Dear flist,
There are a number of you who need to read
this article in Slate right now, this minute. Here's an excerpt:
Television hates nothing more than a happy couple....we've all grown used to the couples we love waiting a lot longer than two years to get it on. The problem seems to be that writers and actors are unable to reliably generate
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And then, if they're in an ensemble show, it's not like how they relate to everyone else is going to change. At least, not as significantly.
I don't know. I don't see any reason to tolerate it; just because it's the norm doesn't mean it should be.
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Do you remember a TV series from the 80's called "McGruder and Loud?" I adored it. They were cops, and because of the demands of their jobs they decided to keep their marriage a secret. As I recall, their apartments had a secret panel that opened. There was lots of drama (especially when one got shot and the other couldn't conceal their anguish publicly). Probably now it would seem primitive 80's. But I'd like to see something along those lines again.
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I'm right now thinking of Northern Exposure; unfortunately, I'm only really familiar with the early seasons, because most of my viewing of the show was on late-night reruns when it was still airing first-runs (IOW, I only saw bits and pieces of 5th season, in particular.) As I recall, Joel and Maggie did eventually get together, though it was not too long before Joel left, so they didn't have much time to explore it. The writing on that show was strong enough that if Joel had stuck around, I'm sure they would have kept their chemistry going.
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McGruder and Loud didn't last very long. I don't remember if objectively speaking it was any good. I thought it was good at the time, which isn't saying much.
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Wherever they are now, I hope they're compensating for their chastity. (In the world of fan fiction, they certainly are.)
LOL
Why the hell can there be so many TV shows on the air where the two central characters are a married couple? Why can't THOSE shows be an example to the others?
Although yeah, Jim/Pam, that IS so much fun.
Sincerely, Allaine
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I loved them to pieces. The dynamic was just wonderful.
I really want a Nick and Nora Charles style detective drama/comedy/mystery tv series
Yes! You have to give the characters a story to work with. Too many shows start with a premise that will instantly collapse if the couple ever gets together. (For instance, if the name of your show is The Nanny than if the nanny marries into the family and becomes the stepmother than your title doesn't even make sense anymore.) But if you start with a premise that says "These two people who are meant for each other are going to team up to fight crime or whatever," then you've got a chance. Which is why Moonlighting was such a crash-n-burn disappointment, because it had the potential to be a modern Nick & Nora (with added snark!) and instead they jettisoned the very part of the show that would have made the show work.
I have only the fuzziest memories of Hart to Hart (and some folks have ( ... )
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Probably because all the married-sleuths tv series crashed-and-burned ;)
There's no real reason why that format shouldn't work on tv. We see it all the time with sitcoms. But not in dramas or genre. Do TPTB honestly think people *don't* want to see couples together? That this will keep us from watching? Or is it as the article on Slate suggests--that it's more fun to write misery than it is to come up with fresh ideas when people are married and settled down.
Why was the 80's flush with boy-girl detective shows, and now...zip?
(See in one of my comments above--there was Hart to Hart and there was also a show called McGruder and Loud which did the married cops dynamic beautifully).
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There's a long list of fandoms since then where I've been burned, but there are some where things have worked out okay.
I think it's great you're just enjoying the shows. My advice is, enjoy the ride and keep a floatation device handy for the landing...
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*happysigh*
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Too much of the time with series, the couple everyone wants to see together is kept apart or breaks up because of reasons that start to feel forced or arbitrary. Which then makes the audience care less about the characters, which leads to dropping ratings, and then to cancellation. Ironically, the artificial obstacles were dropped in to boost ratings in the first place.
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