hOLLYWOOD
RULEs
aPRIL,
2000
- tUNE in
to TV's new "golden age." Case in point: HBO's The Sopranos, praised
by critics for clever story lines and true to life characters. Next month
the show receives the Peabody Award for "excellence in television."
To scrutinize all this praise, I took a rare break from my "All Gilligan
All The Time" and "Beverly Hillbillies 24 Hour Marathon" retro-channels.
Here's what I learned ...
Tearing a page from a respected Hollywood scriptwriting tradition, The
Sopranos features Italian-Americans most delicately described as overweight
murderers who curse a lot and employ troubled grammar, all the while gesticulating
with exaggerated body movements and repetitious facial contortions. More
telling, they eat with napkins tucked under their chins.
In another nod to Hollywood tradition, the show's Italian-American characters
speak in a genetic borough brand of New York/New Jersey accent (the Hollywood
Encyclopedia of Ethnicities confirms that all Italian-Americans are in
fact from the New York/New Jersey area).
Finally, spend any time with Uncle Junior, Paulie Walnuts,
the late Pussy Bompensiero, or the others in The Sopranos brood and you
remember that Italian-Americans are in fact gangsters - specifically of
the Mafia designation.
Given this example of erudite TV renaissance, so determined to reach far
into our reality based TV society, I'm planning to send HBO some reality
based show suggestions of my own, cut from the excellent Sopranos mold.
Here's my roster:
Southern Folk' - Just when you thought TV had turned it's
back on dogs and banjos, follow Junior McCoy and the LaTrash family as
they fish for carp, mumble barely intelligible racial slurs, dress their
gaggle of confusing inbred offspring in rags from discarded confederate
flags, and scan tabloid newspapers for discount coupons on dentures.
The MicHicks - This hilarious family send-up promises to
become a real St. Paddy's day favorite as Sean MicHick returns home, drunk
once again from another bender at the neighborhood bar, to beat the hell
out of his wife before winning her back on a weekend retreat featuring
gay bashing and assorted sectarian violence.
Oy, My Jewelry Store Already - A touching tale of elderly
love opens with Aunt Bella cooking chicken noodle soup in the back of
the family's East Side New York jewelry store, while Uncle Izzy counts
money in the basement and schemes to cheat his customers.
Just Like A Woman - This wacky TV take on today's downtown
gal, tracks new roommates Wanda and Rocks Ann. Gossiping on the phone,
window shopping for shoes, studying Glamour magazine and clipping adds
for breast augmentation, or just driving cars badly, our ditsy duo also
find time to hatch plots to snag rich guys at the alter.
Git Jiggy - Fast and furious TV action guaranteed here as
Jiggy G' and his boyz emerge from respective prison terms with dreams
of selling crack and spawning scores of illegitimate children, while collecting
welfare and dodging showers of bullets alternately fired by LA and New
York police.
Yo' Homo - Zany characters and off-beat humor resound
in an especially memorable episode where our apartment block of gay men,
with little time for more than anonymous group sex and Judy Garland record
collecting, must choose sides in a nasty slap fight over who owns a pair
of spanking new leather chaps.
Am I cutting some spooky edge here or what?
Other shows I'm working on include Little Lesbos,
a super hip spin-off featuring fire hydrant shaped woman sporting lumberjack
shirts and spouting armpit hair, as well as Schadenfreude,
about a wacky young German family - you guessed it - of Hitler loving
goose steppers.
I'm also outlining a concept called Hey - Gimme The Frickin' Anchovies,
about a family of low-class Italian slobs who ... what? That's already been
done? Do it once, do it twice, then do it a thousand times. "Reality"
gets most real when most repeated. Those are Hollywood rules.
Yours Truly;
Xander
Copy Boy In-Chief
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