Here’s an unusual assignment.
Longtime L.A. Times
TV critic Robert Lloyd, whose work I’ve admired for, despite glaring
opportunities, his steadfastly refusing to “write mean”, has written a piece
defending the merits of current network TV.
His challenging statement:
“… the network fall
season might seem to be edging towards irrelevance. Some would say as much about the networks
themselves. I would disagree.”
Gutsy position, wouldn’t you say? And yet, there he is, proclaiming,
analogically:
“It’s basketball. But
there’s no need to be tall.”
Try that on your
harmonica. (And see if your harmonica
doesn’t go, “Stop!”)
Bound by requirements preventing riskier content, today’s
network TV – let’s stick to comedy – today’s network “half-hours” feel creakingly
“Old School.”
For example, earlier this week, I heard a male character, probing
another male character’s date, asking,
“Did you guys… y’know…?”
Sound familiar?
That’s because network television’s been “y’knowing” since the late
sixties. Before which even “y’know” was taboo.
That’s what Robert Lloyd is essentially championing – the
ongoing presence of “y’know”!
To me, Lloyd’s defense of network TV feels straw-graspingly scattered.
He jumps from saying that people toiling
on NCIS – reportedly the most watched
show in the world – are shruggingly oblivious to annual snubs from the Emmys (I seriously suspect that they’re not), to honoring shows where week after
week “… even dysfunction leads to
togetherness” and “… where what falls
apart reliably come(s) back together”, to cherry-picking network classics
from the past – and only the past – mentioning
The Twilight Zone, The Mary Tyler Moore
Show, The West Wing and Seinfeld.
The most recent of which left network schedules in 1998.
Being demonstrably nastier than Robert Lloyd I’d call
today’s network comedies, “The ‘soft food’ of broadcast programming.”
Basic cable, premium cable, streaming services – their
programs, like them or not:
Innovative, layered, subtle and smart.
I don’t know. Do you
really want to malign “innovative, layered, subtle and smart”?
That’s like, “College is great. But don’t knock Sixth Grade.”
At its sensible core, Lloyd’s argument is this:
“Sometimes a person just needs a break.”
That “break” – from “innovative, layered, subtle and smart”,
bless its venerable heart:
Network TV.
Where you don’t have to think hard.
The shows just pour into your brain.
That, proclaims Lloyd, counter-intuitively, is its valuable asset.
Gastronomically analogizing, Lloyd speaks for “simple and
digestible”, saying,
“Sometimes a taste for
molecular gastronomy may be just the thing… But other times a peanut butter
sandwich or a slice of apple pie with vanilla ice cream would be nice, thanks.”
Okay, sure.
But there’s a difference.
The peanut butter sandwich?
The apple pie with vanilla ice cream?
They’re still immensely popular.
Today’s network comedies are not.
Proving, says this voice-in-the-wilderness blogger:
Something is missing.
It’s not just the increased competition that leaves the new
offerings in this genre ignored by a once much larger viewership. Come on.
Watch any new comedy today and see if you don’t get to the ending before
they do.
You want “simple and palatable”? Fine.
But throw me a bone, people. Even
peanut butter sandwiches come “Chunky.”
I know.
“Fish in a barrel.”
However, studying “the other side”, which I shall save for
tomorrow,
Sometimes, succumbing to network parameters, it’s like,
“It’s so predictable, it’s fresh!”
That’s how smart people survive. (And cash in big in syndication.)
They stop complaining,
And make a wonderful piecrust.
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