You're Wrong About - Afterschool Specials
Episode Date: May 5, 2018Mike tells Sarah that the TV movies of her childhood were both less and more problematic than she remembers. Continue reading →Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere to f...ind us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
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So I'll start, actually, I'm gonna, these are the thinking noises we have to, you
get to have fun cutting out.
Do you want to tell me about the first after-school special you ever saw?
The first after-school special I ever saw in spirit, I don't think was an after-school
special, but I remember when I was about 13 watching a lifetime movie called 15 and Pregnant,
starring Kirsten Dunst, which I think of as being in the spirit of the after-school special,
because I really, I loved lifetime movies when I was a kid, which were often
old TV movies that had made their way onto lifetime in the late 90s.
And they also had a lot of Tory spelling movies that were sort of about issues,
like co-ed call girl was about the issue of being a co-ed call girl.
But I don't know if I've ever seen an actual after-school special.
I think what I think of more is the broad category of TV movies or network specials about
issues that were very ham-handed about that, that I think of as being a big thing in the 80s
and early 90s and then sort of fading away.
I remember seeing a Chad Lowe movie I think from 1984 where he commits suicide and nobody knows
why and they kind of don't figure it out.
That might be an after-school special actually.
So this is what I'm curious about. Did the after-school special start this trend of the
teen issue film or was, because it feels like we don't see that now, but that there was a period
when that was really everywhere.
What's interesting to me about this is that's kind of what we remember is this moralistic tone.
And there are two different versions of the history of the after-school special.
There's the hagiographic, aw shucks, how wonderful it is history.
And then there's like the super cynical corporate history.
So the aw shucks history is that at the time the after-school special began with ABC
after-school special in 1972, which ran until 1997, which is pretty incredible, 25 years.
And it was at a time when TV was sort of not really new, but sort of going through
its kind of adolescence, that it was kind of trying to figure out what its business model
was going to be, what TV was going to look like as they were expanding more and more
hours of programming.
And so the aw shucks history is that this guy Martin Tossi came up with this idea that during
the day there was children's programming and during the evening there was family programming,
like primetime stuff, game shows, whatever, that the whole family watched together.
But nobody was speaking to this huge group of Americans in between.
Nobody was talking to adolescents.
And so what he came up with was this idea of sort of movies buy kids for kids.
So he started optioning a bunch of novels that were written, especially ones written by young
authors, about social problems.
He wanted to create this place to talk about what kids were really going through,
not from the perspective of an adult, not from the perspective of the government,
or these like informational public campaign type things,
but actual stories of kids about kids.
So his one rule as a producer, he ended up producing about 25 of them.
His rule as a producer was that all of the problems have to be solved by the kids themselves.
So it has to be that kids are faced with a problem and kids have the authority and the
intelligence and their wherewithal to do something about it.
They're not waiting for a parent to parachute in and fix everything for them.
So he really wanted this to be a place of kind of empowerment and helping kids work through
these actual real issues that they were facing.
It was the mid-70s, the gas crisis was going on, the economy was going nuts, politics was
heating up, it was Watergate.
He wanted to kind of help explain this complicated world to them.
So that's the pure hagiographic wonderful origin story of the afterschool specials.
The cynical explanation is that the networks, first of all, they were under huge pressure
from the government.
Since the government had lifted censorship in the late 50s,
TV had started having a lot more sex on it, had started having a lot more violence.
And there was a sense of panic, especially around teenagers, that oh my god, what are
our kids watching?
They're watching a ton of sex.
They're watching violence.
They're watching dragnet all the live long day.
Exactly.
Which of course, what's funny looking back to is how extremely tame all this stuff looks to us now.
But stuff like dragnet, or whatever the proto law and order was, was something parents were
actually concerned about.
And the country, there were literally congressional hearings about violence on TV and how bad TV
was for kids.
And there was also this idea that TV had this potential for education.
Yeah, we still clung onto that in the 70s, didn't we?
Because wasn't the original dream for TV that everyone would be watching Shakespeare all the time?
Exactly.
And that we'd all learn to read through it.
And it was like the original MOOC.
It was like a flipped classroom where like kids would get all this educational content
and it would be like a surrogate parent and it would be oh, so great.
And then of course, we ended up with a system that we have now, like every other invention.
We always have these like broad social good ideas of it.
And then in reality, it just becomes like kind of shitty with like these little tiny
innovations within it that are like, oh, that's kind of good.
But like everybody's watching TV and it's all violent.
So it was basically in the middle of that period that the TV stations figured out that
they needed to do something to counteract this idea that the whole country had,
that they were poisoning America's youth.
It's kind of like how we think of Mark Zuckerberg now.
It was like, okay, everybody hates me.
I have to do something.
Well, you start like big tobacco, just having to like play to be on the defensive and be like,
listen, I'm going to keep doing all of these things that I'm doing.
Like that's not going to change, but I will do these token things.
So you will like me more or feel less bad about liking what I do.
And I will put these TV shows on in the time slot with the fewest possible number of people
are watching. That was another way.
That was another way to do it.
It's like, oh yeah, what are we doing from like 4 to 6 p.m.
When like everyone is busy getting home from work and eating dinner.
Okay, yeah, we'll give it to the teenagers.
When all the people who buy things are on the subway.
Exactly. So like nobody who actually mattered at that point was watching.
So furthermore in the cynical explanation is first of all,
they had to burnish their public reputation.
Second of all, they did have this marketing segment that they weren't speaking to,
that there were these kids who were unsupervised after school.
And this was the only time that they could reach them.
There were actually a lot of latchkey kids that would come home and watch TV after school.
And the TV stations thought instead of doing reruns,
why don't we actually hook them in with this content that is about them and that will get
them to watch?
So the war on homework faces another decisive battle.
Basically. And what's funny about these two explanations,
and I think this is probably the case with all complex social history,
is that they're both true.
Like I think it is true that Martin Tossi is just a nice guy.
And he's this kind of wonderful figure whose parents were alcoholic and he grew up really lonely.
And he made all these specials and he made a lot of them about kids growing up
with parents who were alcoholics and he made them in a very empathic way.
And he spoke with a lot of young people.
He was very connected to young people.
It seems like he did a lot of work to actually make these things relevant.
And it's also true that the networks were like,
how can we squeeze more ad revenue out of these kids?
How can we make the rest of the country think that we're not out to destroy it?
I don't know.
But I remember growing up, as I think a lot of us do,
seeing a lot of slightly dated instructional how to be a team in the world videos in health class.
So whenever my school would try and teach us about issues,
they would often farm it out through a video.
And it often seemed like it was from the 80s.
And I wonder how many of those were after school specials
or the kind of programming that came on as that became popular.
And how much of this work, like how many schools benefited from the existence of these narratives.
And it's funny because I actually remember watching one that in retrospect speaking of
the empathic nature of them, I found surprising and great because I was used to making fun of them
because I think there was one that we watched, which I don't know where it came from,
but it was called Good Kids Die To, or something like that.
Yeah, it's about a kid who he might actually call back, smoke crack just once and then die.
But we watched one about alcoholism.
And there was one about this girl with alcoholic parents and her mom comes home and is just falling
down drunk and she like puts her to bed and then cleans up the kitchen.
And they had this voiceover that said something like, Susie is being an enabler.
Oh, really? That's interesting.
Yeah, it wasn't, they delivered it more gently than that.
But they were saying like, when you hide your parents' addictive behavior,
you are enabling their addiction.
And I was like, oh, I never thought of it like that before.
This is relevant to me.
It's actually a pretty sophisticated concept for these types of public information campaigns
because they're usually so one-dimensional.
Yeah, I was used to those kinds of movies because I was already familiar with them
being something I could comfortably mock.
But oh, and I think this was an after-school special.
I loved this movie.
My friends and I reminisced about it for years.
It was a TV movie they showed us in eighth grade sex ed at my school called What If I'm Gay.
And it was great because it was made in like 1985.
It was 1987.
I was just watching it on YouTube.
Yes.
It's fascinating.
It's so, I mean, it's hilarious now.
Because you think that Evan Handler is going to be gay,
but then he's not.
It's one of the soccer players.
And then at the end, it's amazing that it ends with this thing
where he finally confronts his best friend.
So his best friend figures out like, finds a gay magazine,
confronts him about being gay.
You're gay, bro.
Like, we're not friends anymore.
And then he talks to this like coach who's like being gay is like,
not really okay, but you'll be fine.
And then the movie ends.
The last scene of the movie is him telling this friend of his.
He's like, you don't have to like me, but just don't hate me.
And his friend is like, okay.
And like, that's the happy ending.
It's like, gay is bad, but let's be friends anyway.
Like it's so retrograde now.
But in 1987, it was probably, I don't know, 1987 is actually pretty late.
So maybe it's not that progressive actually.
It's weird to try and reconcile yourself with history, right?
Because you're like, well, okay, because one of the things I realized
that I found bizarre and fascinating is that, so I was born in 1988.
I think 1990 is the year that Judith Butler's gender trouble comes out,
which really starts this wildfire of people realizing that gender is all imaginary,
which is an incredibly oversimplifying way that I'm putting that,
that Judith Butler would be mad at me about.
But it's actually saying that, you know, we have all of this accrued behavior
and tradition and culture that is a pearl that has formed around no actual grain of sand.
And there's a pearl there, but there's no sand there.
And everyone's like, there's sand.
There's definitely sand.
And it's like, no, there's no sand.
And what we have is real and meaningful and how we relate to it is
complicated and exciting, but there's no sand.
That is like exactly the kind of thing that is too, too far out there
by like an inch for afterschool specials.
That's the kind of thing that they could maybe hint at,
but it just shows you to what extent the afterschool specials
and really anything on the network at that time, because it was really before cable,
had to be very mainstream.
I mean, it had to be really in the middle of the bell curve.
Yeah.
And even something like Judith Butler would not seem all that controversial now,
because we're used to all this niche programming.
But back then, I mean, you really had to hit like 60% of the country
with everything you said.
And even that would have been considered really fringe.
Yeah.
So I mean, do you know what the response was like to what if I'm gay in 1987?
Well, what's interesting is the country loved afterschool specials.
They won a bunch of Emmys.
They won a Peabody Award for an episode about a guy that's taking ballet and he gets teased.
And it like hints that he might be gay.
It like leaves it ambiguous whether he's gay, where like gay viewers would be like,
that's a gay person, but straight people wouldn't pick up on it kind of thing.
Yeah.
But it won a Peabody because people were like, oh, it's so progressive that boys can dance ballet.
Like that was that was a dangerous idea then.
And that was a big deal that they were like blowing the lid off of gender norms.
Fascinating.
And so I mean, what I came away with actually was I was actually pretty impressed by the content
of most of the afterschool specials, considering how long ago they were.
So I want to read you some of the names of these because they're as cheesy as you would expect.
So excited.
But then once you get into the synopses and I watched a couple of them, they're actually
pretty mature.
So before we get into the nuance, here's the names.
So one of them is my dad lives in a downtown hotel.
Really?
Me and dad's new wife.
It isn't easy being a teenage millionaire.
The hero who couldn't read.
This one, this is fucked up.
This one's about date rape and it's called can a guy say no.
Oh, wow.
And there's one about bullying called getting even a wimps revenge.
Oh my.
And then there's like the drug panic ones, reading, writing and reefer.
And then because I used to be one, I got really interested in one called high school narc.
And also I love nearly every single one of these has like random, like huge named actors.
Popping up Rob Lowe is the star of one.
Lauren Hill is in one of them.
Sam Rockwell, Will Smith.
There's one.
There's one called daddy can't read that has fucking John Travolta and Michael Jackson.
Oh my God.
Bananas.
Even also like for me and you, this is like our spirit animal.
You know, uh, Jan from the office.
Yes.
She's fucking in one.
She's like 13 years old.
Oh my God.
I love Jan.
Like every time I watch the office, I admire that what she does with that
character.
Right.
She like should have gotten a spin off.
Whenever I watch Miami Vice, which happens fairly often, I'm like, wow, this is like the
farm league for actors in the 80s because like, yeah, like pretty much every episode of Miami Vice
has some random person right before they were famous.
Like Bruce Willis is an abusive husband who Croyant has to kill.
Obviously.
John Turturro, Steve Buscemi, Leonard Cohen had a cameo on it inexplicably.
He was already doing pretty well.
Julia Roberts.
Like maybe after school specials were the teen Miami Vice.
I mean, part of it is that because it's an anthology show, they're just so many actors
they have to use, right?
So because every single one of them is starting from scratch, it's like six to 10 actors per
episode and they're new.
So just statistically, it's got to pop up with a bunch of random actors.
Anthony Ketus from the Red Hot Chili Peppers is in one.
Jodi Foster stars in like fucking four of them.
She's in one where she joins a little league team and they're like, girls can't play
baseball.
You're a girl.
And then she's like, no, girls can play baseball.
Yeah.
Isn't it wonderful to look back on what was extremely edgy 40 years ago, 30 years ago,
40 years ago and just how exciting it was to have a girl play baseball?
Like there's something very pure about that.
Yeah.
It's interesting too of sort of how should we judge these shows because when they're this old,
they're inevitably on the wrong side of history on like 50 different issues.
But you don't want to defend them by just saying that they're a product of their time,
but you also can't really discard them either.
I mean, I think, especially this guy Tossi and I'm sure that all the teams making these
shows were doing their best and trying to push people's consciousness to like what they
were able to accept at the time.
They couldn't do some like Judith Butler two hour documentary, but they could do like
girls can also play baseball.
Like that's what the country was ready for at the time.
And that's what the structure of network TV because there were only four channels at the time.
That's what structurally they could get away with.
And they really did push it pretty far.
But it's also like that's not really an excuse, right?
It's not like, oh, they did their best.
It's still, I mean, some of these are still pretty retrograde.
Right.
To an extent, this is the same question where you say, how do I maintain the profit margin
that I need and that the network needs?
And how do I not alienate a core demographic, a core demographic of viewers?
But also if the intent is actually there to try and educate people and meet middle America
where it is, what was, what did you see that you were impressed or surprised by or that seemed,
you know, surprisingly boundary pushing considering the other material that you were looking at?
So let me read you a bunch of synopses because I think the synopses demonstrate
the extent to which it wasn't just moralistic stuff.
Tossi really thought of this as his mission was to educate and entertain young kids.
So the content of these is actually pretty diverse.
We remember the moralizing ones that like, don't smoke reefer kids,
but that's actually only about a quarter to a third of them.
A lot of them are just kind of normal dramas.
A lot of them are based on books and they're just books about kids living their lives.
So here's a bunch of synopses.
So a wealthy businessman returns after conquering the stock market.
He inherits a class of underachievers and sets out to make them winners.
This is a really good one.
The story of a retired clown and his undying love for children.
A teenager with a stuttering problem overcomes his shyness to become a championship figure skater.
Oh my God, that sounds amazing.
I need to watch that tonight.
The McPhail siblings discover a wounded deer which they nurse back to health.
So like that has, I mean, there's probably some, I didn't watch that one,
but there's probably some message in there about like we should all love nature or whatever,
but it's mostly just like an old Yeller story.
I like how the synopses sound like there's absolutely no premise at all though.
Like that there's a retired clown and that's the situation.
Yeah, that was the one I wanted to watch the most actually,
but I couldn't find it online.
In order to better understand his blind girlfriend,
teenage Jeff spends an entire day blindfolded.
That sounds like a really good like young Michael J. Fox role,
like right before back to the future.
He would like, you know, earn his stripes by playing teenage Jeff.
A teenage girl is convinced that her mother does not understand the younger generation.
Mysteriously, she is sent back in time and meets her mother as a teenager.
Jack is a motivated high schooler until he experiments with marijuana and falls in with a
fast crowd. Soon he's dabbling in harder drugs such as LSD, coiloads, and cocaine.
Will he wise up before it's too late?
So like obviously that's one of the super moralizing ones.
But then we've also got teenager is stunned when his best friend commits suicide
and is left with one unanswered question. Why?
Is that the Chad Lowe one?
I think that's the Chad Lowe one.
Well, this leads me to an interesting area because you were saying that you would want
it to watch the retired clown one, but you couldn't find it online.
And something I find really interesting is that,
you know, some of these are like, some of these are on YouTube because somebody has a tape somewhere
and they put it online or because they got released somehow along the way.
And the way I watched the Chad Lowe one was that when I was at Bennington, we used to go
to the Yankee Dollar for fun because it was one of the only things in town really.
And they used to have this DVD bin where he'd get a DVD for a dollar with two movies on it.
And they just would put anything on them.
So one of the 50 cent movies was the Chad Lowe movie.
And first of all, I remember that being a very good after-school special.
I mean, I've remembered it for this long.
But also, there's something interesting about a form of media being so dominant in its way
and being on all the time on network TV, being a cultural phenomenon in that way,
and then sort of disappearing and being impossible to find or like you find little
traces of it in the dollar DVD bin.
But there's no sense of longevity.
The columnist for the Onion AV club, Nathan Rubin, has this concept of forgot busters,
things that were extremely popular at the time, but that we never talk about anymore.
His like, er example is Avatar, which like everybody saw and like no one can quote a line
from that movie or like name a character from that movie.
And it's still, I think, the most highest grossing movie of all time.
I think there's something sort of forgot buster-ish about these movies in that they were huge.
It was like they got the biggest actors at the time.
They got Michael Jackson to be in one.
These are a big deal.
And they were totally monoculture.
And it was something that everybody sat down and watched and everybody talked about.
And there were tons of articles about them.
I found all these articles from the New York Times and the LA Times about coming up this week.
There's a preview of this new after-school special.
Make sure you tune in.
It was something the country really talked about and really had huge cultural influence.
And I was amazed at how few actual single episodes have Wikipedia entries even.
That it's just, they're just gone.
They're just wiped from the cultural consciousness.
And they are like they show up on eBay or whatever in VHS cassettes.
But once the tapes are gone, they're gone.
Yeah.
That makes me think of the contingent of people who believe that they once saw a movie called Shazam
starring Sinbad as a genie.
Oh yeah.
Do you remember that?
Yeah.
This kind of exploded, I think, about a year ago.
And all of these people who had been kids at the time, which makes any conspiracy theory suspect,
said, yes, remembering all these plot elements and saying that they had remembered the video art.
And I'm one of those jerks who think that they are thinking of Kazam,
which was a movie starring Shaquille O'Neal as a genie.
And also maybe a little bit of Magic Island was Zachary Ty Bryan.
But the point is that it makes total sense to me that people would just believe in their hearts
that this movie existed and there's no trace of it.
Because there are so many things like an after school special that you would see
and remember really vividly and not be able to find again because they were disposable media
in that way.
And I don't think it would happen with a Sinbad movie because that would be some kind of a Disney
thing, you know?
But on the other hand, you know, Sinbad, like Sinbad plays a genie is the kind of early 90s
forgettable thing that would potentially be out on video briefly and then never on DVD
and it would be forgotten.
And like our sense and I feel like maybe the millennial sense of we live in this digital age
of all of our media being archived and instantly accessible and it's on our tablet and it's in
the air on the cloud all around us.
The idea that there were things that we saw and loved and developed strong memories of and now
can't find feels almost creepy.
I think after school specials are an interesting institution in this genre in that because also
I think because there's so many random famous actors in them, they all just get kind of mixed
up in our brains.
They get mixed up with the public information campaigns, which were significantly less sophisticated
and they also get mixed up with very special episodes of actual major shows of like when
Blossom did, didn't they do like a rape episode or something?
Probably.
And it's really easy to like mix those up with these actual after school specials which
were much more didactic because they have the same sort of tone and they probably have
the same fucking actors too.
It's all these like random 80s kids that pop up everywhere.
And so if you sat people down and asked them to describe after school specials, I wonder
how many of them would turn out not to exist or to just be special episodes of existing shows.
Yeah. And the whole Sinbad thing, you know, with people, you know, saying I just, I absolutely
have specific memories.
I swear it.
It's like people create memories of committing murders that they never actually committed.
Like you can fabricate a Sinbad movie for yourself.
You went a whole like 24 minutes without mentioning murder, Sarah.
This is the first.
That was a really long time.
Yeah.
That actually leads me into an interesting question of did you ever encounter
you know, a premise or a title for an after school special that was surprisingly dark or
that bit off material that it seems.
Oh yeah.
So as we get into, as we get into the 80s, so the ones I already read you are all like
70s and early 80s.
And then I think as the country becomes more complicated and as this moralism becomes
further and further away from the savviness of actual people, the after school specials
get a lot darker.
So there's one in 1987 where the synopsis is teenager Kevin discovers he's been infected
with AIDS by a blood transfusion.
And that seems like it's the breaking point where like they start to get much more social
and structural.
And for the first time, you see African American protagonists.
That hasn't happened in any of them before.
Oh wow.
There's two on date rape.
So there's one where the most popular boy at school rapes this girl.
And it was like seen as a way of bringing attention to acquaintance rape.
I also might have seen that one at sex ed camp in 1983.
You might have.
I mean, that one's actually pretty famous.
There were also clone after school specials.
So ABC after school specials was like the original.
And then NBC and CBS also had their own, their own franchises.
So that of course gets mixed up because who can remember what channel these things were on.
But each one of them did one or two on gayness, one or two on HIV, one or two on date rape.
So there's kind of like five or six among each of these topics floating around.
I love how gayness gets thrown in with like these incredibly traumatic.
I mean, of course it is at the time.
But still it's like, what if I have AIDS?
What if I'm gay?
And it's like, well, one of those things is more fun than the other.
And also you can't have both at once too, right?
It can't be a gay kid that is having consensual sex and gets infected with HIV.
It's always a blood transfusion, right?
Because then he gets to stay innocent.
Right.
And then with the gay episodes, it's like, I'm gay,
but like I definitely haven't like fucked anybody.
I'm gay, but it's like, I'm this like perfect, happy, acceptable vision of gayness
where like no one is threatened by it.
But if you had both of them at the same time, like we weren't ready for that yet.
That reminds me of how speaking of the 80s, I watched fame,
the movie of fame again for the first time in a while.
Have you ever seen the movie?
No.
It's great.
One of the main characters, Montgomery McNeil, is gay and that's his big arc
as a character is coming out.
But the reality of that they've created in this movie is that he is the only gay kid
in the entire performing arts high school.
Nice.
And it's just like really like he had to be tragic and sexless and alone.
I think it was really Philadelphia before America was ready for a person who was gay
and had actual sex in like mainstream depictions.
When did that start happening?
I think it was like early mid 90s.
I mean, I remember Will and Grace getting crapped on by gay writers for being like
none of these characters ever have sex.
Like there's never, there's kind of romance.
There's like little pecs on the lips, but there's never talk of sex.
There's never a realistic depiction of the way the gay men talk about sex.
And that it was always a sexless, attractive, white, affluent, as non-threatening as possible.
And again, it's this balance between what is America ready for and what can we,
you know, can we push the envelope?
But there's clearly a limit to how much you can push the envelope.
He's not the gay character America wants, but he's the gay character America needs.
At some point you get to the Batman mold.
I mean, that makes me think of how Brokeback Mountain came out when I was in high school
and as someone who had been writing slash newsies fan fiction for years at that time,
I was like, oh yes, this is happening.
This is the world that I want to come of age in.
And I felt attached to that movie, but it was, it's so tragic and no one ever has a chance.
It's like you get a few beautiful days on the wilderness and then your whole life is
crushing loneliness and secrets and death and you're left with a shirt.
I remember when milk came out watching it and being really surprised
and realizing that I hadn't seen before like joyful sex scenes.
There was just a lot of happy making out in that movie.
In the first half, yes.
And then things become complex as they do.
But I remember just being like, you don't get a lot of frolic sum making out between men.
It's like they can make out sadly, like somberly or violently.
Those are men's only two modes.
Those are like the forms of sex that we're willing to look at.
Some of these after school specials,
I was also really impressed with one in the late 80s that was about two sisters,
one slim and one overweight, magically switch personalities,
giving them a new appreciation of each other,
which is like also pretty woke to address like weight bias.
Like that's a thing that is still very taboo now to deal with.
And the fact that they were dealing with it then is pretty like, okay, well done.
One of the ones that made the biggest splash was called The Wave,
which was based on a true story about a teacher
whose students were kind of skeptical about how Nazi Germany worked.
They were like, why would people follow the Nazis
even though they weren't a member of the party, blah, blah, blah.
And so apparently he came up with this whole regime in the school
where he created a program called The Wave,
which was about having good posture and eating well
and kind of this Ubermensch feel.
And he recruited the kids to it.
And apparently after like a couple weeks,
they were like shunning people that weren't part of The Wave.
They were thinking they were better.
They were planning to take over the other classrooms.
It's on YouTube and it gets like super dark, super fast.
But that's another one where it's like,
you're actually teaching people about fascism
and the way that authoritarian systems work,
which is like kind of cool.
I mean, it's not, you know, exactly pushing the boundaries all that much.
But the fact that they were actually addressing things like this,
like we are participants in a structure,
we are affected by things like what leaders say to us
is like, okay, after school specials, like you did okay.
What were the things that felt just extremely dated?
Well, I watched one called School Boy Father,
which stars Rob Lowe as he gets his girlfriend pregnant
and she keeps it.
And somehow he ends up with custody of the baby.
And then there's a scene toward the end
where like the baby's crying at night
and he's like, stop crying.
And he gives it a bottle and it won't stop crying.
And then he's like, he looks up at the ceiling
and he's just like, I can't do this.
And then it cuts to the adoption agency,
just like him and his mom at the adoption agency.
And he's signing papers.
And his mom is like, you're doing the right thing.
And then it's like executive producer and it ends.
And you're like, oh, that's the ending?
Like he doesn't learn and grow.
He just like gives up the baby.
Like that one was a little, I was like, all right, Martin Tossi,
like you can do a little better than that.
One of the things that I found really interesting about this guy,
Tossi, that's kind of running the show at the after school specials,
is that because his parents were alcoholics
and he grew up with this past,
he was really, really particular
about the way that alcoholism was depicted.
So there's one in the 80s called Francesca,
which is about a daughter dealing with her mother's alcoholism.
And Tossi said that he didn't want to imply
that the parents were ever going to stop drinking,
which I think is a very mature viewpoint
and kind of a depressing one.
And so the mother tries to get the daughter
to stop going to alatine,
which is alcoholics anonymous,
but for the kids of alcoholics,
which I didn't even knew was a real thing.
The mom tries to stop the daughter from going there.
And the daughter basically says,
your drinking is the problem.
It's not my problem unless I make it mine.
And she tells her mom that I'm going to keep going to this,
regardless of you.
And the episode ends with her telling her mom,
like you need to stop drinking.
And her mom is like, I'll try,
but I can't promise anything.
You'd think that this would be much more like,
and then Susie stopped drinking and everything was fine.
No, it ends on this kind of ambivalent note.
Things might not get better.
And this is just part of growing up,
is realizing that your family sucks.
That is part of growing up.
And it's so rarely represented on network TV.
Like sometimes your family sucks.
There's also one with, so in the early 90s,
I think their business model started to falter.
And so they started doing fewer.
And also you can tell they're getting cheaper
because they start doing like town hall meetings
and things that are like much cheaper to do.
Like you're not hiring actors and directors
and scriptwriters and stuff.
And so there's one in 1992 where they hire Oprah
to do basically the entire 1992 season
of after school specials.
And so she convenes like a town hall of people
of different races to just talk about the racial experience
and their experiences of racism in America,
which is pretty cool in 1992.
And Oprah also really has always taken on far too much.
Yeah, exactly.
She's a busy lady.
And they called it a special shades of a single protein.
And the whole idea was that like race is bullshit.
Race is just like this one stupid thing.
There's no biological basis for it.
It's socially constructed.
So they were doing a freshman reading
of Judith Butler version of race.
That's when they finally got Judith Butler was in 92.
Yeah, but they were like, there's no sand
and the pearl is an illusion.
So that was my takeaway of the actual content
is that they're not as bad as we think they are.
So I tried, I tried watching like as many as I could
and many of them are shockingly bad.
Right.
But I also think that any TV from that era
would be shockingly bad to a 36 year old in 2018.
I think this was not the golden age of television.
Generally the production values were not great.
The acting was not great.
The writing was not great.
But like if you watch anything from that era, that is true.
Starsky and Hutch is not very sophisticated.
Like even fucking Cheers, which isn't even that long ago,
like I find excruciating to watch
just because it's so predictable.
Every scene, you know exactly what they're going to do with it.
And that's how all of these feel is that in every scene,
you're like, oh, here's the part where she confronts her mother
and the mother is going to be mean to her.
Like, yeah, the minute the scene begins,
you just know that there's going to be no surprises.
But I think a lot of that is the fact that like it's 2018
and I'm 36 and I've seen a million of these things by now.
So I think by the standards of the time,
they had pretty good production values
and they were pretty skillfully written and directed.
It's just we're looking at them through this filter
of like we just don't make TV like this anymore.
Some of the academic articles call it edutainment
and we just don't do that anymore.
And so it sort of has to feel cheesy to us.
Or like we do reality TV.
I feel like some of the void that the after school
especially used to fill is filled by shows like Teen Mom.
You know, I was thinking the other night
because I was doing the thing you do
where like you try to watch TV, right?
And you go on Netflix or whatever and you're like,
what should I watch?
Should I watch something I haven't seen before?
And then you realize that Netflix is now releasing
85 shows per week and you flick through like 800 things
and you get completely overwhelmed
and you're like, I'm going to watch the first 45 minutes
of heat again and fall asleep.
And that's what you do.
That is like 85% of what I do on Netflix.
I spend like 30 minutes scrolling through a bunch of shit
and then I watch something I've already seen
because I'm like, I can't invest in some new
like Wild West docu-drama right now.
It is 1130.
I'm just going to watch some Bob Ross and go to bed.
Yes. And you get overwhelmed.
And there are also all of these prestige things
where like I know I should watch this.
The worst way to sell a TV show to me is to be like,
it's so good.
It's mind-changingly, mind-bendingly,
bendingly good.
And I just think I do not have the mental real estate
for something mind-changingly good.
Like I need to watch the first 45 minutes of heat again.
And I wonder what that lack of a monoculture does to us
because there are, there is TV that becomes
a cultural obsession in that way.
Like there was that period of about a month
where everyone was watching True Detective
and no one could stop talking about True Detective.
But that's still confined to a relatively small demographic.
The people who watched True Detective
were talking very loudly about it,
but I doubt it had like a majority market share
or anything like that.
That is like 100% like people we know.
That's like, I was reading the other day
that something like 65% of the country
has never used Uber, right?
It's like we are in bubbles to an extent
that we do not fathom, that is unfathomable.
Things that we perceive as wildly popular
are enjoyed by like half of a half of 1% of the population.
But it's just everyone we know
because everyone we know is college educated.
Everyone we know is generally employed.
Everyone we know is probably living in a big city.
And we all talk a lot about what we're consuming.
Yeah, and we're really loud about what we're into.
It's just so easy to forget the extent to which
like we are a huge niche and that everybody's a niche.
Like your niche, if you're into Duck Dynasty too,
like everybody's in the little niche.
My other example was like, you know,
when Beyonce performed at Coachella
and everyone lost their minds for 48 hours.
And that's a bigger one, but not everyone lost their minds.
There were some people who had no idea
that Beyonce was doing anything.
Yeah.
Well, I think also the critique of the monoculture
is interesting too in that for so long,
the left wing radical critique of America
was that mass media was creating conformity
and you just don't hear that anymore.
Like that problem resolved itself quietly
because we're all consuming random shit now.
Like that's very tailored to our tastes.
And so it almost seems like it's less of a problem
than these informational bubbles
that everybody's living in.
That if you do have a shared set of facts,
you know, everybody does watch Walter Cronkite every night.
In a way that's good in that you can debate the facts,
but the facts themselves, you're not under debate.
But then that does produce a populace
where like there aren't just aren't that many opinions.
There isn't that much diversity
because there's only so much that ends up making the news.
And so we don't process smaller stories.
It's a really very, very small number of gatekeepers.
And so there's only so many hot takes
that you can write about the news of the day.
Whereas now we're in this place where it's like,
if you go to subreddits, it's like what counts as news
on like the random socialist subreddit
versus what counts as news on like the soccer mom subreddit.
Like they're both true,
but they're both anecdotes in completely different places.
The soccer moms will be like, oh, look at this like lady
who like brought her kids to school when her car broke down.
It's some like random thing that happened in like Michigan.
And then the socialist, it'll be like CEO admits
that he's ripping off his workers or whatever.
And both of those things did happen.
So they're both true in a way,
but it's like that piece of news has traveled
only to a very small number of people.
And so we are all in the same reality
and that even if we're consuming facts that are true,
we're still in this mode where we think
that certain things are a crisis
or we think that there are certain things that are trends,
but they're just anecdotes
and those anecdotes have been amplified somehow.
And then the question that I find so interesting is,
are we better able to converse with each other as a nation?
And are we better able to understand the issues
that the different demographics in our country are facing
if we're given this standardized sort of nut role,
everyone goes home and the issue is Rob Lowe
being a schoolboy dad.
And the next day you're like, Rob Lowe is a schoolboy dad,
I mean, I guess not anymore because he couldn't hack it.
And that's what you have to talk about.
And you've all seen the same news pretty much
or news on one of three stations.
And it had to be standardized to the extent
that it appealed to both a broad swath of Americans
and also to the demographics that are considered valuable
by the people making the programming
or in America where we have all of these different
tiny little media landscapes and this mosaic
and we're trying to communicate with each other
coming from wildly different pockets of media and news
that also allow us to believe
that we're doing what everyone is doing.
Everyone's watching True Detective.
Right.
When in fact, basically,
essentially no one watched True Detective.
Like I think True Detective was also probably popular
for its time, but if it had come on in 1986
and got in the market share that it did,
it would have been considered an embarrassing failure,
probably.
Back when things used to get like 40 or 50%
of the whole country watching them.
Yeah.
What have we lost?
I Googled afterschoolspecials problematic
to see what would come up as far as social critique
of afterschoolspecials.
That's a good way to see if millennials
are talking about something.
Some of the critique of them
basically is around this monoculture idea
that they all take place in the suburbs.
Even the ones that have African-American characters,
it's always they're within a nuclear family.
They go to a affluent school.
It's never anybody in a housing project.
It's never even anybody like living in an apartment.
Right?
It's always people in homes.
Except if your dad lives in a hotel downtown.
That's true.
That was as dark as it got.
It's this kind of monoculture idea
that it's all about whatever challenges they have.
It's a deviation from the nuclear suburban family.
And the solution is always swerving back.
They knew which side their bread was buttered on.
Well, that's the thing.
This is the problem with monoculture, right?
Is that you can't appeal to the 12% of the country
that lives in apartments
or the 50% of the country that is poor
because they don't buy stuff.
You have to appeal like in this invisible way,
you're appealing to a market segment.
And that really profoundly changes
what kinds of stories get told.
But in a way that people don't really notice,
in a way that isn't obvious to the viewer,
it creates this idea that like,
well, what is normal is mom, dad, brother, sister
in the suburbs.
But even then that wasn't as common as we think it is.
That idea of like, this is the default.
Even then it was something like 40% of women
were working outside the home during this period.
And so this idea of like the housewife, she stays home,
mom and dad don't get divorced,
that wasn't actually as common as we think it was.
It just, it was so common in media depictions
that we think it was everybody.
And I think that that image persists now.
We have this idea that there's this like 1950s
that we can go back to.
But so much of that for us is constructed
from fucking leave it to beaver.
That was a total bullshit.
But we had this idea that that was actually representative
of what's in the country because that's what we've seen.
Whereas of course there's no stories
in any of the media back then about segregation
or poverty or people being kicked out of public housing
because there was no more funding for it.
Those stories just never got told.
So they've been completely forgotten
or they're in some like PDF on a .edu website
and nobody's ever gonna notice them.
And so there's a really interesting article
about the depictions of disability
in after school specials and it mentions
that it's all about overcoming your disability
and becoming normal.
So the kid with a stutter just gets over it
and then he doesn't have the stutter anymore
and he rejoins society.
And there's one about a girl with juvenile arthritis
who again is sort of cured and she rejoins society.
And that's kind of a metaphor for the way
that it looked at any form of deviance
or any social problem.
It's not about learning to live with it
or being your best self in whatever condition you have
or just that some people are in bad circumstances,
things like structural poverty.
It never really dealt with those things.
It was all about going back to the nuclear family,
going back to the suburbs, going back to affluence.
And so just putting that as the default
gave people the idea that this is what we should
all be striving for.
You can see how trying to integrate gay characters
into that would lead to this weird,
like it feels like the ending of what if I'm gay
is accept yourself but don't talk about it too much
and it's okay if your friends can only tolerate you.
Because that's the best we can hope for.
Yeah, tolerance is as good as you're gonna get.
Don't expect too much more from this kid.
I mean, of course that show was written
for straight people, that it's depicting
what we want from gay people.
I want gay people not to threaten me.
It's about the fear and the trauma
of maybe having a gay friend.
Yeah, that's the undercurrent.
Oh, this is what I have to deal with
and this is how I expect gay people to deal with me
is to not threaten me, to not demand acceptance,
to not say I'm here, I'm queer, get used to it,
but to say like, I'll be quiet in the corner
and I won't mention it but just be nice to me
and keep me around.
That's sort of what the mainstream culture wanted from that.
That reminds me too of how I feel like one of the complaints
you see people making about media
or people demanding their rights and so forth
is just this thing of, you know,
people didn't used to be autistic.
How come we never heard about it?
And it's like we have had neuro atypical around,
neuro atypical people around since we have had people
and just we've been able to say
that they just really liked trains.
For a really long time.
I think in the late 17th century,
there was the first school for the deaf
was established in France and for a long time,
deaf people and autistic people were seen as the same
because if you're severely autistic,
you just have a lack of responsiveness to people around you
which includes sound.
And deaf people were often not educated
or taught to communicate so they developed
this extreme psychological isolation because of that.
So we just, we literally could not tell the difference
between deafness and autism for a really long time.
And just all of these forms of difference
that don't fit with the mainstreaming narrative
that you either, like if someone is mainstreamable,
you mainstream them and if they're not,
you just completely ignore them
because we can't talk about systemic poverty.
It'll take over an hour and a half to solve that problem.
And so we just can't get into it.
And there's also something too of like
make sure you don't rock the boat too much
in that, okay, maybe you are autistic,
but like don't be mad at me,
don't fight or be angry about your autism
and demand your rights, right?
Like there weren't very many depictions,
sympathetic depictions of that kind of rhetoric
of like, I'm gay, Steve, fuck you.
Like there weren't that many depictions of that.
It was like this idea of like,
difference is okay as long as it's quiet
and doesn't fundamentally challenge me
to change any of my beliefs
or change any of the laws or systems or whatever.
Right, yeah, Jodi Foster just wants to play baseball
with the boys and just wants them to accept her
and whatever gauntlet she has to run to make that happen
is okay, because she wants to join things as they are.
There's actually a feminist critique of that episode
and you nailed it like better
than the feminist academic article
that I read it's basically like.
That's basically what it was saying is that like,
you're not actually questioning the institution
of Little League, you're just like,
I want to join your club.
I mean, it's the argument about,
should we have gay marriage
or should we get rid of marriage altogether?
Institution, it's the exact same argument,
but just applied to Little League.
Yeah, and Jodi Foster.
And Jodi Foster. Yeah.
I think I've mentioned this before
that I have this theory that culture affects us
far more than we think it does.
Oh yeah, because we don't have a control group.
Yeah, and this is how you form this idea
of what is normal.
What's interesting about the after school specials
is that it was a deliberate attempt
to actually educate kids and tell them
things that they needed to know
while being very deliberate and very transparent about it.
So the date rape episode had statistics
that kind of flashed on the screen at the end
that said 92% of rapes are acquaintance rape.
And there's a suicide one
that had like a suicide hotline number that came up.
There was one about a couple where they get gonorrhea
and it's like them dealing with STDs and stuff.
And it was like very educational.
And what's interesting is that we still learn
about the world around us from entertainment.
It's just much less deliberate now.
It's much more invisible that instead
of watching after school specials,
you're watching Beverly Hills 90210 or the OC.
And you're, or even like Teen Mom or whatever.
And you're like, well, this is how people act.
This is how I'm supposed to act.
Whereas the after school specials were like,
hello, this is how you are supposed to act.
Like it was very, it was thinking it through,
like what are we teaching kids?
Let's be super deliberate and try to be accountable
to what we're teaching kids.
Whereas shows now are teaching kids stuff,
but they're acting like, oh, it's just entertainment.
Like I don't think we're as deliberate
or as maybe concerned about it now as we should be.
Yeah, and you would never have an episode
of Pretty Little Liars where, yeah,
where they flashed a number on the screen
and we're saying, we are trying to teach you
about this thing because I think the assumption,
and this is probably true, is that as viewers,
especially teen viewers, the response would be,
fuck you, don't try and teach me something.
That's, I'm gonna decide what I am thinking
about and what I believe.
And that we've just gotten, I mean,
I find it so interesting that, for example,
you and I who grew up watching all sorts of TV
and have also been around it for a long time,
like we just know the beats of the network special
in a way that I don't think that a teenager would
in the 80s and part of that is because we're adults,
but also part of it I think is just because we,
the media landscapes that we grew up in had already been
so saturated by this form of narrative
and it was just everywhere and we kind of learned it,
that if someone handed us a piece of paper
and said, outline a TV movie, we could probably be like,
well, after like 20 minutes, this has to happen
and after 15 more, and then there has to be
some kind of reversal and then before you go to commercial,
you, someone will say something surprising
and they'll play a little music, HBO a couple of years ago
did a really good documentary about the Pam Smart trial,
which was the narrative that was the basis for To Die For,
which I think is Nicole Kidman's finest hour.
Oh my God, I love that movie, ever that book too.
Yeah, it's such a fascinating little moment
in what American media was in the mid 90s.
One of the things they talk about in this documentary
is that there was this narrative that Pam Smart
was a conniving seductress and what we know about her
and what she had to say for herself
and what the people close to her had to say
for her really doesn't bear that out.
But it was the story that people knew,
like they knew the conniving seductress
hires the luckless guy, in this case,
a teenage boy to kill her husband.
Like that was, that's the postman always rings twice.
That's the classic noir narrative, everybody knew it.
And so it showed up on TV and could be easily massaged
into that mold and they were like, oh, of course,
Pam Smart is an evil conniving seductress
and just ran with that narrative.
Right, it's like these Jungian archetypes.
Yeah, totally, because what I want to believe
is that as Americans, we can at least develop tolerances
to not to monomyths like the conniving seductress,
which I think is one of the monomyths
that shows up in all forms of media
over and over and over again.
I don't think we're more immune to that narrative
as a whole, but that we do get jaded about
certain forms of media through which narratives come to us.
So for me as someone who was young in the mid 90s
and got very comfortable and familiar with
and is able to be cynical about the like,
I am telling you, this is the message,
I want you to receive sort of 80s tone
that I think was in after school specials and also news.
I think that a teenager of today, if the media was like,
I am trying to tell you this, this is what is happening.
This woman is a conniving seductress
and that's the story, film at 11,
that we at least have more cynicism
about a person on TV trying to tell us something.
Well, it's interesting you bring this up
because all the articles I've read about the downfall,
the demise of after school specials,
says basically what killed it is cynical teens.
It was us, Michael, we did it.
I know, achievement unlocked.
There became this sense of worldliness was the pose
that teenagers took in media and in real life
was basically all of these cliches had been played out
so much by that point, as you were just saying.
And you just couldn't do that level of earnestness anymore.
You couldn't be as obvious about the fact
that I'm trying to teach you something,
I'm trying to send you a message,
I'm trying to teach you a moral lesson.
You just couldn't do that anymore.
And so one of the really interesting articles that I read
was about the depiction of date rape
after school specials versus how it was depicted
in shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer
and the OC and Veronica Mars.
They mentioned something called compassion fatigue
where when you've seen a social problem
depicted so many times,
it actually makes it more difficult to solve
that you see something over and over and over again
and you're like, this is too complicated,
this is too sad, this is too hard.
And also especially, this is boring
because you've seen the narrative so many times
that it makes you less interested in it.
So the more you see TV shows about, say,
a kid with anorexia and she's down to 86 pounds
and she still thinks she's fat, et cetera,
we have actually seen that story many times.
I feel like that was a really good
after school special narrative too
because it's like a girl in peril,
but she's not being traumatized
by a representative of the patriarchy.
She's doing it to herself.
There were actually a lot about eating disorders.
But that's the kind of thing
that once you've seen that story depicted so many times,
you're like, here's the part where she pukes up again.
And it kind of endures you to it.
It makes you less compassionate
because we're just immune or we're allergic to cliches.
And so it's the cliche, the repetition
that you're responding to,
not necessarily the moral content.
And so TV producers started to realize that.
And so I have not seen it,
but the authors of the study talk about
how in Veronica Mars the show begins
with her being date raped at a party,
drugged and date raped.
And there's a voice over that's really worldly
of like, do you want to know about my date rape?
So would I, I don't remember it.
And it's her kind of like rolling her eyes
at the experience of being date raped of kind of,
this doesn't affect me that much.
I just want to solve it like it's any other mystery.
And again, I haven't seen this
or I have no idea how it's actually depicted,
the authors of the article are saying
that that's something that kind of downplays
the experience of date rape
or makes it kind of just another thing that teens deal with.
Another thing I thought was really fascinating
about this article is they mentioned
another thing that got rid of didacticism
was shows started having A plots and B plots and C plots.
Did they not have those before?
And these, since I read this in this academic article
and I was watching these old after school specials,
no, they're like one fucking note.
It's like there's no subplots.
It's literally, because they're 48 minutes
after the commercials.
And so it's like, every scene is about the main thing
and the scenes are long.
I mean, that's another thing that a huge change in media
now that scenes are short because we get the point
after like three lines of dialogue and then we move on.
Whereas in this one, it's like Rob Lowe feeding the baby
is like a six minute long scene, dude.
It's like Terrence Malek.
You're like, all right, you're still feeding the baby.
Are we done yet?
Come on.
Our attention spans are so much shorter now.
So they're packing, they're packing like 10 subplots
into each one of these shows.
And what this article mentions is that by treating date rape,
it's like the A story is like Melissa can't decide
to cheat on a test.
And the B story is like Troy might not make the tennis team
and the C story is like Elaine is getting raped.
It's like, oh, well it's about the same level
as passing a test or joining the tennis team.
Like it levels things off that how many minutes
of attention this social problem is getting
teaches you in this subtle way
how important of an issue it is.
And so just all of these social problems
that are kind of injected into these shows
just end up getting less attention
because they're one of 50 other things.
And most of it is like teenage bullshit,
teenage bullshit, date rape, teenage bullshit.
And it makes you think that like, oh, well,
date rapes can't be that big of a deal
because they're just teenage bullshit.
Well, yeah, that makes me think of this episode of Felicity
that was like a fairly special episode.
Yeah.
And I remember thinking that it was thoughtful
and well done considering the context.
And I saw it when I was about Felicity's age.
And the episode is Felicity has her ongoing situation
with Ben and there's some third thing
and Amy Jo Johnson gets date raped
and they resolve it at the end
with the guy gets kicked out of school.
It's gonna go back to Minnesota
and then everyone moves on.
And it doesn't, and it comes up a little bit,
but then it comes up in terms of Julie and Ben
start hanging out more and eventually dating
because she was traumatized by the date rape
and he has to take care of her.
And that's why Felicity doesn't get to date him
for another two years.
So it does get swallowed into the overarching plot.
It just becomes more teenage bullshit.
And there's also no sense of, you know,
this is a systemic issue that affects more than just Julie.
It's like Julie got herself date raped.
Now she gets to have a relationship with Ben.
I like how we've managed to like make this one depressing.
Yeah.
Even though after school specials are like fun and funny.
We've ended on date rape
and the world becoming a worse place.
Well, okay, my speculation is that audiences
of American media are capable of being more savvy
about the powers that be attempting to lie to them
in an unsavvy media way
or like a dated media way.
So that's vaguely hopeful.
Woo-hoo.
What strikes me is the extent
to which you just can't bring it back.
Right.
Even if you wanted to bring back after school specials
as an institution or this idea of,
let's actually do some instruction.
Let's discuss social problems in a nuanced
and compassionate way for a specific audience.
You just can't do it anymore.
I mean, being that deliberate, that level of earnestness,
I think would just seem really patronizing now.
It would.
Even if you were doing it very openly
and accountably and doing your best,
it just seems so, you just can't do that anymore.
And so it's funny how you just, we've moved on.
Like the way that we move on as a society
from this idea of deliberately teaching our kids anything
through media.
God.
Yeah.
Oh, you and I are great at making things dark.
I mean, the thing is, if you're talking
about American mass culture, then it's always gonna,
it's always gonna get dark at some point if you let it.
Like say we tried to do this today.
Say somebody with carte blanche at a network said,
let's make an after school special.
Let's make it about the opioid epidemic.
You would never, ever, ever make something that was,
you know, Timmy's mother has an opioid addiction.
Oh my God, can you imagine?
Jesus.
I'm rolling my eyes just thinking about it.
Right.
And why would that be so off-putting?
Because it, because there would be,
I guess it's the idea of authority,
the idea of someone coming in and saying,
here's the situation.
I think it's also the deliberateness too.
It's the same way that like when Christians come
to your door, everything about the conversation with them
is you're trying to convert me.
Like you know that.
You know that there's, they're not trying to entertain you.
They're not just having chit chat.
Even if you're just chatting about the weather,
there's this thing in the back of your mind
that's like you are trying to convert me
with every single thing that you're doing.
And so I wonder if it's like that purpose
just infects everything that you see about the show.
That if you know it's edutainment,
if you know you're supposed to get something
nutritious out of it,
you're never going to be able to just enjoy it.
Whereas the idea of entertaining somebody
is much more complex than educating somebody.
If someone says, hey, I made the show.
I want it to entertain you.
I want it to make you laugh.
That feels pure to us in a way
that I want it to make you think
or I want it to make you act in a certain way.
Doesn't.
That also makes me think of my favorite
very special episode of all time
was this episode of Designing Women that they did in 1987
that I think you and I have probably talked about
where Tony Goldwyn is a young client of theirs
because they run an interior design firm and he comes
and he says, I want you to design my funeral.
I'm dying of AIDS.
And they don't specifically say that he got it
from a transfusion of some kind
and he actually is presented as a young gay man.
And they do this whole sequence
where they have a homophobic customer come in
and basically do this straw conservative American argument
that was very well represented at the time
about this is punishment.
And they just say statistics for about five minutes.
Like here's the ways that you can contract HIV here
the ways that you can.
They literally have Delta Burke say if it's punishment
then how come lesbians get it less?
Nice.
That's actually a pretty good point.
It is a really good point.
It's like the best point that Delta Burke
had that entire show.
What I find so interesting about that is thinking
about being an American in 1987
and you might not have access to a library
that has periodicals that have reliable information
about AIDS and you might not be exposed.
If you're not actively searching out information
you probably aren't going to be exposed to it
just by the media you consume in the course of the day.
So the sitcom that was on one of the major networks
that got into everyone's house was actually able
to perform this public health function
and also to try and do something humanist
with the power that it had.
And yeah, I don't think that we would respond well
to someone to very clearly Delta Burke
claiming to be talking in scene
but really being educating you the audience.
Like would you have this feeling of
I don't need to be told information.
I can get information any time I want.
I can look it up online.
I just don't need to.
Yeah, because you'd be like I don't need you
to be the Wikipedia entry on the opioid crisis
for me right now, like I don't.
It feels like the Netflix phenomenon really
where all of the information we need to understand
something that's happening to us is in front of us
and we're like, I'm gonna watch the first 45 minutes
of Pete again.