NBC’s ObamaVision: Green Week and Lousy Writing
by Larry O'ConnorNBC gives new meaning to the phrase “green screen” next week, spreading a pro-environmental message across five of its prime-time entertainment programs – AP News.
When Arthur Miller wrote “The Crucible” it was rightly seen as a brilliant allegory to the House Un-American Activities Committee. It was a brilliant piece of drama about the Salem Witch Trials of the late 17th Century with obvious corollaries to the political climate of post-World War II America. And no matter where you fall on the political spectrum you must recognize the play as a classic in the canon of American drama.

My admiration for much of Miller’s work gives me enough confidence to say that he would view the current efforts to ham-handedly inject political statements into television sitcoms as absolute crap. It takes a deft hand to send a message without it seeming like you are sending a message… and the writers of “The Office” and “30 Rock,” as glib as they may be, are no “Arthur Millers”.
I love “The Office.” I’m one of those apostates who actually like the U.S. version better than the original (must be my knee-jerk patriotism at work). But I saw my very first example of lousy (and I mean REALLY lousy) writing this season when they tried to force the issue of “Volunteer-ism” into the storyline.
And remember what genius came up with the idea for this storyline? According to the memo revealed by Big Hollywood it was inspired by a call to action by the “most powerful writer since Julius Caesar.” And now, to paraphrase the words of a truly great leader…“well, here they go again.”
The left-wing flavor of the month is Green Week, on GE owned NBC. We have already reported that our children have to suffer through “Sustainable Living” storylines on “Sesame Street” and now NBC is preaching to the parents how being green is easy. Unfortunately, it’s probably not going to be too entertaining.
Maybe the AP description doesn’t do it justice, but this doesn’t sound very funny to me:
This year on “30 Rock,” corporate boss Jack Donaghy tells the late-night show’s staff it has to cut its carbon footprint by 5 percent, and puts Kenneth the Page in charge of getting it done.
In the comedy “Community,” the college is renamed “Environdale.” College students think they’re hiring the band Green Day for a gig, and instead gets the Celtic combo Greene Daeye. Dwight in “The Office” takes the role of “Recyclops” in that comedy. “Heroes” features cast members filling a truck with recyclables and talking about the importance of giving back to the earth.
If the end-product is anything like the embarrassing “Volunteer-ism” thread from “The Office” we might actually see a four-way Shark Jump that Evil Knievel would admire.
I know a lot of writers. And they all have a rebellious streak. They love marching to the beat of a different drummer. In fact, one of the main themes of “30 Rock” is the constant battles between the Bohemian writers and the corporate demands from the network. So, why in hell do they go for this stuff? It’s probably because they believe it.
That’s why we rarely see a storyline on a crime drama where a gun owner prevents a crime and saves a life. Or why we rarely see a storyline about a teen in trouble choosing to give her child up for adoption rather than be an un-wed mother or extinguish the nascent life she is carrying (although I have high hopes for “Glee” and the storyline they are pursuing).
And over on HBO, if you really think about the notorious scene where Larry David is relieving himself with offensive results. Objectively speaking, wouldn’t it have been MUCH funnier if his assistant had been black and the urine splashed on a picture of President Obama and the assistant thought it was a divine miracle and began devoting her life to worshiping Barack? It would have been funnier and it would have been a more contemporary comment on American Culture rather than a tired joke about Latino culture. But, Larry David would never have thought in those terms because it’s not what he believes.
The biggest crime in all of this is that these stories will suffer due to this obnoxious attempt at preaching. And the audiences’ enjoyment will suffer as well. In the same way the audience is jarred out of their enjoyment of the musical “Wicked.” The producers spent millions of dollars in costuming and special effects to transport the audience to the magical Land of Oz. When the house falls on the Wicked Witch of the East in Act 2, the character of Glinda refers to it as “Regime Change.” It is supposed to be a laugh line. But given the juxtaposition of Glinda in the story and her role as propagandist for the malevolent Wizard’s government, the majority of ticket holders who supported President Bush and the war in Iraq were sure to feel like they were being mocked from the stage.
If you’re Arthur Miller and you can tell me a story with great characters and great dialogue, I barely care that you’re criticizing the industrial war complex (”All My Sons“) or commenting on the post-war “American Dream” as a myth (”Death of a Salesman“). Good writing is good writing and great entertainment is great entertainment. Green Week on NBC, is doomed to be neither, so they should just stick with what they do best and leave the political propaganda to Valerie Jarrett.





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31 Comments
I also love the US Office more than the UK version (it doesn't help that there are only 12 episodes and a Christmas special to use as a measuring stick). And you're right – it's not good writing and I'm glad they quickly changed the subject.
I feel bad for the showrunners and the writers – not all of whom might agree with GE/NBC on this one. Even during that volunteer week, at least on the aforementioned Thursday night lineup, the messages were minimal at best. I remarked at the time, if I worked in the Obama administration, I'd be thinking, "That's it?! That's all those people did for us?!"
The advantage is that increasingly, no one is watching any of these shows. May it continue.
….wouldn’t it have been MUCH funnier if his assistant had been black and the urine splashed on a picture of President Obama and the assistant thought it was a divine miracle and began devoting her life to worshiping Barack? It would have been funnier and it would have been a more contemporary comment …
You're right. This would have been much funnier. And I'll bet you didn't even consider the ole' "Wee-wee'd up" punchline.
hahaha as JEM said, at least NBC's ratings are sliding to be the worst of the big networks… no one is watching.
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Big Hollywood, Trish Williams. Trish Williams said: RT @bighollywood NBC’s ObamaVision: Green Week and Lousy Writing http://bit.ly/3gSXd [...]
None of it is funny because liberals have no sense of humor and because "PC" just isn't funny. Now, making fun of "PC" is really funny (when done well) and even a litle funny when not done so well (The Goode Family). This is the thing – all of these people used to be the kind that raled against the "establishment" and sometimes that was funny because let's face it, sometimes the "establishment" needs to be made fun of. Even Kings had court jesters. But now that they are the establishment, they've completely lost their sense of humor and they take themselves WAY too seriously. If you can't make fun of yourself, well, then what's the point.
The best comedians know how to make fun of their own cultural quirks, their own political quirks, as well as making fun of the other side. Richard Jeni did that well right before he died in one of the funniest descriptions of Right, Left and "Undecided". It was funny because it was mostly true, but it was good-hearted as well.
That's what's been missing and why I left The Left – they were so hypocritical about so many things, my mind would spin just trying to figure it all out.
They actually take two cheap shots in Wicked, the other happens during the song "Popular" where Galinda sings about "heads of state and great communicators". She's refering to Reagan if I'm not mistaken.
OMG! You are toooo bad. Thanks for remembering the wee… line. You made my night.
Oh there is PLENTY to pick from in "Wicked" but I am trying to keep my posts under 800 words these days! In the mean time… enjoy this: http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/sright/2009/01/...
I know a lot of writers. And they all have a rebellious streak. They love marching to the beat of a different drummer. So, why in hell do they go for this stuff?
You think Hollywood writers are "rebellious"? Damn, you need to get out more. Your pitifully shallow concept of what "rebellious" means, is the reason for your blindness.
Hollywood writers are slavishly conformist at the intellectual level, not unlike those other mindless conformists also misidentified as "rebels"… the hippies of the 1960's. So of course they believe what they are told — duh!
A real rebel is original, and usually attracts seething, unreasoning hatred from all parts of the mainstream.
As I've said elsewhere on BH, the Heroes attempt seemed pretty half-hearted. The guy pitching the cans is this season's villain. When he mentioned giving back to the earth, the guy he was talking to said (paraphrasing), "You can start by giving me back my kidnapped girlfriend!" Putting the mandated green message into the villain's mouth doesn't sound like they really were interested.
I like Community a lot. I hope Thursday's episode doesn't piss me off, but it sounds like they are kind of mocking the whole deal. We'll see.
As another big fan of the Scranton Office (I think I replied to your comment on Volunteer Week, too), I'm really hoping this isn't a trend for the show. The context of the volunteerism comment came at such a point, when everyone was waiting for the Michael/Pam blowup and no one would have been paying close attention to anything else, that I suspect the writers would just as soon have left it out altogether, and only threw it in as a way of getting GE execs off their backs. And while I have seen the previews for this week, with Dwight as "Recyclops," from watching the entire clip, I have an idea that the message may be limited to the cold open and not related to the main story line for the episode. I could be wrong, but that's my theory for now.
The reason I cant bring myself to watch tv is because of the idiot factor and the fact you just cant watch a show; you have to be preached to by some half wit parroting some tripe from the sponsor, in this case the Obama administration. I guess people really are that stupid.
The simple fact that NBC has the nerve to do this and the American people put up with this radical propaganda in their living-rooms shows just how far we have have been indoctrinated. Truly pathetic.
"I'm ONE of those apostates who actually LIKES (with an s) the U.S. version…"
Geez, too much to ask?
I can't wait for the Comcast / GE deal to be completed so that we will finally see an end to this Green Week BS. Unfortunately, we'll have to endure an unending parade of Comcast's self-promotion and surreptitiously inserted local advertising. No… wait…maybe it won't be any better. Does Comcast have a dog in the healthcare fight?
This was tried once before in mainstream television and it sucked then, as well. It was called "Captain Planet."
I'm feeling the same pangs of cheesiness just reading a few of the plot line descriptions now as I did watching "CP" at age 7. I thought those feelings were gone for good.
Not all of us, wink!
The only nbc show I watch is 'The Office'. I gave up the Law & Orders this year. I will not watch 'The Office' Thursday during 'green week'.
When will obama bail out nbc as being 'too big to fail'?
Don't watch, won't watch a network that is:
N othing
B ut
C rap
Didn't we go through this green crap back in the early 90's?
Like using vinegar & baking soda to clean stuff (it didn't work).
Nice to see there recycling the green agenda or what's also known as "what goes around comes around"
[...] NBC’s ObamaVision: Green Week and Lousy Writing [...]
Thank you for the link to your "Wicked" review. I've been dying to see the show, and now I'll be able to see it, knowing ahead of time what to expect.
I've not seen any of this NBC green crapola…oh wait!…..I don't watch anything that is NBC (the definition of pure crapola).
I can stand to miss one week of Community.
Is there anyone at NBC who knows how to run a decent network? Anyone?
[...] Unimpressed with a mix of politics and art. [...]
[...] Unimpressed with a mix of politics and art. [...]
You're wrong, but that's a common mistake.
"When Arthur Miller wrote 'The Crucible' it was rightly seen as a brilliant allegory to the House Un-American Activities Committee"
It wasn't that brilliant. Whereas witches don't exist (so far as anybody knows), communists do. I call that deck-stacking. Poor form.
I actually thought "The Office" handled the volunteer-ism wisely. It used it as the butt of jokes and quickly moved onto another topic.
I think I saw a clip of tonight's somewhere and the seemed to be using the 'going green' thing as comedic ammunition for Dwight Schrute, which shows that the writers are having fun and outright mocking NBC's mandated stuff, much how they mocked NBC's push of 'guest stars' and just had them appear on an internet video instead of anything substantial.
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