T
ThatNickGuy
I've been thinking about the popular TV shows. It seems that the majority of the popular or highest acclaimed ones feature main characters who aren't just straight good guys (as one would expect of most "heroes" of a TV show), but in fact live in a gray area of questionable morals. You're asked to root for and get behind mad men, psychotics, murderers, etc.
Part of it came from a discussion with a co-worker regarding Dollhouse. She had a hard time watching it because the Dolls, essentially, are programmed hookers. What was worse to her is that the volunteers who become Dolls will have no recollection, despite the possibility of sleeping with dozens, if not hundreds of people and putting their lives on the line. And yet the show is surrounded with the idea that the main characters are the "good guys".
Now, personally? That's what I love about the Dollhouse. Its characters are complex and the morality of the show balances on that very delicate edge.
But then, there are other shows, some of which I've watched and loved. Dexter, for example. The main character is a serial killer. Yet he only kills the "bad guys". And yet he works for the police. And yet yet has to hide that aspect of himself. He does "good" work in a very disturbing mannner.
I think this trend might have started with Sopranos, but I'm not sure. I'm not by any means saying ANY of these shows are bad because, as I've said, they're really great TV. It's kind of like The Punisher, in a lot of ways. Yeah, he kills the bad guys, but honestly, he's a psychotic individual himself; a by-product of being a trained killer working in Vietnam.
Can we root for these kinds of characters when, in a lot of ways, what they do would be considered "wrong" by general standards? It certainly makes for interestering and exciting television, when they have to run from the law or in Dexter's case, hide from it.
Part of it came from a discussion with a co-worker regarding Dollhouse. She had a hard time watching it because the Dolls, essentially, are programmed hookers. What was worse to her is that the volunteers who become Dolls will have no recollection, despite the possibility of sleeping with dozens, if not hundreds of people and putting their lives on the line. And yet the show is surrounded with the idea that the main characters are the "good guys".
Now, personally? That's what I love about the Dollhouse. Its characters are complex and the morality of the show balances on that very delicate edge.
But then, there are other shows, some of which I've watched and loved. Dexter, for example. The main character is a serial killer. Yet he only kills the "bad guys". And yet he works for the police. And yet yet has to hide that aspect of himself. He does "good" work in a very disturbing mannner.
I think this trend might have started with Sopranos, but I'm not sure. I'm not by any means saying ANY of these shows are bad because, as I've said, they're really great TV. It's kind of like The Punisher, in a lot of ways. Yeah, he kills the bad guys, but honestly, he's a psychotic individual himself; a by-product of being a trained killer working in Vietnam.
Can we root for these kinds of characters when, in a lot of ways, what they do would be considered "wrong" by general standards? It certainly makes for interestering and exciting television, when they have to run from the law or in Dexter's case, hide from it.