Television Gripes
Posted: Tue May 07, 2013 5:20 pm
I know it's silly, but a lot of things bug me about prime time dramas.
Police break down a door or walk into a house, confront the Bad Guy, and the BG runs out the back door. A foot-chase follows. Jesus H. Christ, real police couldn't possibly be this stupid. Doesn't anyone think to watch the back-fucking-door? I realize there is some benefit to shooting an exciting chase scene, but really...
The putative Good Guy decides that he or she is finally going to kill the Bad Guy who has been ruining his/her life. S/he takes a gun, confronts the BG, then stands there explaining why the BG will soon be dead, when - OMG! - the BG suddenly grabs the gun out of her hand and turns the tables. I hope if the situation ever comes up in my personal life I will take my cue from Al Pacino in the Godfather. Pull out your gun, kill the fuckers, and walk out. No speeches, hesitation, no shaking gun, or any of that. Jesus. I get so tired of seeing this same scene (thwarted killing) over and over again on all the cop shows.
I realize I'm out of touch with the dating scene, but in television dramas ANY TIME one character has a date or even has a drink with another character it is assumed that they ended their evening doing the old in-and-out. Every other character in the show presumes it, and it is virtually never disputed. I can't remember the last time someone said, "Yes, we spent the evening together but didn't end up in bed." On the other hand, the writers sometimes cling tenaciously to what the refer to as "sexual tension" between main characters where they virtually sniff the other one's chair every time they leave the room, but it never leads to an actual sexual episode (NCIS-LA fans know of the most eggregious example of this). Honestly, the sexual tension thing DOES get old after a while.
Do these directors think the audience is totally unaware of what specific foreign accents sound like? Honestly, they seem to think that foreign accents are interchangeable. And of course American actors are, for the most part, horrible at imitating a foreign accent.
Finally, I wish I could blow up the dream world created by Shonda Rhimes in all of the shows she has created. Normal marriage is non-existent, half the cast is gay, inter-racial relationships and adoptions are ubiquitous, and men find chubby black women (like Shonda Rhimes) irresistable. Not to mention that most of the characters have the maturity of a 15 year old. Sheesh.
Police break down a door or walk into a house, confront the Bad Guy, and the BG runs out the back door. A foot-chase follows. Jesus H. Christ, real police couldn't possibly be this stupid. Doesn't anyone think to watch the back-fucking-door? I realize there is some benefit to shooting an exciting chase scene, but really...
The putative Good Guy decides that he or she is finally going to kill the Bad Guy who has been ruining his/her life. S/he takes a gun, confronts the BG, then stands there explaining why the BG will soon be dead, when - OMG! - the BG suddenly grabs the gun out of her hand and turns the tables. I hope if the situation ever comes up in my personal life I will take my cue from Al Pacino in the Godfather. Pull out your gun, kill the fuckers, and walk out. No speeches, hesitation, no shaking gun, or any of that. Jesus. I get so tired of seeing this same scene (thwarted killing) over and over again on all the cop shows.
I realize I'm out of touch with the dating scene, but in television dramas ANY TIME one character has a date or even has a drink with another character it is assumed that they ended their evening doing the old in-and-out. Every other character in the show presumes it, and it is virtually never disputed. I can't remember the last time someone said, "Yes, we spent the evening together but didn't end up in bed." On the other hand, the writers sometimes cling tenaciously to what the refer to as "sexual tension" between main characters where they virtually sniff the other one's chair every time they leave the room, but it never leads to an actual sexual episode (NCIS-LA fans know of the most eggregious example of this). Honestly, the sexual tension thing DOES get old after a while.
Do these directors think the audience is totally unaware of what specific foreign accents sound like? Honestly, they seem to think that foreign accents are interchangeable. And of course American actors are, for the most part, horrible at imitating a foreign accent.
Finally, I wish I could blow up the dream world created by Shonda Rhimes in all of the shows she has created. Normal marriage is non-existent, half the cast is gay, inter-racial relationships and adoptions are ubiquitous, and men find chubby black women (like Shonda Rhimes) irresistable. Not to mention that most of the characters have the maturity of a 15 year old. Sheesh.