Was I really already in high school when I first watched this? I didn't think I was so old.
Wait, high school? God, I was so young back in '94.
Speaking of being young, it's really weird watching it now and getting what the doctor is saying from the start, rather than agreeing with Christy all the time. I mean, I get where she's coming from too, but he seems like less of a cynic/stick in the mud this time around. And not just because I know how it ends.
Watching the scene where they talk about the moonshine in the pilot episode is very different when one has yet to ever drink, versus watching while drinking a White Russian (with ice cream, yum). As a member of Friday Night Live, you are pretty much just thinking "alcohol bad!". As the Kalua drinker, you mostly just feel bad that they had to make do with moonshine.
I find it intersting that this is hailed as such a Christian show. I know it's mostly because the book is (books?) but this particular adaptation? Aside from Christy's internal monologues and her conversations with Alice, not a resounding endorsement for organized religion. There's a reason Christy picks the doctor over the preacher.
Also, there's just too many parallels between the doctor's arguments in favor of the moonshine and the situation of the modern poor, whether it's farmers in Afghanistan growing poppy or kids in "inner cities" that get involved in selling drugs. That's not really a perspective that the bulk of those that speak for American Christians and "family values" really get behind.
Wow. I can't believe I liked the preacher more than the doctor the first time. He's so young! Oh wait, that makes sense. And Christy is really young too.
Wow is this a surprisingly feminist show.
No wonder why I liked it. Now I feel less bad that I completely missed Buffy when it first aired. I'd recently abandoned fantasy/scifi for romance novels and historical fiction, and horror would not be on my list of things I liked for several more years. Buffy completely passes me by until the sixth season or so when I caught a rerun of Hush on FX. But Christy was totally on my radar.
Why is it feminist? Well, aside from the part where Christy not only says that she wants to do more with her life than keep home and have babies, the show lets her qualify that statement by explaining that it's the lack of purpose of being a female member of (high?) society that feels pointless to her, not the raising kids part. The mothers in Cutter Gap are all shown sympathetically (if at times cowed) and often as important members of the community, albeit not officially.
Most importantly though, there is Christy's relationship with Alice, which is just awesome. How often do we get to see older women mentoring younger women? Especially when the women are not related? This is a professional mentoring relationship, which grows to include the spiritual and emotional. I just love it so much. In no small part thanks to the fact that Tyne Daly is perpetually awesome. And Tyne Daly with a shotgun, more than awesome.
(Oh, wait, I need to add Cagney and Lacey to the list of dvds I need. I think I'm going to forgoe getting cable - or even any kind of broadcast television - when I move, and just spend the money on buying shows on dvd instead.)
And Christy's friendship with Fairlight? Very cool as well. I mean really, how many shows that aren't about Housewives or girlfriends in the City (and their relationships) do we have on now that center around a female character, her job and the people around her, with half of the main people around her being female?
Yes, sadly, there is a reason why it was shortlived. And Kellie Martin's sophmore acting wasn't it reason. (I think Kellie Martin can act, but Christy was not her best work. Not the pilot anyway.)
I hated David's sister the first time I watched this. Now I just hate him. Manipulative, self-centered asshole. I doubt she had very many other prospects, and what kind of a bitch would people think of her if she left her poor brother to fend for himself in the wilderness? As I said, not resounding endorsement of organized religion.
PS - it's hot. I hate trying to get to sleep when it's hot.
Saturday, May 31, 2008
Random Thoughts on Christy
Posted by Mickle at 11:57 PM
Labels: Buffy, Christy, feminism, politics, privilege, remember when, romance novels, scifi/fantasy, tv
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3 comments:
I LOVED Christy when I was younger, and I remember I had such a deep, resounding crush on the doctor. (I, for whatever, reason in my youth, tended to be more fond of the older cynics than I think I was supposed to be.
QUOTE:"I think I'm going to forgoe getting cable - or even any kind of broadcast television - when I move, and just spend the money on buying shows on dvd instead."
My husband and I opted to forgo cable, as well, and we've never really looked back! Our combined DVD collection is pretty huge, anyway, and there's always Netflix if there re any "newer" shows that we want to check out. I reccomend it, but then, I'm not a big TV person, anways.
I'm not sure I want to forgo TV for forever - there's always a couple shows each year that I must watch as they are aired.
But this time around, I won't be moving any further than a 20 minute drive from my parents, and they have Tivo (I love Tivo - TV makes TV watchable) and at least one of the shows that I must watch every week is one that they watch as well, so they would definitely keep it in on the PVR until I get to watch it, as long as I come and watch it each week and not let them build up.
And I think I can be patient enough to wait a day or two for a year or so until I'm making a little more money.
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