Okay, CBS, let’s clear a few things up.
As a rule, I am fond of any kind of nose-thumbing to The Man, whoever the man might be. I like comedy that speaks truth to power; I like drama that examines the underpinnings of the status quo, if only so we can go on status-quoing with a little more self-awareness. Lately, The Good Wife has been sticking its tongue out at television—all television, everywhere, except CBS!—in its “For your consideration” cards to Emmy voters, in its continued parody of prestige television with Darkness At Noon, and tonight, even with a dig at streaming services (and also NBC Universal).
It’s not out of character for The Good Wife, which also makes some fantastic drama by deliberately flouting conventions that other shows follow. It’s stubbornly deconstructive and contrarian, and that is usually to its benefit. As a result it’s pursued topics that other shows would avoid like the plague—like NSA wiretapping, Bitcoin, and cyberbullying—and gone down storytelling paths that are risky at best. Kalinda’s entire character seems designed as a vehicle for all the critiques the show wants to make against other television but hasn’t totally thought through. And Will’s death was another opportunity for the show to pursue something unpredictable and unconventional.
I admire the show’s sense of purpose—and most of the time, if not all of the time, its critiques are on the money. But The Good Wife is itself a prestige television show, and in the past few episodes, all the snark has taken me out of the story, into instead wondering what the showrunners and writers are trying to prove—and to whom. Maybe this is all a complicated bid for the best drama series Emmy, which I think The Good Wife should certainly be in the running for. But it’s looking a little like premature sour grapes. And worse, it is an attitude that seems to implicate viewers more than it implicates rival networks—or their parent network, for that matter. People like True Detective, but we think it’s dumb—let’s make fun of it with a fake TV show! People watch TV on demand because it’s easier—but ha ha, it totally isn’t! Let’s make fun of that, too!
Okay, CBS, let’s clear a few things up.
As a rule, I am fond of any kind of nose-thumbing to The Man, whoever the man might be. I like comedy that speaks truth to power; I like drama that examines the underpinnings of the status quo, if only so we can go on status-quoing with a little more self-awareness. Lately, The Good Wife has been sticking its tongue out at television—all television, everywhere, except CBS!—in its “For your consideration” cards to Emmy voters, in its continued parody of prestige television with Darkness At Noon, and tonight, even with a dig at streaming services (and also NBC Universal).
It’s not out of character for The Good Wife, which also makes some fantastic drama by deliberately flouting conventions that other shows follow. It’s stubbornly deconstructive and contrarian, and that is usually to its benefit. As a result it’s pursued topics that other shows would avoid like the plague—like NSA wiretapping, Bitcoin, and cyberbullying—and gone down storytelling paths that are risky at best. Kalinda’s entire character seems designed as a vehicle for all the critiques the show wants to make against other television but hasn’t totally thought through. And Will’s death was another opportunity for the show to pursue something unpredictable and unconventional.
I admire the show’s sense of purpose—and most of the time, if not all of the time, its critiques are on the money. But The Good Wife is itself a prestige television show, and in the past few episodes, all the snark has taken me out of the story, into instead wondering what the showrunners and writers are trying to prove—and to whom. Maybe this is all a complicated bid for the best drama series Emmy, which I think The Good Wife should certainly be in the running for. But it’s looking a little like premature sour grapes. And worse, it is an attitude that seems to implicate viewers more than it implicates rival networks—or their parent network, for that matter. People like True Detective, but we think it’s dumb—let’s make fun of it with a fake TV show! People watch TV on demand because it’s easier—but ha ha, it totally isn’t! Let’s make fun of that, too!
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