How Dimension 20 Restored My Appetite For Television

I’m not much of a TV guy anymore. 10 years ago, it felt like I was on the ball and watching all the prestige series everyone else was in on. In between classes or at parties, I was dialed into the conversations about Game of Thrones and extolling the values of my favorite sitcoms. But in the decade since, I’ve fallen out of favor with broad swaths of television, becoming endlessly bored by the bottom-of-the-barrel stuff that just kind of gets shoveled onto streaming services, all the while infuriated at the fact that most shows with promise bite the bullet too soon to ever grow into something bigger. Even when I think about the presently great shows airing, I am bored at the prospect of watching them. Even the very best ones are too formulaic for my taste at the moment. Save for the occasionally fun distraction or occasionally long show to marathon out of comfort, TV just hasn’t been doing it for me on both the dramatic and comedic front. I was just looking in the wrong place, because it turns out that the best show with the most compelling drama and heartiest of laughs isn’t on a cable network, HBO, or traditional streaming service. It’s instead this little show called Dimension 20 all about some improv comedians playing Dungeons & Dragons.
Dimension 20 has been around for a while now, but I only became aware of it within the last year. Headed up by comedian and renowned dungeon master Brennan Lee Mulligan since 2018, Dimension 20 launched as part of CollegeHumor’s streaming service Dropout, which has seemingly saved the company since a near ruinous layoff in 2020 that left Mulligan as the sole creative on payroll. Undeterred by the upheaval, Dimension 20 continued putting out seasons, which thanks to a loose anthology format, take place in several different worlds created by Mulligan, his cast and crew. Beginning with Fantasy High, a series frequently dubbed an amalgamation of high fantasy creatures and magic in a world akin to John Hughes depiction of America, the show has jumped to settings such as the depths of space (in a scenario Mulligan borrowed from the published works of his mother, Elaine Lee), a rendition of New York with a magical world sitting just underneath, and most recently, a multiverse of Brothers Grimm fairy tales. This aspect, of a new story every season with mostly new characters—some seasons have had sequels—was one of the biggest boons to begin with. Going into Dimension 20, I mostly wanted to avoid the situation of growing attached to characters I’d have to follow for years and seasons only to potentially be burned by the end because of poor writing. Little did I know I’d find characters I’d cherish even more. What a fool I was.
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