Saturday, May 22, 2010

There's Nothing Ironic About Show Choir!: The Sentimentality of Glee



Since before its actual airing, I had been hearing buzz about Fox’s Glee becoming the new television sensation. After attempting to watch the pilot, I found myself unimpressed by the show half-way through and gave up, deciding that the show did not live up to its hype. Still, the buzz didn’t die down as the season went on, and I couldn’t help but wonder if the show actually got better after the 25 minutes I had actually watched. So I gave the show another shot and watched the first dozen or so episodes in one sitting. What I found was that the show was much more enjoyable than I had originally assumed. Yet, there was something about the show that still struck me as strange. There seems to be a certain sentimentality to the show that hipster cynics tend to reject unless it is being treated ironically. Yet those same cynics have embraced the show whole heartedly. This raised the question for me: What is the appeal of Glee?

The fact that a musical television show has, to the best of my knowledge, never been attempted before certainly adds a sense of originality to the show. Yet, the show is more than a musical. Glee is a hyper-postmodern collage of musical, sitcom, teen drama and soap opera genres. In traditional postmodern style, the show is brimming with irony, which I would argue is a large part of the show’s appeal. The irony of the show comes in the wholesomeness of the show’s premise being contrasted against clearly unwholesome elements, such as Sue’s abusive treatment of her cheerleading squad, or Terri’s stint as a school nurse where she fed all of the students pseudoephedrine in a misguided attempt to keep them “happy and healthy.” Yet, as Rachel so acutely points out in the pilot episode “There’s nothing ironic about show choir!”

The ironic elements of the series create the illusion that the show is parodying conventions of the genres it incorporates into its pop-culture blender. However, the irony and the sentimentality of the show, while simultaneously present, are kept distinctly separate. Take, for example, the episode “The Power of Madonna.” That the show’s plot was an razor thin premise designed as an excuse to do an episode centered around Madonna was treated with a postmodern self-reflexivity; the show was fully aware of how flimsy this premise was and reveled in the absurdity of it. Yet, the show still fell back on a stock plotline that it did not treat ironically. One plotline of the show involves the male characters collectively treating their female counterparts poorly and putting together a performance for the women as a way of apology. If this plot sounds familiar, it’s possibly because Saved by the Bell did it in 1990 with “Breaking Up is Hard to Undo” and Boy Meets World had the same plotline in 1997 with “Last Tango in Philly.” All of these episodes ended with the men putting on a performance of some sort, and Saved by the Bell’s incarnation of the plot was the only one of these three examples without a musical number.

The following episode, “Home,” features another stock plotline straight out of the sitcom archives. After the events of “The Power of Madonna” land Kurt and Mercedes in the Cheerios, Sue forces Mercedes to lose weight, forcing her to develop an eating disorder. The story of a female character developing an eating disorder for exactly one episode, only to find herself miraculously cured of her affliction by the next episode (which is almost unheard of in the real world of eating disorders) has been so prevalent in sitcoms over the years that examples of it hardly need citing. The episode concludes with Mercedes realizing that she does not need to lose weight, singing the song “Beautiful” at a pep rally to demonstrate her renewed confidence, much to the surprise of her new coach, Sue. If there is irony to be found in this plot, it’s in the fact that Sue, rather than being punished for her abuse of her cheerleaders, is actually rewarded for her behavior when a local reporter mistakenly believes that Mercedes performance was planned by Sue and, thus, gives Sue a glowing write-up in the local newspaper. Still, the lesson that Mercedes learns is a trite one that has been taught to female sitcom characters for several decades and it becomes doubtful that Mercedes will ever show signs of her eating disorder again, which would place her more in line with real life anorexics and bulimics than with the anorexic-for-a-day women of the classic family sitcom.

What I think disarms the otherwise cynical and jaded television viewer is the irony in these episodes—or, to be more accurate, the perceived irony. Because the show goes to such extremes with Sue’s hateful and ignorant remarks, Brittany’s bizarre non sequiturs, and Emma’s comical naiveté and germ phobia, it creates the illusion that these stock plotlines are being parodied. Yet, these extreme elements of the show are kept in separate boxes from the stock plots described above, and the sitcom sentimentality is carried out unironically. My point here is not to suggest that Glee is not a wildly entertaining show. Rather, I’d like to point out that the show is pulling from the very hokey family sitcoms that its otherwise jaded audience would normally reject. Feel free to continue enjoying it, but understand that, in pulling from the clichéd plots of family based sitcoms, the show is not performing satire. The sentimentality is meant to be nothing more than pure sentimentality.

Friday, January 15, 2010

The Late Shift 2: How NBC Dug Their Own Late Night Grave



Hello, all! I’ve come back out of the darkness. Now, in light of recent events in Haiti, it seems trivial for me to talk about matters of little importance like media and television but, this is a media studies blog, and I have nothing in particular to say about the media’s coverage of the earthquake in Haiti. All I can say about the situation is that I encourage you to donate and help out as much as you can. I donated at http://www.yele.org, you can also, naturally, go to http://www.redcross.org. Do all you can, please. Now, while I cannot help the current crisis situation, I can lighten the mood by talking about something funny today: the amazing mismanagement of a major broadcast network.

Now, since I intend for this blog to be an academic blog, I always try to keep somewhat of an academic distance in my writing. Whether I succeed or fail in that regard is up to debate. However, in this entry, I find myself struggling to maintain my impartiality. What I am talking about, of course, is NBC’s astounding mismanagement of both The Jay Leno Show and the subsequent Jay Leno/Conan O’Brien controversy.

As NBC planned to move the failing Jay Leno Show to Leno’s old 11:30 PM timeslot, Internet fan support for Conan O’Brien, who has said he will not do a Tonight Show at 12:05 AM, became so strong it prompted a New York Times article.1 The article estimates fan support of Conan on Twitter beating out fan support for Leno by more than a 50-to-1 ratio. With support of Conan getting so much media attention, NBC obviously has to be aware that fans are favoring O’Brien. Yet, in a stunningly odd PR move yesterday, Dick Ebersol chose to ignore fan support for Conan and publicly blame Conan O’Brien for the entire fiasco.2 According to him, O’Brien failed to take Ebersol’s advice on how to broaden the appeal of the show. How, exactly, this accounts for the low ratings of The Jay Leno Show, or how, exactly, advice from Dick Ebersol, who caused ratings for Saturday Night Live to drop when he took over that late night comedy show in 19813, was never explained in the article.

As I have been writing this article, I have now found sources online reporting that Jay Leno will officially be taking back The Tonight Show, with Conan exiting NBC with a 30 million dollar severance package. Obviously, as witnessed by the Ebersol interview, NBC and Conan are not parting ways on good terms. If one were to place blame for the entire debacle, I would say that the blame rests on the shoulders of the network themselves, as the situation comes about as a result of several strikingly poor decisions on the part of the network. While the network tried to pride themselves on being able to take risks, the series of that led to the creation and ultimate failure of The Jay Leno Show can be better described as reckless.

The network first announced in September 2004 that they would be replacing Jay Leno with Conan O’Brien starting in 2009. The network’s decision seemed strange since Leno had been winning his time slot. The best explanation for the decision, as posed by Leno himself, is that, perhaps, NBC predicted a decline in the ratings within five years. At the time, Leno agreed to the change without any fuss, and the plan to transition to the new host in 2009 was put in place. The problem is that five years is a long time to think over a decision, and during that time, Leno started to regret his agreement to step down from the show and started entertaining offers from competing networks. Worried that Jay Leno, who had been consistently beating his late night competitor David Letterman for many years, would become Conan’s new competition in the 11:30 timeslot, NBC offered him a show in the 10 PM weekday timeslot five nights a week.4

No network had aired the same show in prime time five nights of the week since the Dumont network aired Captain Video and His Video Rangers from 1949 to 1955. While it seems like a risky move to do something as radical as putting the same show on in prime time five nights a week, the economic logic behind the show was pretty sound. While cable and premium cable are becoming more and more popular, broadcast networks consistently beat out cable networks in prime time ratings. While we now live in a five network era, the two younger networks, Fox and The CW, do not have any programming on in the 10-11 PM time slot. Therefore, NBC is pretty much guaranteed to finish at least third in the ratings every day in that time slot. Thus, they can easily aim for a modest ratings success in the 10-11 timeslot rather than trying to win their timeslot and simply make a less expensive show, like a talk show, to increase their profit margin.

While this is a sound strategy on a national level, NBC failed to take into account the effect this would have on a local level. The majority of the revenue for a local affiliate station comes from that ever important timeslot between the end of prime time and the beginning of late night at 11:00 to 11:30 (or earlier for a Fox or CW station) where stations air the local news. While a third place finish of a cheap show may be acceptable to NBC on a national level, it just was not okay as a lead in for local affiliates who saw their local news numbers tank due to a low-rated lead in.5 The affiliates even had a name for this problem: “The Leno Effect.”

It would be unfair to claim that NBC had no way of predicting that this would happen as they did get an early indicator from my own local NBC affiliate, WHDH 7 in Boston. The Boston affiliate originally claimed that they would not show The Jay Leno Show when it aired because they were afraid that it would kill the ratings for their local news. They planned to, instead, push their local news to the 10:00 timeslot. The affiliate only backed down when NBC threatened to pull all programming from WHDH.6 Still, this was not where NBC made their biggest mistake. Their biggest mistake was in the fact that, while trying to change the face of prime time television, they failed to give themselves an out if anything went wrong.

Whether it was because they thought their plan for the show was so economically sound or because they wanted to appease Leno, NBC made a strange move when they gave Leno his own primetime show, promising to keep the show on for at least one year regardless of ratings.7 Despite NBC’s claim that the Jay Leno Show was like launching 5 new shows in prime time, this contract hardly seems like the contract for a new show. A new show would almost never be guaranteed a full season run regardless of ratings, and most new shows in prime time are not running through the summer either. Leno was guaranteed a full year of episodes, five nights a week, which further shows that the network was thinking nationally and not locally. While the network could always afford to take the hit of finishing in third every night as long as the budget for the show itself was pretty cheap, local affiliates certainly could not handle that kind of ratings bust for a year straight.

Thus, Conan’s fate was sealed. Despite the support for O’Brien, NBC had no choice but to move Leno somewhere else in their schedule, or else force their affiliates into bankruptcy. The 30 million dollar severance package to Conan O’Brien was, in essence, the cheapest option that NBC had available to them under the circumstances. What becomes the biggest shame of all this, though, is that O’Brien, who worked for years behind Leno with the promise of being given the prestigious title of Tonight Show host, and uprooted his entire family and moved them to Los Angeles, is being forced to let go of one of his life’s dreams because NBC backed themselves into a corner. As O’Brien said on what will now be one of his last few episodes of The Tonight Show: “I just want to say to the kids out there watching: You can do anything you want in life. Unless Jay Leno wants to do it, too.”

1 Stelter, Brian. "In Leno vs. O'Brien, Fans Show Allegiance Online." New York Times 14 Jan. 2010: C1. NYTimes.com. 13 Jan. 2010. Web. 15 Jan. 2010. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/14/arts/television/14fans.html?scp=8&sq=conan%20o'brien&st=cse.
2 Carter, Bill. "NBC's Ebersol Defends Leno and Zucker." New York Times. 15 Jan. 2010. Web. 15 Jan. 2010. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/15/business/media/15conan.html?ref=business.
3 McDermott, Mark. "Ebersol, Dick." The Museum of Broadcast Communications. MBC. Web. 15 Jan. 2010. http://www.museum.tv/eotvsection.php?entrycode=ebersoldick.
4 Hirschberg, Lynn. "Heeeere’s . . . Conan!!!" New York Times Magazine 24 May 2009: 30-36. NYTimes.com. 20 May 2009. Web. 15 Jan. 2010. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/24/magazine/24Conan-t.html?_r=1.
5 Carter, Bill. "Late-Night Shift Sinking, NBC Wants Leno Back in Old Slot." New York Times 8 Jan. 2010: A1. NYTimes.com. 7 Jan. 2010. Web. 15 Jan. 2010. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/08/business/media/08leno.html?hp.
6 Heslam, Jessica. "Channel 7 to Broadcast Jay Leno This Fall." Boston Herald 13 Apr. 2009. Print.
7 Levine, Stuart. "Leno Pulls Wraps Off His Primetime Show." Variety 5 Aug. 2009. Variety.com. Reed Elsevier Inc., 5 Aug. 2009. Web. 15 Jan. 2010. http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118006952.html?categoryId=14&cs=1.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Video of the Week - Megan Fox as Catwoman?

A long overdue new Video of the Week that speaks for itself:

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Die Hard, James Bond, Captain Kirk and The Doctor: Versions of the Masculine "Action Star"


I'm back, after a long absence! I started writing this blog at the beginning of the summer, and left it unfinished for months as I focused on things like my thesis and Poetry Slam Nationals. But, I'm back with a nice long blog. Enjoy!

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When I saw the recent Star Trek movie, it got me thinking about concepts of masculinity in media. It’s a subject that, as a man, naturally comes up in my mind a lot. When we think of a “guy movie” we think of explosions, fist fights, big, muscular men and lots of guns and other phallic weaponry. Yet, I’d like to propose an alternate theory to what the concept of a “guy movie,” or, alternately in television, a “guy show,” really is. I would suggest that there’s something else that appeals to male viewers in these types of movies and television shows besides sheer action.

We tend to think of these images of masculinity being projected onto men by the media, creating a stereotype of the typical “male.” I cannot, with a straight face, deny that there is some truth to that notion. What I want to suggest, though, is that there’s also an element of wish fulfillment in these shows and movies. Males in our society are often pressured into the roles of providers, leaders, father figures, etc. The concept of masculinity is often tied to a concept of leadership. Naturally, the feminist movement and other shifts in gender politics are altering these ideas, but much of that concept remains in the minds of males. With a concept of leadership comes the responsibility to be a decision maker. Therefore, I would suggest that these films and shows are a chance for males to live vicariously through characters who exemplify what men are often pressured to be: good leaders and excellent decision makers. Additionally, the main characters of these stories must not only be good leaders and decision makers, but must have the ability to adapt these skills to a number of diverse situations.

This thought first came to me when I was watching the fourth movie in the Die Hard series, the poorly titled Live Free or Die Hard:



This trailer is certainly laden with explosions, but notice Bruce Willis’s dialogue in the trailer. Much of it is about how sure he is of his actions. He acts with the utmost confidence in all of his decisions, including driving a car into a helicopter, which he speaks of with surprising nonchalance. What this trailer fails to show is one of the other main pleasures of the film, which is the adaptability of the John McClane character to an unfamiliar situation. McClane has little knowledge about the Internet or any other new technologies, hence the need for Justin Long’s character, Matt Farrell. Farrell stands in stark contrast to McClane’s confidence as he is often frightened and unconfident in his actions. His main purpose is to provide McClane with the technological information needed to defeat their enemy, Thomas Gabriel. McClane quickly assimilates this information and uses it to adapt his game plan.

Therefore, the primary element of Live Free or Die Hard that makes it a “guy movie” is not so much the action element as the ability for McClane to adapt to new situations. The film is the ultimate fish-out-of-water situation for McClane: he is quickly thrust into a crisis that he did not anticipate in a field which he is not familiar with (technology) and can just as quickly adapt to the threat. It is his superior decision making skills that give him the ability to thwart Thomas Gabriel’s plan with little time to prepare while Gabriel has, potentially, had years to plan. McClane’s masculinity is demonstrated, not merely in his muscle, but in the speed and accuracy with which he moves through the mental processes of assessment, analysis and execution of a plan when he encounters a new and unfamiliar situation.

It brings to my mind the comments made by my good friend’s cousin, who is in his early teens, regarding Martin Campbell’s 2006 James Bond reboot film, Casino Royale: “He’s not James Bond. He makes mistakes.” Daniel Craig’s James Bond in Casino Royale is a young Bond who is still learning and making reckless mistakes. While he can perform the assessment, analysis, execution process with a great deal of speed, his accuracy leaves something to be desired.



This is the chase scene from very early in Casino Royale. If you don’t wish to watch the entire thing, then at least direct your attention to the moment at approximately 4:45 in this clip. While Bond shows great confidence and quick, accurate decision making skills through most of this clip, at this point in the chase scene he hesitates. He shows a lack of confidence in the jump he is about to make, and then fails to make the jump with the same accuracy as the man he’s chasing. This is not the only time in the chase scene when he fails to land on his feet, literally or figuratively. He crashes and falls several times in the chase and, in the end, he diffuses a standoff by setting off an explosion which later creates an international uproar and negative publicity for MI6. Throughout the rest of the movie, we see Bond showing some other poor decisions, failing to read people both at the poker table and in real life, being double crossed more than once and being easily fooled by another poker player who set him up to lose approximately 10 million dollars.

Look at this in contrast to the new Star Trek movie. The movie tells the story of Kirk’s meteoric yet completely impossible rise from the rank of cadet to captain. Kirk, like Daniel Craig’s Bond, is a young and reckless version of a classic, iconic character. Kirk makes rash and bold decisions but, unlike Bond, he shows an inhuman ability to make the right decisions at all times. This is especially odd when he manages to see the connection between a special anomaly encountered by the Enterprise and a similar anomaly that was present in the battle that killed his father, a connection that no sane or logical person would have made.

Kirk bucks authority at almost every turn, especially the authority of the young Spock who becomes the temporary captain of the Enterprise, outranking Kirk. Kirk’s disregard for authority is rewarded instead of punished because he is usually proven to be correct in the end. Even his decision to cheat at the unwinnable test at the academy by reprogramming it is ultimately rewarded as he is rescued from possible expulsion by an impromptu mission, which Kirk becomes the hero of, earning him a commendation instead of an expulsion.

Yet, the examples I’m giving here are all of war-headed tough guys who fit into the archetype of a male action hero. Yet, I’d like to present an example of a less traditional figure of masculinity taken from British television, a pacifist action star of sorts: David Tennant’s portrayal of the Tenth Doctor on the long running series Doctor Who.

For those of you unacquainted with the series, you might benefit from a very quick rundown of the show’s plot. The “Doctor,” the titular character of the series, is an alien of a species known as the Time Lords from a planet called Gallifrey, who travels around time and space in a time machine/space ship known as a TARDIS which is disguised as a police call box (which becomes more and more conspicuous with each passing year since call boxes have disappeared from England) with a constantly rotating series of companions who are usually human. The show started out in the 1960’s and, when the original actor to play The Doctor, William Hartnell, decided to leave the series, the show’s producers didn’t want to end the series, so they wrote in a plot device in which the Doctor is capable of avoiding death by a process of “regeneration” moments before his death. This regeneration, while keeping The Doctor alive, results in a complete change in his appearance, voice and even his personality, allowing for the lead actor to be replaced whenever it is necessary to do so. Because of this, the show has lasted over three decades, albeit non-consecutively, with ten different actors playing The Doctor, and an eleventh already cast for a new season beginning in 2010.

David Tennant, the current actor to play the role, portrays what might be the most pacifist version of the character to date (although, I could be incorrect on this, as I have only ever seen the first, fourth, fifth, eighth, ninth and tenth doctors.) The character’s progression towards a pacifist has been gradual, moving from the violent war veteran Ninth Doctor who inaugurated the revamped series in 2005 to a much more non-violent version of the character by the fourth and most recent season of the new series. The Doctor is often forced to commit violent acts, falling into the classic Star Trek plot device where the hero wishes to be peaceful but a universe full of violent monsters won't let him. This includes acts such as destroying the Sontaran battleship in the two part episode “The Sontaran Stratagem”/”The Poison Sky,” or killing the last of an arachnid-like alien race in the 2007 Christmas special, “The Runaway Bride.” However, in both of these situations, he only kills his enemies to keep them from taking other lives, and, even then, he offers them an opportunity to live if they surrender first.

Yet, despite being such a staunch pacifist, David Tennant’s Tenth Doctor holds many of the same masculine qualities as Captain Kirk, James Bond or even John McClane. The Doctor’s ability to adapt to new situations is unrivaled. Due to his extremely advanced age, there is almost no alien race he is unfamiliar with, no scientific principle that baffles him, and no point in Earth history that he does not have an intimate knowledge of, often having been present or even responsible for these momentous event. He still finds himself surprised from time to time—you could make a drinking game out of the number of times he uses the phrase “It can’t be”—but he quickly and enthusiastically adapts to the surprising situation and finds a solution almost instantaneously, often with an oddly childlike sense of glee.

Take this famous clip from the show’s 2008 Christmas Special “Voyage of the Damned.” In this clip, he just accidentally crashed on a luxury cruise spaceship aptly called The Titanic, and figured out quite quickly that the ship had been sabotaged and was about to be struck by a series of comets while its shields were down. The only reason he failed to stop the collision was due to a series of security guards and robots physically restraining him from warning the passengers and resetting the shields. Yet, even in the wake of this disaster, he spends little time panicking. He quickly asseses the situation, formulates a plan, and takes a leadership role amongst the survivors:



Despite being a man who detests violence and refuses to carry a weapon—instead only carrying a tool called a "sonic screwdriver" that allows him to open doors and fiddle with electronic machinery—his decision making skills and confident swagger make him a classic action star. Thus, we see how big muscles, guns and explosions aren’t the most important ingredient in creating masculine oriented media (although, admittedly, these things are not completely absent from any of the media we’ve looked at).

Whether this is a positive or negative trait of these movies would be the subject of another blog. My purpose here is mainly analysis, not judgement. I could also write a whole separate blog about how this same formula is used to empower women by creating similar female action stars like Buffy in Buffy the Vampire Slayer or The Bride in Kill Bill. However, where these female characters often show their strength by combining their leadership and decision making skills in battle with other important responsibilities in their lives, their male action counterparts allow male fans to fulfill one main role vicariously through them: the role of an unfaltering leader.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

"Who died and made you..." by Victor Infante



Normally I post my own writing on this blog. However, after the announcement of a possible Buffy the Vampire Slayer reboot movie, I found that I couldn't really think of anything to say that my friend Victor Infante didn't say in a recent entry in his own personal blog. So, with permission from the original author, I bring you the following from the editor-in-chief of the online literary magazine The November 3rd Club, copy editor for the Worcester Telegram, author of City of Insomnia, which is available from Write Bloody Press, and a man of many other accolades, Victor Infante:


I'm pretty sure I've never seen word of a movie get such a sudden and sharp denunciation from its potential audience as the proposed reboot of Buffy the Vampire Slayer1. Really. It's been staggering2. The news was originally broken by The Hollywood Reporter, who also reported that:

The new "Buffy" film, however, would have no connection to the TV series, nor would it use popular supporting characters like Angel, Willow, Xander or Spike. Vertigo and Kuzui are looking to restart the story line without trampling on the beloved existing universe created by [Joss] Whedon, putting the parties in a similar situation faced by Paramount, J.J. Abrams and his crew when relaunching "Star Trek."3

Which, really, it's not the same situation at all. Buffy has been off the air for less than a decade, and still does a brisk business in DVDs and has an ostensibly canonical continuation in comics. Star Trek was a dying franchise of which the principle image in most young viewers minds was either an aging, overweight William Shatner at his hammiest, or worse, the barely interesting TV show Enterprise. It was time to start again. And that time will come for Buffy, too, but this probably isn't it. Or at least, this is probably not the way to do it.

There's two hard realities butting heads here -- one legal and financial, and the other cultural. On the legal side, the movie rights to Buffy are owned by original director Fran Rabel Kuzui along with her husband Ka. According to Newsarama, "Kuzui and Kuzui Enterprises has held on to the rights since Kuzui, 'discovered the "Buffy” script from then-unknown Whedon. She developed the script while her husband put together the financing to make the 1992 movie, which was released by Fox.'"4

Characters such as as Willow, Giles, Angel and Spike are all owned by Fox, and it's unlikely Fox would release them. And while Whedon still retains some ownership over the franchise, it likely only extends to royalties, not to actual control. Once the movie rights were sold, that's all she wrote. So if they want to make the movie in the face of an outraged and noisy fandom, that's their prerogative.

However, one thing's become clear to me in this process, though: Buffy's an iconic character, and as such, eventually will pass out of Joss' hands. Probably even while he's still alive, although doubtfully while he's still interested. The character has embedded itself in the cultural matrix, and her story will get retold umpteen million different ways. That's how it goes for the icons. But the key to the success of Buffy's next iteration will be the identification of the fundamental elements of the story.

So what are the fundamental elements of the Buffy story? Well, Buffy Summers, obviously. "One girl in all the world with the strength and skill to fight the vampires, blah, blah, blah." But while the movie was first, it's clear that the TV show is the ruling canon, and the characters introduced there have become part of the meta story. At this point, a Buffy without Willow and Giles is a bit like Superman without Lois Lane or Jimmy Olson, and even Smallville made use of Lex Luthor when it started up, along with Superman characters Lana Lang and Pete Ross. The fan reaction is one thing, but stories -- big stories, anyway, and Buffy's earned its place as a big story -- they work a certain way. And oddly, that way has little to do with faithful retelling, and secondary characters ... they have their place in a mythos.

It's like this: there's a certain power in stories that get retold and reinterpreted. Take Batman for example. The Batman in the comics now (err ... before he died) is not the Batman Bob Kane created, nor the one Frank Miller reinvigorated, nor is he the one in the cartoons or the one Christian Bale plays in the movies. But they're all faithful renditions of the story, even if the details are different: You have the boy who watches his wealthy parents get murdered in Gotham City who returns to fight criminals. You have the Batmobile, you have Jim Gordon and his faithful butler Alfred. In most, you have Robin. Some of these details were added along the way, but once they're locked into the mythos, they're there to stay. I'd argue that Giles, Willow & Xander, Angel and Sunnydale itself have locked themselves into that mythos.

So what happens if the new movie goes a completely different direction, and jettisons the existing mythos? Well, then you have a situation like, say, the Halle Barre Catwoman movie, which had nothing to do with the spirit of the mythos save its name. The reaction to the misstep becomes visceral, because some stories have a weight of their own, and not honoring that shows. For what it's worth, I think J.J. Abrams outdid himself with the new Star Trek, and that you could completely see how Christopher Pine and Zachary Quinto could grow into the more familiar older Kirk and Spock. The spirit was there. Is it too much to suspect already that Buffy's spirit is lacking in the proposed movie? It's way too soon to say that, but there's a bad feeling in my gut about it.




1 "BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER remake without Whedon or anything developed from the TV show... seriously..." Ain't It Cool News. 25 May 2009. 26 May 2009 http://www.aintitcool.com/node/41180.
2 "Buffy minus Joss?" Newsarama. 25 May 2009. Imaginova Corp. 26 May 2009 http://blog.newsarama.com/2009/05/25/buffy-minus-joss/.
3 Kit, Boyrs. "'Buffy' in for feature relaunch." Hollywood Reporter. 25 May 2009. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 26 May 2009 http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3i666afabc28491e6a5d5861d83ae30855.
4 Newsarama.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Video of the Week - Jon Stewart vs. Poetry



The Daily Show With Jon StewartM - Th 11p / 10c
Old Man Stewart Shakes His Fist at White House Poetry Jams
thedailyshow.com
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This week’s video of the week comes a little late, but with a longer commentary than usual.

The point of this blog is to talk about my thoughts about the media, not to talk about my life as a slam poet. I have many other forums to discuss that aspect of my life. However, when these two interests intersect, I find it necessary to discuss it here.

This video from The Daily Show with John Stewart created quite a stir within the slam community. While ours is not the first community to be lampooned by Stewart, nor will it be the last, I thought this would be a good chance to discuss the role of a comedian and what can and cannot be deemed an attack from someone like Jon Stewart.

The reactions from poets to this segment ranged from moral outrage to George Watsky’s limerick entitled “Jon Stewart could light my cat on fire, and he would still be My Hero”:

A New York comedian’s mercy
goes only as far as his slurs– he
takes poetry down
but that’s easy to clown
(like the fact that he grew up in Jersey)1

Part of the outrage, undoubtedly, came from the fact that the slam community tends to fall into The Daily Show’s target demographic. Slam poets generally run the gambit from moderate democrats to die-hard socialists with almost no conservative voices in the community. Many poets are, therefore, fans of The Daily Show’s left-leaning political satire. Thus, when Jon Stewart decided to spoof the slam community, many saw it as a sort of betrayal.

Yet, where in the video is Stewart actually attacking the slam community? One moment could be where he claims that “not every first is something to necessarily celebrate,” referring to this being the first White House Poetry “Jam.” Another would be immediately after his montage of the poets’ actual performances where he mocks an admittedly silly sounding line from a poem regarding Alexander Hamilton.

Poetry Slam Incorporated’s president, Scott Woods, argued in a recent column of his that Jon Stewart’s supposed attack on our community would be justified if these poets were representative of the community as a whole:

Jon Stewart makes a comment suggesting that, now that we have black president, poets can stop doing that “jam” thing we do. It is a statement borne out of ignorance of what modern poetry has to offer, but it is a common ignorance…an ignorance poetry does not counter often enough in the public eye, even when given every opportunity to do so.2

Woods is arguing that, if our community is being mocked, we only have ourselves to blame by not putting our best foot forward when given public exposure.

What this comes down to is simply this: the line in the poem was unintentionally funny. Had I been sitting in the back of a poetry reading with one of my friends, I probably would have made some of the same comments that Jon Stewart did.

So, putting those moments aside, what is Stewart really making fun of in this segment? He mocks the media’s discussions about the difference between a “Poetry Slam” and a “Poetry Jam” (the latter being a phrase that is virtually unused in the slam community). He makes jokes about Obama trying too hard to be hip with the cultural events he puts on in the White House. None of these things are really direct attacks on the slam community as a whole.

Furthermore, he mocks himself by naming the segment “Old Man Stewart Shakes His Fist at White House Poetry Jams.” This suggests that this is less than a serious attack, and more of a gentle mockery. Some poets, however, disagree with this. In an online discussion on the Facebook profile of Chicago poet Robbie Q. Telfer, Telfer responded to my argument about Stewart’s own self-deprecation in the piece by saying:

well, i say it's racist and elitist knowing the history of what slam has brought to disenfranchised voices, but also knowing that the daily show writers either don't have access to that history or they don't care. mocking the voice of hip-hop poetry replicates and can encourage the same gate-keeping of language slam poets have been fighting since the beginning of the movement.

i think comedians can get away with racism and elitism for the reasons you give, trevor, but it's still there. and when i talk about "jon stewart" i mean the character, not the actual dude.3

I find this especially interesting that this is coming from a poet who is known for his comedic work. I hope that Robbie Q. will forgive me for saying this, I don’t mean to pigeon-hole him and ignore any of his non-comedic work, but some of his most well known works are comedic. Yet, he brushes off the self-deprecating element of this segment, which is the part that undercuts everything else Stewart is saying. Poetry, in this context, is being presented as something that is “hip,” while Stewart is mocking himself for being “unhip” in doing so. Stewart is, in a way, complimenting the community. As for the “gate-keeping of language that slam poets have been fighting,” I think Scott Woods’s previous comment speaks to that very well.

Stewart’s job as a comedian is to find humor in the news and point it out. Often times, in doing so, he points out the faults of our government and our society. However, as Jon Stewart has made very clear on several occasions, for all his political commentary, his first role on the show is as a comedian. Sometimes, the best comedy comes from finding small, niche groups doing unusual things and poking fun at them. While the “Poetry Jam” that was held at the White House was a big step forward for our community, there were also elements that were particularly funny, such as the clips that Stewart played. Must the slam community take itself so seriously that it can’t take a joke when one is thrown at it? Do you think that, when Conan O’Brien filmed the famous segment for his show where he mocked an old-timey baseball league in Long Island that the league boycotted his show afterwards, or did they understand that what they do probably looks funny to outsiders?

Remember, funny is funny, and a comedian has to find material somewhere. If he doesn’t find it in one community, he’ll find it in another, and we can’t all take it personally when it’s leveled at our community and then laugh when its aimed at someone else’s. The lesson here is simply to not take yourself too seriously, a lesson that Jon Stewart tries to remember with his own career, as evidenced by his famous quote on Crossfire: “The show that leads into me is puppets making crank phone calls."4


1 Watsky, George. "Jon Stewart could light my cat on fire, and he would still be My Hero." Weblog post. GeorgeWatsky.com. 14 May 2009. 19 May 2009 http://www.georgewatsky.com.
2 Woods, Scott. "Poetry is Doomed #23: The White House Poetry Jam." Weblog post. GotPoetry.com. 17 May 2009. 19 May 2009 http://www.gotpoetry.com/News/article/sid=35243.html.
3 I have no freakin’ clue how I would even begin to cite this. I don’t think anybody’s ever thought up an MLA citation format for Facebook conversations that aren’t even readable by the general public. I will say, however, that it was used with permission.
4 "Episode dated 15 October 2004." Crossfire. CNN. 15 Oct. 2004.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Video of the Week - Scrubs Finale

SPOILER ALERT: These are the final moments of the Scrubs Finale. Watch at your own risk.



Since I dedicated an entire article to the Scrubs finale, I thought I'd dedicate the Video of the Week to it as well. Rather than my usual Video of the Week selections which offer commentary on the media, I thought I'd go for sentimentality this week and show you a real tear jerker. If you've been a fan of the show like I have, this is sure to break your heart. Enjoy.
 

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