Nell Scovell Pays Tribute to the Under-Used Women Alumnae of SNL

Posted on October 28, 2014 at 3:37 pm

The wonderful Nell Scovell, who helped Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg write Lean In and is now working on a screenplay based on the book, has an excellent essay in Time about the talented women who appeared on “Saturday Night Live” but never transitioned to the kind of high-profile careers that some of their male peers did. Her list includes Nora Dunn, Ana Gasteyer, Julia Sweeney, Molly Shannon, and Maya Rudolph. “Very few women from SNL have gone on to “a big movie career.” Of course, Fey did, along with Amy Poehler and Kristen Wiig. And in TV, Julia Louis-Dreyfus is in a class all her own, with 18 Emmy nominations and five wins for three different roles. Still, their success stories are the exceptions to Hooks’s rule.” She documents the difference in the numbers of male and female performers over the years.  I think one additional reason also has to do with numbers — the way Hollywood treats men and women differently as they get older.

Critic Ann Hornaday made this point very tellingly in the Washington Post:

“That’s what I love about these high school girls, man. I get older, they stay the same age.”

That line from Richard Linklater’s classic 1993 comedy “Dazed and Confused” came back with an ironic vengeance this week, and die-hard fans of the film will know why: It’s spoken by a 20-something stoner named David Wooderson after a cute-looking teenager walks by. Wooderson is played by Matthew McConaughey, and the girl is a young actress named Renee Zellweger.

 

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Actors Commentary Gender and Diversity Television

Is This the End of Television?

Posted on October 22, 2014 at 3:24 pm

Last week both cable giant HBO and broadcast giant CBS made announcements that signal the end of television as we know it.  Both responded to the clear message of the market and said that they would make their content available in the form and via the delivery system consumers prefer — the internet.  For the first time, viewers will be able to watch HBO movies and series via their HBO Go platform with a separate subscription, even if they do not get HBO via cable.  And CBS will start showing its programs online in real time, as they are broadcast on television.  It is certain that the other networks, premium and basic cable, will follow suit.

We will look back on the 1950’s-2000’s as the last time people watched the same program via the same medium at the same time. Once television sets had only four or five channels.  Then, with cable, there were more than one hundred.  Online-only content from Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu, and YouTube and webseries on “stations” created by individuals and small groups will be at the same level as big-budget series like “Scandal” and “Game of Thrones.”  This is great news for creators and consumers, but the big businesses behind the large-scale productions will need to be nimble to maintain revenues.

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Commentary Internet, Gaming, Podcasts, and Apps Television Understanding Media and Pop Culture

Clip: How We Got to Now

Posted on October 6, 2014 at 12:42 pm

How We Got to Now is a new PBS series with Steven Johnson explaining how six inventions and innovations transformed the future to create our world.

They are:

      REFRIGERATION – How our mastery of “cold on demand” helped give birth to at least four million babies, created the golden age of Hollywood and unlocked the secrets of the universe.

 

      CLEAN – How our battle against dirt created the sidewalk, the swimming pool, the flat screen and the iPhone.

 

      LIGHT – How our quest to harness light changed our genetic make-up, gave birth to Times Square, Las Vegas, video downloads and an artificial sun.

 

      SOUND – How the journey to harness sound created the modern world of instant communication, but also helped put thousands of planes in the sky, changed the face of warfare and created a new way for teenagers to rebel.

 

      TIME – How our journey to calculate time helped create international trade and travel, victory for the North in the Civil War, GPS and understanding of the origins of human life.

 

                SIGHT – How our quest to see better helped us see the world differently, whether right in front of our noses with the birth of eyeglasses or far beyond our visible universe with the creation of the telescope.
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Television

Why Are We Getting So Many Split POV Stories About Couples?

Posted on September 10, 2014 at 3:27 pm

I wonder why there are three (so far) different stories coming out that tell us the same saga of an up-and-down romance from two different perspectives (POV, or point of view).

“The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby,” starring James McAvoy and Jessica Chastain, is being released in three different versions, one called “The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby: Them,” which alternates between her story and his, and then full-length feature films coming out later that each tell just one side of the story.

On “Showtime,” a new series called “The Affair” stars Dominic West and Ruth Wilson are the lovers who have a relationship we get to see from both points of view. The New York Times reports:

The affair begins after a happenstance meeting at a diner in Montauk, where Alison (Ms. Wilson) waits on Noah (Mr. West) and his family. Her recollection of the encounter differs from his on several crucial, often funny points, like her memory of wearing a knee-length waitress uniform: in his recollection, her skirt ends midthigh.

Anna Kendrick and Jeremy Jordan, both Broadway veterans, star in “The Last Five Years,” a film version of the popular musical that tells us both versions of the love story — with a twist. We see his story from the beginning to the end, but her version begins at the end and then goes back in time to the beginning.

It’s not unusual for a book to be told from the point of view of one character, whether narrated by an “I” in the first person or whether the narration just lets us hear the thoughts of one or more characters. In film, we often see what one character sees but it is rare to alternate points of view. One famous exception is the classic film Rashomon. A terrible, violent rape and murder is recounted by the man accused of the crime, the wife who was raped after her husband was killed, the ghost of the murdered man, and finally a witness. Many, many stories have been inspired or influenced by “Rashomon,” from a “Star Trek: TNG’s” episode “A Matter of Perspective” to “The Dick Van Dyke Show’s” hilarious “The Night the Roof Fell In.”

A far-from-classic example is a soapy pair of movies starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton called “Divorce: His” and “Divorce: Hers.” Yes, that twice-married/twice-divorced to each other (plus many others) pair should know. Mark Twain’s charming Diary of Eden gives us both Adam’s and Eve’s sides of the events of Genesis — witty and insightful, with the most deeply romantic ending of all his writing. Thanks to Kristie Miller for reminding me of Dave Berry’s classic piece about male/female thoughts about a relationship. I’m a huge fan of The Norman Conquests by the wildly talented Alan Ayckbourn. We don’t get the different perspectives of characters — we get three different plays that tell the same story from three different places, the living room, the dining room, and the garden. An exit in one play is an entrance in the other. The more you watch, the funnier it gets.

Is there a message in this new vogue for splintered storytelling? Are we in a moment of history when we are feeling a need to be more empathetic? Or are we less sure of what the truth is? Any answer I’d give, of course, would be from my own POV, so yours is just as valid. Isn’t it?

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Commentary Understanding Media and Pop Culture

Tribute: Joan Rivers

Posted on September 4, 2014 at 4:58 pm

Joan Rivers has died at age 81. More abrasive than her trademark raspy voice, Rivers wanted to be an actress but became famous as a comedian, in an era when comedy was almost completely all-male.

She did act, appearing on Broadway in Neil Simon’s Brighton Beach Memoirs. But mostly she did whatever anyone would pay her to do that would keep her in front of audiences, and that mostly included stand-up comedy, selling her jewelry line on television, and trashing celebrities and their red carpet fashion choices with the intense focus usually reserved for geopolitical battles. She was fierce. She was unstoppable. As she said, she had nothing to lose that had not already been taken from her. She had been fired. She had been bankrupt. Her husband committed suicide. If anyone had a reason to find solace by putting the punch into punchlines, it was Joan Rivers. She was tough on everyone, but tougher on herself.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2fnojZw54ls

She was a pioneer who opened doors for women in comedy. She wrote the movie “The Girl Most Likely.” She wrote books, including the memoir Enter Talking, the sequel Still Talking, and, released just two months ago, Diary of a Mad Diva.

Joan Rivers was the first and still-only woman to host a late-night talk show. She wrote and directed Rabbit Test, with Billy Crystal as the first pregnant man.

And she never, ever gave up. She was an icon of re-invention. I loved Nell Scovell’s tribute in Vanity Fair:

She was a warrior. She rose up fighting and she went down fighting. Either way, she kept fighting.

May her memory be a blessing.

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Actors Tribute
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