[October 15th marks the 70th anniversary of I Love Lucy’s debut. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy Lucyyyyyyyyyyyy and other sitcoms—share your responses and other sitcom analyses for a crowd-sourced post that’ll need no canned laughter!]
Let me start by saying
that I’ve gotten a lot of pleasure out of Friends
over the years; once they got into their rhythm, this was one of the
better ensemble casts of any sitcom in history, and produced lots of very funny as well as
many touching moments over the years. But at the same time, like so
many hugely popular cultural works, this TV show also reflected and
extended some of the darker elements in America’s collective psyche. Here are
three such dark sides to the mega-successful sitcom:
1)
Anti-Intellectualism: As Richard
Hofstadter knew all too well, there’s been a longstanding, influential
current of anti-intellectualism in American society. And in its consistently
snarky and often downright nasty portrayal of Ross Geller (David Schwimmer)’s
job as a college professor of paleontology, Friends
unfortunately played into this current and to the stereotypes
of eggheaded academics on which it has often relied. Each character’s work
world was the subject of plenty of jokes, but I would argue that only Ross’s
was so thoroughly tied to the character’s worst personality traits and tendencies,
with virtually no attention to any other elements of the profession. Not smart,
Friends.
2)
Homophobia: To be honest, there’s not much I can
say about Chandler Bing (Matthew Perry)’s constant homophobia that wasn’t said
already in this
great Slate piece. But I would
particularly single out the character of Chandler’s father, who is either a
cross-dressing man or a transgendered woman (it’s never made quite clear, but
the character is played
by Kathleen Turner), and whom both Chandler and the show treat almost
entirely as a combination of cringing embarrassment and shameful joke. Transparent or Grace and Frankie this most definitely isn’t, folks—and even
for its own late 90s/early 00s moment, Friends
was behind the curve.
3)
Diversity: None other than the
great Ta-Nehisi Coates has referenced the thoroughgoing lack of racial
diversity on Friends, as well as the
careless way the show recycled the same plotline for its two prominent African
American guest stars, Aisha
Tyler and Gabrielle Union. But the show’s diversity problem was even
broader and deeper than that: this was a show set in New York City in the late
20th century, and the only prominent Asian
character was literally fresh off the plane from China; I can’t remember
any significant Hispanic characters or indeed prominent characters of any
non-white ethnicity other than the three I’ve mentioned (and that’s over ten
seasons!). I’m not arguing that one of the six friends would have had to be
non-white, necessarily—but if their turn of the 21st century
American world is so completely white, well, that’s an indictment of either the
characters or the show.
Next
SitcomStudying tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other sitcoms you’d study?
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