UnREAL: quite possibly the best new show of 2015. All of the praise that it's gotten has been well-earned. The one thing sticking point I have is the repeated claim that Rachel Goldberg is “the female Walter White.”
Now, I have nothing against the idea of a female Walter White character. Walt's
comedic doppelganger was a woman; some day soon he'll
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Okay then.
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Oh, that is great, ITA. I've assumed that Rachel probably did pretty well socially throughout her life just because she's so good at working people. But regardless of how she would come across to an observer, Rachel would feel like an unfairly overlooked Smart Quirky Girl.
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This lifestyle is more ideological than Don realizes. The American Way(TM) of the early '60s was in no small part a pervasive and intimate repudiation of communism. And Don Draper could only have happened to the world under that particular implementation of capitalism, where he can collect wealth without being restricted by his class background. But he's unusual in his success - indeed, to stop being working-class and get on the road to riches, he had to give up his own name and take on someone else's. Sterling Cooper - or, more accurately, the clients they work so hard to enrich - will lead to the exploitative and unsustainable economic situation of the twenty-first century. Rachel, born into an “upper-middle-class” family of similar social standing as Betty and her children, is broke. While the vast majority of millenials don't come from a comparable social background, her experience of growing up with the belief that education and work will lead to prosperity and then ( ... )
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This is wonderful. I have a problem in general with too much lumping of the socially sanctioned Rachel and Don with outlaw Tony Soprano or Walter White. To a great extent, I think it's a way for the audience to claim some moral superiority that they don't have. Most of the educated, wealthier audience of UnREAL or Mad Men wouldn't join the mafia or deal meth but they either would jump at the chance to be a producer of one of the most highly rated reality shows or a millionaire advertising creative director or it's already their job. MM and UnREAL particularly challenges its audience to hold a mirror up to themselves, instead of to feel EVEN BETTER about themselves or smug about the 2000s vs. the 1960s, as the problems captured in UnREAL indicate in present-day media land ( ... )
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