22 July 2023

Why I Watch British TV (almost exclusively)


 A friend of mine says he prefers British TV because "they use real people."  By this, he means everyone on the set isn't young and model-gorgeous, like in most American shows.  I agree with him.  I much prefer Brit crime shows to American.

I've studied this recently and have found that the real difference is about women: that older, average looking women are virtually absent from American shows.

Some examples that struck me hard:

Blue Bloods:  At first, I thought this show would be appeal to me.  My spouse loved it, first time around.  The protagonist is a good man, a decent man, who loves his family.  But two episodes in, I realized that all the older women had been banished from the set.  Both the mother AND the grandmother are dead.  So those nice family dinners that appear in each episode have men in an array of ages, but no women over 40, at all.  Just good-looking young women.

I understand the device being used here.  The protagonist can be seen as a good man in our eyes, a decent man, because he is not cheating on his wife.  His wife is dead.  Therefore he can have dalliances with other younger women, and still be seen as heroic.  And the male viewers get their eye candy.

I am so so sick of this banishing of older women from major roles.

Which brings me to the latest Indiana Jones film.  Social media sites for women are raging about this one.  An 80 year old man with a 30-something-year-old co-star?  Not even someone my age, *twenty* years younger than the star will do?

One younger woman said to me:  "Does it help that she's his god-daughter?"  And to her, I said, "You're missing the point.  The point is that it is okay for an elderly man to be on that screen, but no one wants to see a woman over 50, apparently.  Let alone one nearing 60, which is a *full generation* younger than the man!"

Which brings me to British shows.

Way back when, we reveled in Prime Suspect.  Helen Mirren was my hero.  A woman, not young and gorgeous, but absolutely fascinating on screen in a lead police procedural role.  

Then, Vera, which is still running.  Overweight, poorly dressed, over-smart, with a mouth and wit that makes me smile.  Where is the American Vera? 

And now - Annika.  If you haven't seen Annika, you're in for a treat.  Nicola Walker is 53, and doesn't mind looking it.  Don't look to her for top fashion.  As my husband says, she's 'every-woman'.  But what a woman!  

I can name more.  Sister Boniface.  Lucy Lawless in My Life is Murder.  Agatha Raisin.  Miss Marple, for Pete's sake!   

Whenever I say Miss Marple, someone always counters with Jessica Fletcher.  That was decades ago!  Where are the older women leads on American crime shows now?  Where are the real women, who don't wear high heels on a crime scene, and haven't resorted to gravity-defying cleavage?

In this, I think we of the second wave feminist movement failed.  If anything, older women have become more invisible as the decades rolled on.  It has become even more important to be young and sexy now than in those early decades of my youth.

Except in Great Britain, where women of all shapes and ages seem to be appreciated.  I will continue to watch British crime shows.

Melodie Campbell writes Brit-type classic mysteries with Brit-type humour.  (note the u)  The Merry Widow Murders is her latest book.  As seen in Ellery Queen:








23 comments:

  1. I am with you 100% Melodie. American TV and media have pretty much banished women over 40 (unless you're watching PBS). I was reading a great article in The New Yorker this week on "Country Music's Culture Wars": "In 2015, a radio consultant named Keith Hill gave an interview to a trade publication, Country Aircheck Weekly, in which he made the implicit explicit: “If you want to make ratings in Country radio, take females out.” For a station to succeed, no more than fifteen per cent of its set list could feature women, he warned—and never two songs in a row." Well, it's more than the number of older women we see on TV and movies.
    BTW - I loved "The Merry Widow Murders" - great fun, great mystery, great characters and, as always, great dialog!

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  2. Eve, you're a doll! Thanks so much for the kind words re The Merry Widow Murders. You've said it so well: they've pretty much banished us over 40. And wow, about the country radio ratings. That's news to me, and a sad sad thing. I'm waiting to see if our men respond to this post. I'd like to hear their point of view.

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    1. Crap! that was me (Melodie) responding.

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  3. Michael O'Connell22 July, 2023 11:37

    The Hollywood formula for the use of female characters has become obnoxious. They have used younger women with older men forever however now they need to enhance the women through unnecessary surgery which is then highlighted through wardrobe choices. The British shows, as you pointed out, use all ages as they fit into the story. I don't think I understood this until I watched enough British shows for it to become obvious. We men are not all that bright.

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    1. Thanks for commenting, Mike! I appreciate the male point of view on this issue. I'm reminded of university, where there were no women profs, and no women role models in business. If you never see yourself on screen (a woman over 40, or pushing it, 50) then it's hard to feel valued in society. You feel diminished.

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    2. shoot! That was Melodie above, again. I'm a dope today.

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    3. Michael O'Connell22 July, 2023 12:29

      I forgot to mention that i have also read The Merry Widow Murders and thought it was great. The ending was a wonderful surprise well hidden in the clues you left. As mentioned we men are not all that bright.

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    4. Thank you, Mike! But I'll challenge you on the men not bright comment - grin. Most of the men close to me are top 1%. Melodie

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  4. Thanks for saying this, Melodie! I'm with you 100%. I watch Acorn and Britbox almost exclusively. Not just because the actors look like people, but because there's less violence and more cerebral activity. I should add it's not just British shows, but Aussie and Kiwi shows too. Adored Darby and Joan, where the romantic leads are over 65.

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    1. Yes to Darby and Joan! WHY can't we get shows like that here? If you know of any more like that, let me know. Melodie

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  5. Oh, Anne, I loved Darby & Joan too!

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  6. I'm so glad to hear that I'm not alone in feeling this way! I'm not a big TV watcher, but when I do watch it's mostly Britbox. People of all ages, and all shapes and sizes. I loved Shakespeare and Hathaway, especially because the female lead (who was not skinny!) would actually eat throughout the show. And clearly enjoyed food. The acting is so much better as well. (And add me to the list of people who love The Merry Widow Murders! You create the best characters!)

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    1. Teresa, thank you so much for those kind words on Merry Widow! I truly appreciate it.
      And yes, to the Shake and Hath - so refreshing. Let me know if you see more like that. Melodie

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  7. Well! As HUGE fans of VERA, my wife and I are duty-bound to check out ANNIKA. And don't give all the way up on American crime television. 67-year-old Mimi Rogers co-starred in the last couple of seasons of BOSCH, and reprises that (expanded into a full) co-starring role in BOSCH: LEGACY. In fact, in the aforementioned BOSCH the titular character has a romantic relationship with a judge played by the wonderful Bess Armstrong (69 years old)-and she's hardly the first of Bosch's on-screen paramours who is "age appropriate." And speaking of crime fiction inspired by the writing of Michael Connelly, there's THE LINCOLN lawyer, which features two female co-stars and one continuing guest star, all in their late 40s. And they are all fantastic.

    None compares to Vera, mind you, no one does, or has, since THE CLOSER. Did you ever watch that one?

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  8. I will definitely check out The Closer, Brian! Thank you for that. Yes, Vera has a special place in my heart. Melodie

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  9. Elizabeth Dearborn22 July, 2023 20:53

    Would just like to say that on CSI:Vegas, Marg Helgenberger who plays Catherine Willows is my husband's age, 63/64, although she does her best to look like she's only about 40.

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    1. I'll have to check that out, Elizabeth. I call that Jane Fonda Syndrome - meaning maybe it's okay if you're older as long as you don't look it.

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  10. I’m so out of touch with television, I’m almost a heretic, but one British counterpart to the Tom Selleck series is Hetty Wainthropp. Outside of Baker Street Irregulars, it’s hard to find a younger sidekick.

    You might appreciate this collection.

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  11. Seen it, Leigh! It's fun. I'm always looking for fun series, so if you come across anymore, let me know.

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  12. I loved Hetty Wainthrop - watched them all on PBS in the old days!

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    1. Maybe I am showing my age, but I find shows aren't as fun as they used to be. The whole world has lost its sense of humour.

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  13. Just catching up here. I noticed the real women in British TV as long ago as early episodes of Morse, and the difference astonished me. As for what "our men" think, I'm afraid they don't get it. The Lincoln Lawyer's Neve Campbell et al don't pass as "older" or "ordinary" women in my eyes. The glamorous 49-year-old does a fine job, but she's no Vera or Lu Shakespeare.

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    1. I'm with you on that, Elizabeth. It makes me so sad, because it renders those of us over 50 invisible. Or rather, those of us who look older than 50, invisible.

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