You’ve got to hand it to the people behind 30 Rock. They really do know their television. This week’s reality TV parody did such a brilliant impression of being mindless, stilted and dumb, it was almost hard to tell it apart from the real thing. For anyone unfamiliar with the franchise, Real Housewives is an orgy of confrontation, collagen and consumerism so stagy it makes my niece’s primary school nativity plays seem nuanced and profound. Typically, it stars a group of expensive, shiny women who brunch and bitch their way through lives of extreme privilege whilst wielding egos so weighty it’s a wonder they can totter around on their yogalates-toned Bambi legs. Our UK equivalent is probably The Only Way Is Essex, the major difference being that, for the most part, the real housewives do seem capable of forming sentences between bikini waxes (even if they are limited to random combinations of the words ‘whore’, ‘Chanel’ and ‘I just need to focus on me right now’). Arrogant and demanding, with a habit of pulling out other women’s weaves, Angie (Sherri Shepherd) proves the perfect lead for her own rich girl reality show and has the co-stars to match. There’s gay hairdresser, D’Fwan, who’s not speaking to Christian illiterate, Randi, because of ‘that thing’ she said in Atlantic City, table-tipping Portia who’s got no class, and Angie’s meth addict nephew, Michael. The bit players did their best, but nobody could match Shepherd, who stole every scene she was in as demented dynamo Angie. Jenna wasn’t the only one playing up to the cameras. Despite his best efforts, the usually suave Jack was fighting his portrayal as a clumsy, gay buffoon by Queen of Jordan’s producers. In a subplot that riffed on how manipulative reality TV editing is, Alec Baldwin played it straight and got his quota of laughs. Liz, meanwhile, was busy trying to get Tracy back so she wouldn’t have to run another ‘Best of TGS’ (that is, if legal weren’t now questioning the use of the word ‘best’). Her methods were dubious and, sho nuff, a bit racist, but her heart was in the right place even if her shirt was tucked into her underwear. The show’s makers took on an ambitious task this week: putting a show-within-a-show-within-a-show, tangling up four subplots and all but burying a major league cameo. But did it work? Some have said no, calling it the worst episode ever, whilst others (oh, you fickle Internet) have ranked it as amongst the best. My opinion? Well, I watched it twice. First time around, I found it jaw-droppingly unfunny. Second viewing, I laughed like a drain. Which just goes to show, what the hell do I know? Read our review of episode 16, TGS Hates Women, here. Follow Den Of Geek on Twitter right here.