Current:Home > ScamsIt's 2024 and I'm sick of silly TV shows about politics. -Keystone Wealth Vision
It's 2024 and I'm sick of silly TV shows about politics.
View
Date:2025-04-15 18:32:19
The 2024 presidential election will be a story told on TV. I don't need to see it anywhere besides CNN.
Between news coverage, heated conversations with relatives over holiday dinners and angry social media posts, it's hard to avoid politics in your daily life these days. It's especially hard to avoid all things donkey and elephant during a presidential election year. And when that news verges from disturbing to depressing, it can be exhausting and overwhelming. But some people can't get enough.
Series like Max's "The Girls on the Bus" (streaming Thursdays) are out to turn the electoral into the entertaining. The campaign trail series and the usual "Saturday Night Live" skits on NBC and Kate Winslet's dictatorship bacchanalia "The Regime" on HBO present a showbiz version of real-life politics and foreign relations. But in an era when so much of government feels like theater, fictional stories about it lose a lot of their luster. When I sit down on my couch to lose myself in a new TV show after a long day, I don't want to see yet more talking heads.
"Girls on the Bus," based on a portion of the memoir "Chasing Hillary" by former New York Times reporter Amy Chozick (who co-created the series with "Vampire Diaries" producer Julie Plec), follows four female reporters on the campaign bus for a fictional presidential candidate. It gives political journalism a "Grey's Anatomy" makeover, complete with sex between colleagues, petty rivalries, overwrought drama and an unexpected amount of law enforcement. The candidate the four leads – played by Melissa Benoist, Carla Gugino, Natasha Behnam and Christina Elmore − follow across the country is a woman embroiled in scandal (not a direct parallel of Clinton, despite the title of Chozick's book), competing against a handful of overly earnest politicos that are straight out of "The West Wing" fan fiction.
As Benoist's newspaper reporter Sadie and her colleagues type up the scandalous scoops from their candidate's bus, I was struck by the inanity of the whole exercise. As much as the characters try to take themselves and their jobs seriously, the writers present them in the most unserious manner. Silly sex scandals. Lame TikTok jokes. Someone getting "canceled." Bad banter. Head fakes toward the issues that really matter to a country divided.
It's a tone that attempts to be tongue-in-cheek but verges on poor taste. It's not fantastical enough to be escapist, but not real enough to be thought-provoking. Instead, it falls into an awkward, cringey middle ground.
"Regime" (Sundays, 9 EDT/PDT) certainly has the fantastical down, but its farce tends to go too far. Winslet plays a vain dictator of a fictional European country who leads her unwitting citizens into civil war with her increasingly poor decisions. The series of events has eerie parallels to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, among other tragic conflicts. Winslet's silly fascist shtick is funny for the first few episodes but quickly gets old. And so does the idea of any one person causing so much death and destruction, even if it's not real. After all, the war in Ukraine is now two years old.
Even stalwart satirical programs like NBC's "SNL" (returning March 30, 11:30 EDT/PDT) aren't hitting the right notes this year. During previous election cycles, the nearly 50-year-old sketch-comedy institution flourished with radical impressions of the candidates, even influencing public opinion (Tina Fey and Sarah Palin, anyone?). But satire is supposed to have a point. The latest lame cold opens from Studio 8H have little to say other than to make the same old Trump jokes with a slightly different cast than four years ago.
Many people find escapism in this kind of storytelling. In a world full of somber issues and debates, there can be relief in treating lawmakers as clowns. It's understandable, and I'm glad those people can find enjoyment in these shows. But all I get is anger and stress.
Maybe if things calm down on the national stage, I'll be ready for the cartoonish energy of "Girls on the Bus." After all, great political TV shows have found the right tone to match their eras before: "West Wing" under Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, "Parks and Recreation" during the Obama era and "Veep," especially under early Donald Trump, found something to say that complemented (but not necessarily complimented) the political realities of the time. But in 2024, no one seems to have figured out how to do that yet.
Until they can, let's stick with zombies and detectives, shall we?
veryGood! (669)
Related
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Man gets 142 years for 2017 stabbing deaths of Fort Wayne couple
- Hawaii firefighters get control of fire at a biomass power plant on Kauai
- NFL free agency 2024: Ranking best 50 players set to be free agents
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Man convicted of 2 killings in Delaware and accused of 4 in Philadelphia gets 7 life terms
- Natalie Portman and Benjamin Millepied divorce after 11 years of marriage
- Music Review: Ariana Grande triumphs over heartbreak on seventh studio album, ‘eternal sunshine’
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- The total solar eclipse is one month away on April 8: Here's everything to know about it
Ranking
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Amy Schumer Is Kinda Pregnant While Filming New Movie With Fake Baby Bump
- Worst NFL trade ever? Here's where Russell Wilson swap, other disastrous deals went wrong
- Peek inside the gift bags for Oscar nominees in 2024, valued at $178,000
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Fulton County prosecutor Fani Willis and judge in Trump 2020 election case draw primary challengers
- Students lobby to dethrone Connecticut’s state insect, the voraciously predatory praying mantis
- Three people were rescued after a sailboat caught fire off the coast of Virginia Beach
Recommendation
'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
Labor market tops expectations again: 275,000 jobs added in February
Israel-Hamas cease-fire unlikely before Ramadan as Hamas delegation leaves talks, but says they'll resume
Government funding bill advances as Senate works to beat midnight shutdown deadline
Bodycam footage shows high
Missed the State of the Union 2024? Watch replay videos of Biden's address and the Republican response
Washington state achieves bipartisan support to ban hog-tying by police and address opioid crisis
With DeSantis back from Iowa, Florida passes $117B budget on final day of 2024 session