Pawnee (Parks and Recreation)
Pawnee, Indiana | |
---|---|
Parks and Recreation location | |
Creator | Greg Daniels and Michael Schur |
Genre | Television program |
Type | City |
Notable locations | City Hall |
Notable characters |
Leslie Knope Ann Perkins Chris Traeger Ron Swanson Tom Haverford April Ludgate Ben Wyatt Andy Dwyer Jerry Gergich Donna Meagle Jean-Ralphio Saperstein |
Pawnee, Indiana (/pɔːˈniː/ paw-NEE) is the fictional setting of the NBC comedy series Parks and Recreation. Since the show's start in 2009, the fictional town of Pawnee has received acclaim by fans and critics, with the town's colorful history and inhabitants being the joke or focal point for many episodes.
Founding
Pawnee was founded in May 1817 by Rev. Luther Howell, who came from Terre Haute on an ox. The Native American Wamapoke tribe were driven out of town by July 1817. Howell founded several Lutheran churches in town. The first mayor of Pawnee, Charlton Sharpspeed, took office in 1818.[1]
Location
Several times on the series, Pawnee is said to be in south-central (or southwestern) Indiana, although the exact location is unknown. Pawnee is said to be located about 90 miles from Indianapolis. Pawnee is also believed to be the seventh largest city in Indiana. This would put its population between 80,294 and 80,405, the populations of the real ranking sixth and seventh largest cities in Indiana, Bloomington and Gary. However, the population has also been described as between fifty and seventy thousand.[2] Per the book Pawnee: The Greatest Town in America, the town is "roughly the same size as Bismarck, North Dakota" — which had a population of 61,272 as of the 2010 United States Census. As of the 2000 Census, Pawnee had a population of 79,218 according to NBC's fictional Pawnee site.[3] The town is located in the fictional "Wamapoke County".
Pawnee has a twin city in Eagleton, a smaller but wealthier town. It was founded by the richest portion of Pawnee's original settlers who split to found their own city shortly after Pawnee's establishment and a mutual dislike between the communities has festered ever since. In "The Pawnee-Eagleton Tip Off Classic", due to an Eagleton budget crisis, the city is dissolved and incorporated into Pawnee.
Pawnee is noted as being in Indiana's 10th congressional district,[4] which in reality has been obsolete since 2003.
Government
Pawnee's government is set up like most local governments in the United States, with several departments, such as Parks and Recreation (the primary focus of the show), Sewage, etc., serving under a strong city council and a mostly ceremonial mayor, with a city manager running the day-to-day business of the town. From 2014 until his election to the United States House of Representatives in 2018, the City Manager was Ben Wyatt. The primary protagonist of the series is Leslie Knope, a former member of the City Council who was the deputy director of the Department of Parks and Recreation until accepting a job as the Regional Director of the National Parks Service Midwest at the end of season six.
Walter Gunderson became mayor of Pawnee in 1994, according to the book Pawnee: The Greatest Town in America, and held the office until his death in 2017. After an exhaustive search for an interim Mayor, Garry Gergich assumed the office, and was then elected to ten consecutive terms.
At the end of the second season, Pawnee had a serious budget crisis that eventually led to a temporary shutdown of the government. This storyline was inspired by the real-life global recession. The third season opened with the budget of every department being slashed.
Notable locations
- City Hall, sometimes referred to as Pioneer Hall, in season one. The primary setting for the series. Contains the Parks and Recreation Department, as well as other departments and offices.
- The Fourth Floor of City Hall is the "creepy" floor that hosts the Department of Motor Vehicles, divorce filings, and probation offices.[5]
- The Snakehole Lounge, a sleazy nightclub where many after-work functions are held. Donna Meagle is an investor, as was Tom Haverford before Chris Traeger made him sell his shares.
- JJ's Diner, a diner that is the unofficial meeting place for people in the government. It is Leslie Knope's favorite eatery, where she always orders waffles.
- The Bulge, a gay club. Leslie became an inadvertent hero of its patrons when she "married" two penguins at the Pawnee Zoo, not realizing they were both male.
- Food and Stuff, a store frequented by Ron Swanson where he purchases meat, along with miscellaneous items such as mufflers.
- The Glitter Factory, a strip club that Tom frequents. They serve an all-you-can-eat breakfast buffet that Ron Swanson appreciates.
- Turnbill Mansion, the site of a historic wedding between a Pawnee Native American man and white woman, which became a "bloodbath" when knowledge of the wedding became public, with the sole survivors being two horses.[6]
Annual functions
- The Harvest Festival, a carnival-like festival that spreads across the entire town. Budget cuts terminated it, but Leslie revived it in season three with resounding success.
- Government Follies, a yearly pageant held around Christmas, hosted by one of the departments, parodying Pawnee's government.
- Tellenson Award for Public Service, a yearly award given to government officials for public service, given to Leslie's mother in the first season.
- Ted Party Day, a celebration supporting the historic tea party where a random person named Ted is thrown into the lake because the old handwriting makes "Tea" look like "Ted" in the document. As of the events of "Article Two," after people named Ted opposed being thrown into the lake, the city began using a volunteer that would portray Ted.
Reception
The city of Pawnee has received critical acclaim. Several critics have noted that the city has become the show's secret weapon. Hillary Busis of Entertainment Weekly wrote that "the show wouldn't work nearly as well if it were set in a less wonderfully quirky place" and raved that "some of the show’s funniest moments come when the extreme weirdness of its setting is revealed — when, say, Leslie explains what’s going on in one of City Hall’s numerous, horrifically offensive murals, or when she dispatches ridiculous bits of Pawnee history. ('For a brief time in the ’70s, our town was taken over by a cult.') And then there’s how absurdly cosmopolitan Pawnee is: Why does this blip on the map have its own tabloid news show, zoo, beauty pageant, periodicals, and thriving nightlife scene? Pawnee is more than a setting — it’s a rich comic universe, like Springfield."[7]
Merchandise
Since the premiere of the show, NBC has sold merchandise for the town of Pawnee. Shirts, sweatshirts, mugs, and others were sold with the seal of Pawnee, and shirts with Pawnee's slogan, "First in Friendship, Fourth in Obesity".[8] In the episode "Born & Raised," Leslie writes a book about the town, called Pawnee: The Greatest Town in America. After the episode aired, NBC released an actual book of the same name, filled with information about the fictional town.[9] The author is listed as "Leslie Knope", although it was actually written by show writer Nate DiMeo. In 2012, it was nominated for the Thurber Prize for American Humor.
References
- ↑ "City of Pawnee - History". Pawneeindiana.com. 2009-12-03. Retrieved 2012-09-22.
- ↑ "Watch Parks and Recreation: The Future of Tom and Ann's Relationship online | Free". Hulu. Retrieved 2012-09-22.
- ↑ "City of Pawnee". Retrieved 28 February 2016.
- ↑ Taylor, Jessica (11 February 2015). "'Parks and Recreation' takes crusade to D.C.". The Hill. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
- ↑ "City of Pawnee - The Fourth Floor". Pawneeindiana.com. 2009-12-03. Retrieved 2012-09-22.
- ↑ "94 Meetings."
- ↑ Ross, Dalton. "'Parks and Recreation': Let's hear it for Pawnee, the town for weirdos who care | PopWatch | EW.com". Popwatch.ew.com. Retrieved 2012-09-22.
- ↑ "Parks & Recreation Merchandise | Parks & Recreation Store - NBC". Nbcuniversalstore.com. Retrieved 2012-09-22.
- ↑ Knope, Leslie (2011). Pawnee: The Greatest Town in America (1st ed.). New York: Hyperion. ISBN 978-1401310646.
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