ONTD

9:58 pm - 11/07/2012

“The Golden Age of TV” x TV Wives: A depressing undercurrent of misogyny



Earlier this week, there was a recap posted on Grantland about the latest episode of The Walking Dead, which made some great overall points about the show and its underselling of their own characters, and also touched on a very disturbing trend happening with most of our currently critically beloved shows – the absolute hatred most fandoms seem to have for the wives in them:


(btw, I shouldn’t have to point out how SPOILERY this is, since, like I already mentioned, it’s a recap of the latest episode – but still, just for good measure: Spoilers ahead.)


(…) As befits a character always treated as second-class, T-Dog’s dismemberment was overshadowed by a much more outrageous death last night. And the fact that it’s taken me 900 words just to get to the part of the episode that everyone is talking about reveals my ambivalence. To recap: In an act of perfect TV karma, Lori goes into labor while on the run from a swarm of walkers. In the relative peace and lack of hygiene of a boiler room, she realizes “something is wrong” and insists that Maggie cut the baby out of her, likely ending her life. With a level of uterine gore not seen since Prometheus and a dash of Oedipal agony unimaginable even by Sophocles, this is precisely what happens.

Now, in the short view, there is a part of me that admires the unblinking savagery of Mazzara’s vision. As appalling as everything that happened in the boiler room was, it certainly was consistent with the miserable universe The Walking Dead has created, a place where tough choices are inevitable, pain is unavoidable, and life — particularly young life — is to be protected at any cost. All actresses, inevitably, are asked to perform an agonizing birth scene at least once in their careers, and Sarah Wayne Callies was excellent here. For once, her innate fierceness was used for something other than accusatory snark; in her wide-eyed and desperate good-bye to her son, there was a hint of the ferocious and protective warrior/mother the character could have become with better development and more thoughtful scripts.

As quick as I’ve been to label Lori Grimes one of the worst protagonists on television, the intensity of fan hatred has continually given me pause. There’s a depressing undercurrent of misogyny to a lot of the reaction toward TV wives these days, from Skyler White to Cat Stark. It’s something I’ve been guilty of harping on as much as anyone. But a large part of the blame rests in the writing, the perpetual creation of an impossible dynamic wherein the cool husband wants to do fun and/or violent stuff and the snippy wife is always trying to harsh his mellow. As a TV fan, I wasn’t unhappy to see Lori Grimes go. And the atrocity of it all brought out the best in the normally wooden Andrew Lincoln and certainly made the burden on young Chandler Riggs — who, thus far as an actor, has proven to be all hat and no cattle — even greater. But the exact way she went out was an even greater bummer than the irritating scold the character had become.

Lori’s final words to Carl, before sacrificing herself in front of his young eyes, sounded to me like an unnecessary apology, not a loving good-bye. “It’s so easy to do the wrong thing in this world,” she moaned. “If it feels wrong, don’t do it. If it feels easy, don’t do it.” What she was referring to, of course, was her utterly reasonable decision to bed down with Shane, a trusted and caring family friend, amid the looming horror of the end of the world. Her ongoing guilt and suffering for this is and has always been outrageous; surely a reality in which burying a machete into a man’s widow’s peak is a heroic act can forgive a little post-traumatic nookie. There’s a difference between the admirably unforgiving worldview Mazzara is trumpeting elsewhere and downright cruelty. There were plenty of reasons for Lori Grimes to die; it’s a shame that her capital offense turned out to be the simple act of being alive.


Also embedding the video linked to in the article:



Full article at the source
chihaya19 8th-Nov-2012 12:31 am (UTC)
if you are married and you sleep with someone else imo you are a cheater
swissbeauty23 8th-Nov-2012 12:36 am (UTC)
i think they were pretty much separated at that point
swissbeauty23 8th-Nov-2012 12:37 am (UTC)
and she was trying to divorce him but he was blackmailing her
beetlebums 8th-Nov-2012 12:40 am (UTC)
they were separated

he moved out long before she fucked ted
kurtvonnegut 8th-Nov-2012 12:45 am (UTC)
i will never get why people treat tv cheating like it's real life, if we hated people on tv for cheating then what character wouldn't be hate when most of them do worse
ediesedgwick 8th-Nov-2012 12:51 am (UTC)
mte usually when you get characters that are well-adjusted and healthy they're disliked by the viewership, because on tv normal people are boring.
kurtvonnegut 8th-Nov-2012 12:53 am (UTC)
especially since people forgive cheating irl all the time, 50% of the celebs we worship have cheated.
ediesedgwick 8th-Nov-2012 12:50 am (UTC)
that's kind of a simplistic viewpoint since it doesnt account for separations
youmustbeaghost 8th-Nov-2012 12:55 am (UTC)
she was trying to divorce him. also does anyone else remember when walt sexually assaulted her b/c i feel like no one ever brings that up.
astrologee 8th-Nov-2012 01:06 am (UTC)
i remember that.
pin_stripe 8th-Nov-2012 01:25 am (UTC)
YES

i'm still SO PISSED that it never came up ...EVER
agatharuncible 8th-Nov-2012 03:48 am (UTC)
that's... very simplistic. at the end of the day, if your marriage is basically over then a piece of paper saying that it still exists will count for nothing but child custody and tax purposes.

(not to mention people who have open marriages, and it's not cheating because it's within the terms of their relationship)
londonshowers 8th-Nov-2012 03:51 am (UTC)
...
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