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- <text id=92TT2052>
- <title>
- Sep. 14, 1992: TV's Generation Gap
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Sep. 14, 1992 The Hillary Factor
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TELEVISION, Page 68
- TV'S Generation Gap
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The new fall programs are rife with angst-ridden baby boomers
- and fun-loving 20-year-olds. Some shows are witty; many are
- drivel.
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin
- </p>
- <p> Woman walks into a bar. The regulars instantly size her
- up: "Uptown, East Side, college educated. Probably reuses her
- grocery bags. Charter subscriber to Working Woman magazine. Saw
- The Big Chill three times. Plays Trivial Pursuit on the
- weekends with friends. What's she doing here on a Monday? It's
- Murphy Brown night."
- </p>
- <p> Man makes a lewd comment. Woman instantly sizes him up:
- "Is there a brain up there, or just one long episode of Studs?"
- </p>
- <p> Scenes from both sides of TV's generational divide: the
- first, from Diane English's much anticipated new CBS sitcom Love
- and War, is hip, sophisticated, full of knowing media
- references (including one to English's own show--and current
- cause celebre--Murphy Brown). The second, from a less heralded
- new NBC sitcom called Out All Night, is brassy and in-your-face;
- its TV reference, appropriately, is to a salacious game show.
- Love and War is one of a potful of upscale, thirtysomething
- sitcoms served up by the networks this fall. Out All Night gives
- a good idea of what TV thinks of the younger generation.
- </p>
- <p> Thirtysomething, ABC's trendsetting drama series, has been
- off the air for more than a year, but the show's angst-ridden
- spirit will be all over the dial this fall. In Love and War, a
- roughhewn Manhattan journalist (Jay Thomas) falls for a prickly,
- recently divorced restaurateur (Susan Dey). In Hearts Afire, two
- aides to a U.S. Senator (John Ritter and Markie Post) get
- together despite clashing political views. NBC's Mad About You
- focuses on neurotic newlyweds living in Manhattan, while ABC's
- Laurie Hill adds a five-year-old child to the trials of a busy
- two-career couple.
- </p>
- <p> It's no surprise that thirtysomething shows are growing in
- popularity. They reflect, to a large degree, the experiences and
- life-styles of the people who create them. They attract the
- audience demographics that advertisers crave. They usually get
- applause from the critics--or at least approving nods for
- trying to bring "quality" to a medium dominated by escapist
- drivel.
- </p>
- <p> The escapist drivel, meanwhile, is going after a younger
- crowd. TV's hottest new genre is the twentysomething ensemble
- show. Melrose Place (a spinoff of Beverly Hills 90210), The
- Heights (about a group of blue-collar New Jersey youths trying
- to launch a rock band) and 2000 Malibu Road, a soap opera set
- in a California beach house, all drew strong ratings this
- summer. Coming this fall are NBC's The Round Table (young
- professionals in Washington), Fox's Class of '96 (students at
- a small Northeastern college) and a slew of youth-oriented
- sitcoms.
- </p>
- <p> A generation gap could hardly be more clearly defined.
- TV's under-30s are, for the most part, shallow, fun loving,
- upbeat. They tend to live in communal groups and spend a lot of
- time in the sun. They are still young enough to be entranced
- with the idea of being on their own. One of the two bachelors
- who room together (while working at Patti LaBelle's nightclub)
- in Out All Night raves about their new apartment: "It's what
- we've always talked about. A place of our own, with no parents,
- no dorm directors--just freedom!"
- </p>
- <p> After the age of 30, however, life gets more complicated
- and troubling. TV's thirtysomethings are tense, introspective,
- concerned about relationships. They have pressure-filled jobs,
- and they usually live in big cities, where just getting to work
- can be a problem. "If we're not on the subway by eight, all the
- nonsticky seats are taken," says the husband rushing for work
- in Mad About You. They worry a lot about their future, and no
- wonder: if they're not careful, they could end up like one of
- the midlife losers of Middle Ages, CBS's downer drama that just
- opened for a five-week run. Take Peter Riegert, for instance,
- who plays a salesman trying to peddle computers to small-town
- Midwesterners, many of them old people who are still mystified
- by the little holes in steam irons. Willy Loman never had it so
- drab.
- </p>
- <p> TV's younger generation, of course, has its troubles too,
- but they are usually overblown soap-opera cliches, and they
- seem to catch everybody by surprise. In Melrose Place, a naive
- young secretary is sexually attacked by her new boss, but only
- after warning signs that not even Senator Arlen Specter could
- have missed. In The Heights, a band member's girlfriend
- announces that she is pregnant. "I guess we'll get married. It's
- the right thing to do," says the boyfriend, who has apparently
- never seen an episode of Oprah or Donahue. The knottiest
- problems in The Heights are not personal but group related. The
- sole black member of the band gets razzed by his neighborhood
- pals for playing with a bunch of whites. "It's not a color
- thing," he replies. "It's a people thing." A blond waif
- complains that the band won't let her sing her own soulful
- music. "If you don't start taking me seriously, I'm going to
- quit the band!" she cries. Who said anything about taking people
- seriously?
- </p>
- <p> Not all of TV's under-30s appear brain damaged. Beverly
- Hills 90210, the high school drama whose success launched the
- current spate of twentysomething ensembles, has always borne
- more resemblance to a thirtysomething show, with its brooding
- characters and relatively forthright treatment of teen problems.
- Going to Extremes, the new series from John Falsey and Joshua
- Brand (I'll Fly Away, Northern Exposure) and set in a Caribbean
- medical school, is a surprisingly bland concoction from that
- creative team. But at least it revolves around characters with
- minimum scores on the SATs and some awareness of the real world.
- </p>
- <p> Nor are the older-targeted shows, for all their
- introspective angst, necessarily profound or truthful. Laurie
- Hill sets up a familiar problem: a two-career couple (she's a
- doctor, he's a freelance writer) trying to find time for each
- other and for their five-year-old son. But the day-to-day
- conflicts are too overbaked. Laurie's husband gets pouty when
- their evening at home is interrupted by her beeper. "You have
- a kid at home who's gonna be in college by the time the three
- of us get to have a meal together!" he snaps later. And what is
- the crisis that has called her away? A sick young boy whose test
- results show he is HIV-positive. So much for marital
- sensitivity.
- </p>
- <p> Love and War is shrewder and funnier, but its
- therapy-session psychologizing tends to run amuck. Wally and
- Jack, the couple from opposite sides of the tracks, dissect
- their relationship in first-person comments to the camera. (He:
- "I have this feeling about her. It's like the first time I rode
- the Cyclone at Coney Island. I was strangely excited, and a
- little nauseous at the same time." She: "I've always found his
- type very attractive, but I'm in a dangerously vulnerable place
- right now.") Conversing with each other, however, they revert
- to adolescent stammering. Jack tries to ask Wally for a date:
- "Would you like to have dinner with me tonight? O.K., O.K., that
- was too much, too formal, too crazy. Want to eat with me
- tonight? I mean, I have to eat, you have to eat..."
- </p>
- <p> The one subject in which conversation is blunt and
- unambiguous is sex. On their first date, Jack and Wally kiss
- briefly, then she suddenly blurts out, "Would you like to have
- sex?" They proceed to debate the possibility with all the
- emotional involvement of a discussion of tax policy on Wall
- Street Week. There are gag lines that must have had the show's
- writers in stitches ("Your condom or mine?"), but the whole
- encounter is contrived and phony, like too much of the show.
- </p>
- <p> Love and War seems even more artificial when compared with
- Mad About You, the season's best new sitcom. Paul and Jamie
- (Paul Reiser and Helen Hunt) are Manhattan newlyweds with no
- cute eccentricities, no clashing political views, no comical
- disparities in social background. Their problems are the little
- ones that occur when even compatible people are tossed into the
- same house together for the first time. Just getting out of the
- apartment in the morning is a Feydeau farce: she rushes back to
- open the window (the dog needs air), he rushes back to close it
- (a burglar might get in).
- </p>
- <p> Mad About You, like Love and War, is too self-consciously
- verbal on the subject of sex, but it has more self-deprecating
- wit. She: "It doesn't bother you that we haven't had sex in
- five days? What's going on with us?" He: "What's going on is
- that we're married five months and the sexual part...is
- over. I thought you understood that."
- </p>
- <p> Reiser, a former stand-up comic, has knife-edge timing and
- a full repertoire of nervous tics, and Hunt manages to be both
- charming and exasperating at the same time. One sign of a
- sitcom that cares more about its characters than its gag lines:
- when Paul and Jamie start to fight, they ask their dinner
- guests to leave the room--carrying their potential wisecracks
- with them. Privacy is one concept that becomes more precious
- with age.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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