€™ll be hooked.

There, Linda Harrison (Jenn Lyon) enters the picture and demonstrates what kind of challenges teachers face today. Sheโ€™s an outwardly sweet mother/entrepreneur who wants Evan Marquez (Brian Jordan Alvarez) to change her sonโ€™s grade in his class. Evan doesnโ€™t think the paper merits a higher grade.

Stephanie Koenig as Gwen Sanders and Brian Jordan Alvarez as Evan Marquez commiserate at lunch in "English Teacher."

Linda, however, wonโ€™t backย down. She makes a formal complaint to school officials, commandeers a public meeting and, for good measure, serves her invention โ€“ steak nuggets โ€“ to fellow parents.

The performance is so remarkable it should put Lyon at the head of the list for next yearโ€™s guest star Emmy. Sheโ€™s the ultimate helicopter parent โ€“ a reason teachers push back at book banning, curriculum โ€œadjustmentsโ€ and grooming.

Before Alvarezโ€™s comedy gets to that point, โ€œEnglish Teacherโ€ shows us the kind of battles he fights daily. Students insist a Powder Puff football game is a โ€œboomer traditionโ€ and resist boys dressing like girls and playing cheerleader. To change the narrative, Evan contacts a friend โ€“ who happens to be a drag queen โ€“ to instruct the boys. The move blows up in his face and becomes one more notch on Linda Harrisonโ€™s belt.

Sheโ€™s name-checked in the first episode because she objects to Evan kissing his boyfriend on school property.

Listen now and subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | RSS Feed | SoundStack

Alvarez (who created the series and wrote the pilot) plots the course very carefully and puts the characters in play. His friends and fellow teachers โ€“ Gwen Sanders (Stephanie Koenig) and Markie Hillridge (Sean Patton) โ€“ try to provide support in the most trying situations. They extricate him, too, and have their own issues with students who are looking for ways to trap their teachers. These arenโ€™t the Mr. Kotterโ€™s Sweathogs; theyโ€™re social media savvy manipulators who can convince others thereโ€™s such a thing as Asymptomatic Touretteโ€™s. Knowing Evanโ€™s problems with vulnerabilities, they seize on every opportunity to bait him. Even though Linda Harrison thinks otherwise, theyโ€™re more than capable of fighting for themselves.

Homecoming, school mascots and pronouns become talking points and a great way to reveal the teachersโ€™ personalities. Alvarez walks the tightrope extremely well and uses '80s music to comment on the action; Koenig and Patton are great sidekicks and Enrico Colantoni suffers nicely as the principal caught in the middle.

โ€œEnglish Teacherโ€ isnโ€™t a bookend to โ€œAbbott Elementaryโ€ โ€“ itโ€™s much more adult than that show. But it does gives outsiders a heads-up on the stakes in schools today. Itโ€™s a great addition to cableโ€™s curriculum and a chance for the oh-so-talented Alvarez to show the breadth of his resume.

But Jenn Lyon? Sheโ€™s one to watch. Donโ€™t miss her sixth-episode appearance. Itโ€™s better than a Double Sprite with a little kick.

ย 

โ€œEnglish Teacherโ€ begins Sept. 2 on FX and streaming on Hulu.


Become a #ThisIsTucson member! Your contribution helps our team bring you stories that keep you connected to the community. Become a member today.

ย Bruce Miller is editor of the Sioux City Journal.ย