Speaker For The Diodes - May 14th, 2010

May. 14th, 2010

05:32 am - QotD

"[...] Critic Wayne Booth would probably call Family Guy 'blank irony,' because it has no fixed referent of criticism, it simply vacillates between the progressive and conservative, the subject speaking and the object spoken about.

"I think that much of the pleasure for many viewers is precisely in the cheap feeling of transgression, of having that 'he can't say that!' It's no accident that the most appalling characters tend to be the most quoted. For conservative viewers, bigoted characters occupy an unmediated position as the Voice of Reason (see also: Gene Hunt in Life on Mars, Jack Donaghy on 30 Rock), and a certain kind of liberal response (it's not bigotry, it's a critique of bigotry!) ends up just acting as pure alibi for that.

"Because what do we have after all that (blank) irony? Texts that have the SAME recurring motifs, the SAME privileged characters, the SAME slurs, the SAME tired old bullshit.

"Personally, I think they added the more progressive elements of this episode that people have noted precisely TO cover their arses from criticism, precisely so they could then have an extended 'deceiver' storyline ending with a puking joke.

"In the end, nothing is fucking shifted. Nothing."

-- Queen Emily of Questioning Transphobia, 2010-05-12, responding to pushback on criticism of the "Quagmire's Dad' episode of the Fox television program Family Guy

... and my own commentary on the subject: )

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