Thursday, October 24, 2013

Review: The Good Wife (Rough Draft)

The Good Wife is a show that airs on CBS and first aired in 2009. The show is a political and legal drama that was a commentary on the multiple political scandals between wives and husbands in the political world. The show began with the main character, Alicia Florick, being cheated on by her husband who was the governor of Illinois at the time. The show has since carried the plot of how Alicia responds and moves on. Each episode however also carries individual plots pertaining to either the law firm Alicia works for or the political scene being established by her husband.
The show at face value is a drama. However, the show also requires the audience to think critically of the information argued within each episode. The icons of wife, husband, lawyer, and politician are all examined and the roles of each are renegotiated almost each episode. As a whole I appreciate the commentary made on these different roles. In society, men and women are held to strict stereotypes of how to act in relationships. I think it is important that shows like this break gender stereotypes like who takes care of the kids, who makes the decisions in a relationship, and more.
The show specifically addresses the double standards between the genders in instances of infidelity. The show may have originated with the moment that Alcia’s husband was caught having an affair, but throughout the show, Alicia also finds herself in bed with someone who is not her husband. The commentary on this issue stands out the most. Society seems to market itself with values of fidelity yet the value of marriage continues to deteriorate. Right now in America, around fifty percent of marriages end in divorce. I find it interesting that fidelity is still presented as such a high value when the value of marriage itself continues to drop.
One attitude that has been recently addressed in the show that really caught my attention is the view that we as a society have on the limelight. We are constantly discussing celebrities and stars and the lives they lead. Part of those discussions fall on how we feel about youth that grow up in the limelight. There is a common attitude towards youth in the limelight that makes it look that we as a society see them as unreal and incapable of being normal. We judge children who are thrust into the media’s attention and mark them as future burnouts and delinquents but no one considers what they themselves are going through. The show recently addressed this topic when it followed the sub-plot pertaining to the daughter of Alicia Florick. The daughter has just begun high school and due to a high government ranking father and the scandal behind his name, she is being recognized as a pseudo celebrity name. Specifically she is being identified by her looks when a popular website lists her as one of the top ten hottest politician’s daughters.  
As a whole I believe that the show is effective in representing the world the way it truly is. It's not black and white or at least not to the degree that we would like. There are different shades of gray and it's our job to discern which ones are acceptable.

4 comments:

  1. I really like the choice you made for this paper. I think that it’s a good example of the stereotypical gender roles that society has built. I think that the way that society has been painting the picture that marriage as something that is this perfect thing to have and how the society does try to make it seem like they have values that need to be kept clean. I think that this show shows is the unclean version of what is really going on in marriages now a days. Also shows us that it is not usually the man that cheats that women cheat too. Even though society is trying to paint this pretty picture on how marriage should be most of the time that’s not how is really is.

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  2. i feel like the choice you made can really go a long way in giving examples of the different roles, responsibilities and expectancies of certain social groups and individuals. one show i think you may want to tie in to that (if you'd like) would be Parks and Recreation. which focuses on the life of a parks and Rec employee who is a woman and makes her way up to being a city council member. it touches on the mixed gender roles and the stereotypes of both men and women in government positions and personal lives. Great looking paper so far.

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  3. This sounds very interesting. It is a constant argument among people. The roles one plays in a relationship, cheating, and other factors. Iv'e heard the that the guy is too sensitive and the girl is running things. Men can't cook, and do laundry and other things for their wife/girlfriend because he is now a "slave" and she is lazy. I believe a relationship should be equal, and is one is more masculine or feminine is doesn't matter. I don't think cheating is ever okay, male or female. But some people think that when a girl cheats its worse. Its equally wrong. This show seems to cover a lot and breaking it down and looking in depth at it seems like it will be interesting.

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  4. I've never seen the show, but it seems to focus on "family values" in high profile situations. For every family, the values are different. Which value will you focus on? Maybe a good correlation would be to see if the ones in high profile cases are the same as the ones outside of the limelight, and if they are/are not synonymous. Supposedly, we are supposed to look up to the limelight for guidance, but maybe they could take a refresher course from us out in the audience? What significance could they take away from our experience? How is what they do any different from what we do?

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