Category Archives: News

TV review: ‘White People’ explores gray areas in privilege and stereotypes

MTV Jose Antonio Vargas in the MTV documentary show “White People.”

MTV
Jose Antonio Vargas in the MTV documentary show “White People.”

By Mary McNamara

Los Angeles Times

In an episode of “The Middle” last season, Sue Heck (played by Eden Sher) couldn’t figure out why the guide on her college tour kept steering her to the school’s Native American programs. Turned out, when asked for her race, Sue had checked the wrong box.

“I’m a native of America,” she earnestly explained, before realizing her mistake.

White people, am I right?

Isn’t it funny how you can make a joke about white people, but if you use the term “black people,” you risk being called a racist before you finish your sentence?

Well, maybe not funny so much as perfectly understandable. At no time in U.S. history have white people been persecuted or disenfranchised simply for the color of their skin.

For other things, like being Jewish or Irish or Italian, but not for being white. In fact, as one astute young woman points out in Jose Antonio Vargas’ new MTV documentary “White People,” when the Jews, Irish and Italians first arrived on these shores, they weren’t considered white. Not really. Not in the way “white” has been often defined, the ideal from which all the other races “diverge.”

In fact, the term “white people” didn’t move around in the casual lexicon much until fairly recently, when it became something of a punch line, a reminder that Caucasian is, in fact, just another race whose members might want to know what it feels like to be defined instantly and solely by color.

Not surprisingly, many “white people” don’t like it very much. When MTV announced they would be airing a film called “White People,” conservative pundits hit the roof, predicting an exercise in race-baiting disguised as an exploration of white privilege packaged in a hashtag-worshipping world of the network’s target audience.

It is none of these things.

Instead “White People” begins with the acceptance that most white Americans don’t feel privileged and attempts to explore what they feel instead.

To do this, Vargas (who recently partnered with the Los Angeles Times to create a multimedia digital magazine exploring race and identity called #EmergingUS) speaks with folks who deal with their whiteness in a highly overt way, including:

Dakota, a Southern gay man, who chose to attend “an historically black college.”

— A group of white teachers on the Pine Ridge Indian reservation near the site of the Wounded Knee massacre in South Dakota.

— John, a young Italian American, and his family watching as “their” Bensonhurst neighborhood in Brooklyn becomes increasingly Asian.

— Katy, a young college student in Arizona who believes she might have had access to more financial aid if she weren’t white.

None of whom, I hasten to add, appear as “in extremis” as they seem when described. If nothing else, “White People” proves that you can take on a sensitive topic in a provocative way and avoid being a provocateur.

Still, it’s a maddeningly brief and hectic road trip. Lasting less than an hour, “White People” seems more like a pilot for a reality series than a documentary. Each stop on the journey could easily sustain its own episode — especially when padded with shots of Vargas meeting larger groups — if the genre weren’t so reliant on overly orchestrated encounters, manipulative production and absurd histrionics.

Some of which make their presence felt there — the soundtrack insists on reminding everyone how they should be feeling — though at levels so low the MTV demographic probably won’t notice. “White People” clearly prides itself on being frank about things that too often fester.

“A lot of people feel like that,” Vargas says several times in answer to white people reluctantly saying they feel discriminated against or are tired of being made to feel ashamed. “Why do you feel like that?”

But if brevity forces the narrative to skim, it does not skirt. A dinner in which Dakota brings his black friends from college to dinner with his white family is just as odd and uncomfortable as you would imagine, while the widely felt concern that whites don’t have the same scholarship opportunities as other races is debunked gently but firmly.

Vargas is a Filipino citizen who in 2011 revealed that he was here illegally, which makes it natural to assume that he has, well, some skin in this particular game.

He does, but the whole point of “White People” is that we all do. As the recent outrage over the use of the word “diversity” as shorthand for the inclusion of races other than Caucasian makes clear, it is time we stop thinking of white as the base to which other colors may or may not be added.

In these terms, “White People” is more conversation starter than a revelation, but the conversations it could start are limitless and important. Watching a white woman describe her privilege as never having been institutionally oppressed is enough to make a feminist scream, and surely Dakota’s experience as a gay man tempers his experience of life as much as his whiteness.

None of us are one thing or another, so defining anyone solely by their race is ridiculous. Which explains why the joking use of the term “white people” has become popular and the film “White People,” though imperfect, is worth watching.

The new TV etiquette: When is a spoiler not a spoiler?

Nick Briggs/HBO/TNS  Since the entire show rests on it, it’s okay to publicly mention that Eddard Stark is executed at the end of season one of “Game of Thrones.”

Nick Briggs/HBO/TNS
Since the entire show rests on it, it’s okay to publicly mention that Eddard Stark is executed at the end of season one of “Game of Thrones.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By Michael Hewitt

The Orange County Register

Kristin shot J.R.

“Newhart” was all a dream.

And that book the Kanamits are toting around on “The Twilight Zone”? It’s a cookbook!

I come to reveal spoilers, not to hide them.

Modern television viewing, which allows us to watch nearly any show ever made pretty much whenever we wish, has come upon us so quickly that social convention is still catching up.

The critical question still to be settled among polite society: Where does discussion end and spoiling begin?

Lately, it seems that the pendulum has swung to the favor of people who feel they should be able to approach a series unsullied, castigating those who might – however innocently – dare to try to discuss a show they are still watching, or even thinking about watching.

Who hasn’t tried to analyze the latest episode of “Game of Thrones” with the office fan club only to be shooed away by a co-worker who isn’t caught up? Or been approached by a friend who has “finally watched ‘House of Cards’” only to be scolded for revealing a plot point that comes after Episode 1?

A colleague recently was castigated by a reader for writing about Emily Kinney and “spoiling” that her character had died on “The Walking Dead” – seven months earlier.

I say it is time for the pendulum to swing back.

It is time to free the people who watch television to talk about their shows and for those who lag behind to accept that spoiling simply is a risk of a leisurely viewing pace.

Do I need to declare a spoiler alert before writing that the New England Patriots won the last Super Bowl because someone might still have an unwatched copy on their DVR?

Of course not. So why do some viewers believe they must be extended the “courtesy” of universal silence by the rest of the world when it comes to fictional television?

Naturally, there are limits. I believe people can reasonably ask those around them for 48 hours of spoiler-free space after a new episode airs. For series from online sites like Netflix that arrive all at once, a month after the release date is an acceptable cushion, especially for the later episodes.

On the other hand, it is up to the procrastinators to steer clear of social media. Those spoiled by reading their Twitter feeds can only blame themselves.

There are certain elements we have an obligation to be circumspect about, for a few years at least. Plot twists that significantly affect the path of the story should not be blared out in mixed company. The solutions to murder mysteries should be protected.

Still, all this concern about spoilers is largely misplaced. A good television series is more than a plot; our enjoyment comes from how the plot is conveyed: what the characters are like, how the story changes them, how our emotions are affected, how the themes of the story illuminate our own lives.

Does knowing that Miss Bennet marries Mr. Darcy make us like “Pride & Prejudice” any less? Were you able to watch “The Empire Strikes Back” a second time knowing that Darth Vader was Luke’s father? I’m guessing you know how Janet Leigh’s shower turns out in “Psycho” even if you haven’t seen the movie. That doesn’t make it any less great of a film.

And so it should be with a television series. Learning of an important plot twist ahead of watching a show doesn’t ruin anything. It removes the element of surprise from a very small moment of a long experience.

A 2011 study from U.C. San Diego even concluded that spoilers increased readers’ enjoyment of literature.

So let’s ease up on the demand to be spoiler-free. If you are late to a series, accept that you might learn a plot point or two in advance. It might make things better.

SPEAK FREELY

Here are 10 “spoilers” it is OK to discuss in public without warning. Listed in reverse chronological order:

Dr. McDreamy gets bad medical care on “Grey’s Anatomy.” Let’s see: Actor feuds with producers and talks extensively about his desire to leave a show. How did we think this would turn out?

Walter White dies at the end of “Breaking Bad.” And Hamlet dies at the end of “Hamlet.” It’s what happens at the conclusion of a tragedy. What is important is how Walt dies and what his death means.

The girls of “Orphan Black” are clones. Yes, it is an important reveal in Season 1. Then again, if you didn’t figure that out weeks before the reveal, then this show is over your head.

Matthew Crawley of “Downton Abbey” is a bad driver. The death of Dan Stevens’ character was one of the worst-kept secrets in television history. Stevens quit the series to make movies months before Season 3 played in America. We all knew he was going to die, but no one could have predicted the artless way his demise was worked into the story.

Eddard Stark gets executed on “Game of Thrones.” The entire show rests on Eddard being killed at the end of Season 1 and his heirs scattered. It’s what “Game of Thrones” is about. “Spoiling” this is like spoiling that “Star Trek” takes place in the future.

There are no answers to “Lost.” Before anyone invests 100 hours or so in watching “Lost,” they should be aware that the many riddles posed in the first six seasons will not be answered in the seventh. What do 4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42 signify? How did the island lure the castaways? Why was Walt so important? You will never find out.

“The Sopranos” cuts to black. It is difficult to be alive in the 21st century and not be aware of the final image of HBO’s groundbreaking series. Besides, knowing this tells you absolutely nothing about the 86 episodes that preceded it.

Carrie marries Big in “Sex and the City.” This was such an unsatisfying and illogical ending to an otherwise fun series that all prospective viewers should be warned in advance to avoid TV breakage.

No. 6 is No. 1 in “The Prisoner.” This psychedelic ‘60s relic was hard to follow, but if you didn’t figure the answer to “Who is No. 1?” by Episode 2, you were doing too many drugs. The real mystery – one still up for discussion – is not who is No. 1, but why is he No. 1? Plus, the reveal happened nearly 50 years ago.

Series based on history are fair game. I’ve got some bad news: Anne Boleyn gets beheaded in “Wolf Hall” and “The Tudors.” Thomas Cromwell, too. Julius Caesar’s friends stab him to death in “Rome.”

KEEP QUIET

Here are five spoilers you probably should still keep the lid on:

The rest of those “Game of Thrones” deaths. This show kills of regular characters with alarming regularity, and rarely with warning. Best to let the uninitiated go wander as unspoiled as possible _ although there has been so much talk about the “red wedding” that most will figure that one out.

The identity of A. The whole point of “Pretty Little Liars” is discovering just who A is. But it’s OK to tell prospective viewers that the answer keeps changing and you’re not really sure the writers even know.

The end of Season 2 of “Homeland.” This is the kind of twist that is both a complete surprise and yet intrinsic to what happens afterward. Let the newbies enjoy it.

What happens between Dexter Morgan and the Trinity Killer. The climax of the fourth season of “Dexter” is perfectly shocking and shockingly perfect.

Who killed Laura Palmer. Yes, “Twin Peaks” is nearly 25 years old. But just as in “Pretty Little Liars” this mystery is the cornerstone of the entire series – and the information might be important to the upcoming remake/sequel.

Denis Leary ready to rock FX once again

Patrick Harbron/FX/TNS Denis Leary as Johnny Rock in “Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll.”

Patrick Harbron/FX/TNS
Denis Leary as Johnny Rock in “Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll.”

By Greg Braxton

Los Angeles Times

When it comes to his Hollywood triumphs, there are at least two sides for Denis Leary.

On one side are his young fans, who flocked to Leary thanks to his distinctive voice performance as the saber-toothed tiger Diego in the animated hit franchise “Ice Age.”

On the other are hopefully not many kids but instead the multitude of adults who delight in his profanity-spiced songs and comedy. After years as a sharp-tongued stand-up, Leary earned new praise for his portrayal of a troubled firefighter in FX’s “Rescue Me.” The series, which he co-created, ran for seven seasons on the cable network and helped burnish its credentials as a programming risk-taker.

Leary is back once again on FX with a half-hour comedy aimed more at his adult audience: “Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll,” premiering July 16, which allows the 57-year-old Massachusetts native to flex both his comedic and musical muscles.

Leary stars as Johnny Rock, the leader of an early ‘90s rock band that flamed out after a blazing debut. This particular Rock lived a life of excess and had a habit of sleeping with the fiancees and girlfriends of band mates.

Washed up and all but forgotten, Rock’s world is overturned when a beautiful young woman named Gigi (Elizabeth Gillies) with an amazing singing voice lands in his life. She says she is his daughter from a decades-old fling.

Armed with money and ambition, Gigi wants Rock help to launch her own singing career. Seeing a chance at redemption, Rock smooths things over with his former band mates, reunites the group and plunges them back into the music scene.

In addition to heading the cast, Leary is the creator, executive producer and writer of the series. He is also the composer of all the music.

“It is fantastic to be back at FX,” said Leary by phone. “I always loved being here so much. They’re the greatest creative supporters.”

FX is just as thrilled to have Leary back in its corner. “Rescue Me” was widely celebrated for its intense action sequences and emotional salute to firefighters following 9/11.

“’Rescue Me’ is one of the pillars that FX was built on,” said Nick Grad, president of original programming for FX Networks. “It was always our evil plan to get Denis back on the network.”

Grad said of “S&D&R&R”: “We love it. It has the similar comedic tone of ‘Rescue Me,’ but it’s a half-hour, set in the world of rock and roll and exploring the journey of this guy reconnecting with his daughter. It has lots of pathos and resonance.”

Leary said he wanted to explore the rock music scene and the dynamics of veteran rock bands. “Rock bands are big dysfunctional families, particularly if they last 25 years or longer. The lead singer and lead guitarist are usually the mother and the father,” he said.

The pitfalls of fame and the touchstones on what fame means for different generations is another area of examination. “It’s about getting perspective on what fame is all about. The daughter character wants to be famous, but wanting it isn’t going to make her famous. And Johnny, who was famous, isn’t going to be famous again. Ultimately, the most important thing in life is family.”

Co-starring in the series along with Leary is John Corbett (“Sex and the City”), John Ales, Bobby Kelly and Elaine Hendrix.

Although his primary goal is to make “Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll” as funny as possible, Leary said the true highlight of the series has been Gillies. The actress starred in the Nickelodeon series “Victorious” and appeared on Broadway in the musical “13.”

“She’s a real find,” Leary said. “I knew I wanted my daughter to sing, actually be able to do live vocals, be funny, be able to act drama and do improv. Elizabeth can do it all.”

Leary had come up with the idea for “S&D&R&R” before the last season of “Rescue Me” aired but thought it might be best to wait a bit before developing it fully. After “Rescue Me,” he kept busy with voice-overs for commercials as well as supporting turns in the “Amazing Spider-Man” movies and the Kevin Costner sports film “Draft Day.”

While he’s keeping his fingers crossed that “S&D&R&R” scores with viewers, Leary’s other persona is keeping busy.

“We’re getting ready to do ‘Ice Age 5.’” Leary said. “It’s incredible. We’re going to run out of ice at some point!”

Another ‘Poldark,’ and once again it’s scything the fans

Handout/TNS  Irish actor Aidan Turner portrays the dashing Ross Poldark in “Masterpiece Classic’s” remake of the 1970’s hit, “Poldark.” Turner plays a soldier returning from the American Revolutionary War only to find things in England no more peaceful.

Handout/TNS
Irish actor Aidan Turner portrays the dashing Ross Poldark in “Masterpiece Classic’s” remake of the 1970’s hit, “Poldark.” Turner plays a soldier returning from the American Revolutionary War only to find things in England no more peaceful.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By Susan King

Los Angeles Times

When the epic romantic TV series “Poldark” premiered this spring in England, its success took even the producers by surprise.

“The truth is you never know what’s going to strike a chord with the viewing public,” said executive producer Debbie Horsfield, who adapted Winston Graham’s popular novels set in 18th century Cornwall about the complex Ross Poldark and the two women in his life. “We even sparked an interest in scything.”

The eight-part series opened Sunday in the United States on PBS’ “Masterpiece” and was greeted with largely positive reviews. Irish actor Aidan Turner has the title role.

“Aidan plays Ross so amazingly,” said Horsfield. “And as a character, Ross is very charismatic and very appealing.”

Longtime “Masterpiece” fans are familiar with “Poldark.” The original 1975 series, which starred the magnetic Robin Ellis, captured the hearts of U.S. audiences when it aired decades ago on the PBS showcase.

“It’s a known title for those who have watched ‘Masterpiece”’ said “Masterpiece” executive producer Rebecca Eaton, adding it was a “no-brainer” to do the new version. “The nature of the story of a dashing hero and a love triangle is appealing to younger viewers too.”

Horsfield had never seen the original before being approached to write a new adaptation. She took the first two “Poldark” novels with her on vacation to read (Graham wrote 12).

“I think probably it took about three pages to realize they were fantastic stories and I wanted to do the adaptations.”

Horsfield deliberately didn’t revisit the series while writing the eight scripts. “The ‘70s series had a whole team of writers. I didn’t want to be influenced by the choices they made. The only thing I was a little bit intimidated about was doing justice to the books because the books are tremendous,” she said.

Turner, who played the dwarf Kili in Peter Jackson’s “The Hobbit” film trilogy, was Horsfield’s only choice for the role. She had seen him play poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti in the 2009 series “Desperate Romantics” and as a vampire in the 2009-11 “Being Human.”

“In both of those he was playing an outsider, rather damaged characters who were on the outskirts of society, a rebel,” said Horsfield.

Turner recalled the morning when he received a knock at the door of his home in England.

“It was a FedEx guy with two Winston Graham novels and eight scripts with a little note that said we would like to offer you the part of Poldark,” he said. “I thought, ‘Brilliant, what was Poldark?’ I went straight to the laptop and Googled ‘Poldark.”’

Just as Horsfield, he decided not to watch the old series. “By all accounts, I heard that Robin Ellis and the series were really good. I was just afraid, like every actor, that I might sort of emulate him. It would be safer if I didn’t watch. The scripts are strong, and I just went for it.”

Turner loved playing Poldark’s massive contradictions. “He’s a real character. He’s not this benevolently saint character. He’s stubborn and doesn’t befriend the people he should. He’s confused in love and he’s temperamental. He has a healthy disrespect for authority.”

Ellis has been a strong supporter of the new series since it was announced, and he even appears in the third and sixth episodes of the show as a nemesis of Poldark, Rev. Halse. (Ellis describes Turner as “the real McCoy.”) The actor is also returning for the second season of “Poldark,” which begins production in September.

“It was quite an extraordinary moment when we had the two Poldarks together,” said Horsfield.

“Robin was amazing,” said Turner. “He was totally supportive and lovely.”

Ellis, who lives in France and is a well-known cookbook author, noted how different it was to do the series four decades ago. “We rehearsed for six days,” said Ellis. “And then we went into the studio and did it virtually from 7:30 a.m to 10 p.m. with five (video) cameras on set. Every so often we would go to Cornwall for two weeks to shoot the exteriors.”

A lot was made in the British press of Turner’s shirtless sequences in “Poldark,” which showcased his muscular physique.

Such was not the case for Ellis.

“When I was playing it, I did take my shirt off once,” said Ellis, laughing. “I took it off to wash in a scene and the next day I took my washing across the road to the launderette that I normally used. The lady who did my washing was Eastern European. She looked at me, wagged her finger and said, ‘Big mistake.’ I never took my shirt off again.”

Sarah Carter says farewell to ‘Falling Skies’

‘FALLING SKIES’

10 p.m. Sunday, June 28, TNT

By Rick Bentley

The Fresno Bee

Sarah Carter has been sworn to secrecy.

She’s hiding the details about the fifth _ and final _ season of the TNT sci-fi drama “Falling Skies.” The last batch of new episodes begin rolling out Sunday, June 28.

All of the final episodes have been filmed, and Carter is careful not to share any details about how the series will end. After a little prodding, she finally says there will be some surprises and that “it ends in an extremely hopeful place.” She gets a little cryptic when she adds that the last episodes will be “appropriate” and what fans are “not expecting.”

For five seasons fans have followed the story of the last survivors of an alien invasion of Earth. Rag-tag groups of rebels have come together to fight back. It’s been a story of average people doing extraordinary things in the name of freedom. It’s a sci-fi action series, but it never shies away from serious topics.

Carter plays freedom fighter Maggie. The cast also includes Noah Wyle, Connor Jessup, Moon Bloodgood, Maxim Knight and Colin Cunningham.

Saying farewell to the show has been a lot tougher that Carter had expected.

“It was really sad. I didn’t know I would feel as much as I did making the last episodes,” Carter says. “We were reading the scripts for one of the last shows and I got so emotional I had to get up from the table.”

This is coming from an actress who has been working steadily since 2000. She got her start with a string of series-regular roles on “Undeclared,” “Wolf Lake” and “Boston Legal.” She’s had work from being a member of the cast of “Shark” to a series of guest starring roles on “Smallville” that continues to give her a huge fan base.

In high school, the Canadian actress was a member of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet and one of the top three public speakers in the world. Asked about those early accomplishments, Carter laughs, saying, “I was much smarter in high school.”

She’s smart enough to land jobs that have been both entertaining and challenging. The difference between her work on “Falling Skies” and other film and TV projects is how much she’s been able to do with the role. Instead of one or, at best, a few episodes, Carter has had multiple seasons to develop the character.

“She’s become a part of me,” Carter says. “She has such a wonderful heart that has shown what it is to be brave and to love. I am proud of Maggie.

“What I appreciate the most about the show is that Maggie has been so complex and really developed. I loved the constant resistance — and capacity for love — Maggie has. But, she’s always ready to fight the good fight.”

Carter will miss more than just her character. She’ll miss working with Drew Roy, who plays Hal Mason, because their characters spent a lot of time together. Carter calls it rare to get to connect with a cast and characters so deeply. And, while there was the serious business of making a television show, at the heart of the story was a ramped-up version of “Capture the Flag.” That made for some fun moments on the set.

Before you start getting misty eyed for Carter, she’s already has another television job. She plays a DEA agent on the DirecTV series “Rogue.” The third season of the series, which also stars Thandie Newton and Cole Hauser, began Wednesday, June 24.

The new series helps, but it is still tough on Carter to see “Falling Skies” end.

“It has been so well written. I will miss the huge sets,” Carter says. “But, it’s also time for it to end. Plus, actors start craving different stories and become anxious to try something new.”

« Older Entries