In 1980, the writer George W. S. Trow published a riveting essay in The New Yorker about television and the state of American popular culture. “Within the Context of No-Context” explored the effect of TV on public life and the evolution of art. “The power behind [television] resembles the power of no-action, the powerful passive,” Trow writes. “It is bewitching.” Trow’s tone may have been a bit overwrought at times (“No good has come of it”), but his essay, published as a book the following year, was prescient in many ways. And it spoke to the outsized effect the medium has had and continues to have on the popular taste and mores of American society at large.
This week, we’re bringing you a selection of pieces about notable shows and how they have helped transform our culture. In “The Hit Man’s Burden,” from 1999, Nancy Franklin writes about a new show, “The Sopranos,” that explores the human side of the Mafia. (“There has certainly never been anything like it on TV, and on network TV there never could be anything like it—it goes out on a limb that doesn’t even exist at the networks.”) In “Cookie, Oscar, Grover, Herry, Ernie, and Company,” from 1972, Renata Adler considers the revolutionary, enlightening spirit of “Sesame Street.” In “Taking Humor Seriously,” from 2000, David Owen profiles George Meyer, one of the chief comedic visionaries behind “The Simpsons.” (The sitcom “is not only the funniest but also the most literate show on TV—a program that, in the words of the poet Robert Pinsky, a longtime fan, ‘penetrates to the nature of television itself.’ ”) Doreen St. Félix chronicles the chaotic spirit of Michaela Coel’s “I May Destroy You,” about the poignant aftermath of sexual assault, and, in a review from 1993, James Wolcott analyzes the wry comic agility of “Seinfeld.” Finally, in “Stealing Life,” Margaret Talbot describes how a former Baltimore Sun reporter named David Simon created “The Wire,” which he later described as “a novel for television.” As you consider what to stream during the long Thanksgiving weekend, tuck into some of these invigorating selections from our archive; they may help narrow your list.
—Erin Overbey, archive editor
From The New Yorker’s Archive
On Television
The Hit Man’s Burden
The Old Country meets Prozac Nation on “The Sopranos.”
By Nancy Franklin | March 29, 1999
Profiles
Taking Humor Seriously
George Meyer, the funniest man behind the funniest show on TV.
By David Owen | March 13, 2000
Profiles
Stealing Life
The crusader behind “The Wire.”
By Margaret Talbot | October 22, 2007
Newsletters
Sign Up for The New Yorker’s Movie Club Newsletter
Reviews of the current cinema, plus recommendations for classics and underrated treasures available on streaming services, every Friday.
The Air
Cookie, Oscar, Grover, Herry, Ernie, and Company
The invention of “Sesame Street.”
By Renata Adler | June 3, 1972
On Television
Michaela Coel’s Chaos and Charisma in “I May Destroy You”
The HBO series about the aftermath of sexual assault is a hangout vehicle, a detective story, and a comic bildungsroman.
By Doreen St. Félix | July 6 & 13, 2020
On Television
Blows and Kisses
The cult of Jerry Seinfeld and his flip side, Howard Stern.
By James Wolcott | November 15, 1993
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.