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Leslie Knope does her best to improve Pawnee as a member of the city council, only to face frequent resistance from unhappy citizens, corporate interests and rival politicians. And life outside the office is just as wild, as she and Ben try to plan their wedding amidst the usual chaos of their friends’ lives.
Leslie, and Parks as a whole, are going to face these new challenges with the same optimism and can-do spirit that made them so successful in the first place. And so far, I have little reason to doubt that they are up to the task.
In spite of its willingness to embrace change, Parks and Recreation remains deeply aware that repetition is largely what drives viewers to keep tuning in.
It's filled with the witty humor and touching moments we have come to expect, while posing questions about our political, social, and personal systems.
Parks and Rec really found itself as a series when it stopped trying to copy The Office, and let Leslie blossom into an ultra-competent heroine, not a boorish Michael Scott clone.