We all have them. I don’t mean criminalities one hides from police (though some of us have those) or infidelities one hides from a spouse (though even more of us have those). I mean the secret joys of the oil rig roughneck who rushes home to see
Spongebob Squarepants, of the museum of art curator who is addicted to
Jersey Shore, of the hard-nosed county prosecutor who cries when she watches
Dumbo, or of the NFL halfback who never misses
The Princess Diaries when it is on cable. That sort of thing. There is nothing really wrong with it, but it’s just not something you’d like most people to know.
What’s one of mine? OK, I’ll admit it. Between 1999 and 2003 I was addicted to a primetime teen soap opera called
Roswell. More than that, when the dvds were released I bought all three seasons. But that’s all in the past, right? No, not exactly.
A few months ago, a friend and her teen daughter were visiting at my house.
The teen mentioned she couldn’t stomach the hit teen soap
Twilight
even though many of her friends were obsessed with it. I suggested she
introduce her friends to
Roswell,
which was a vastly superior show. I dug out the pilot episode and put it in the
dvd player. Both mother and daughter liked it, but there was an unintended side
effect. Damn it, now I’m addicted again, and I see no alternative but to see
the series once more all the way through to the end – actually, I just finished
the second season yesterday.
The show’s premise: the mysterious crash of an object outside of
Roswell NM
in 1947 that originally was reported by newspapers to be a flying saucer was in
fact a flying saucer, rather than a weather balloon as the Air Force later
insisted. Two alien survivors of the crash escaped the scene and secreted away
pods in which alien and human DNA were blended; the pods incubate for decades
until out pop human-looking kids; the alien-human hybrids grow into teenagers
and attend West Roswell High. Silly? Utterly. Yet strangely mesmerizing.
What did the show do right? Solid writing, clever directing, a great cast,
dry dark humor, and a core plot of two young literally star-crossed lovers. The
show won a fiercely dedicated following, yet, the following was cultish rather
than large.
Roswell
was always on the verge of cancellation; it lasted three seasons only by
switching networks. So what did the show do wrong, at least commercially? It didn’t
focus specifically on the teen audience, especially girls. In particular, the
two male leads in the show, while good-looking, lack the swoon-inducing
presence of, say, Robert Pattinson on
Twilight, and so failed to win a
female teen/tween following outside the pool of sci-fi fans. After all, if a middle-age
bachelor can enjoy the show, the target demographic wasn’t hit with precision. The
female aliens played by Emilie de Ravin and Katherine Heigl are the real eye
candy on the show.
So, if you are someone who is likely to have your TV set commandeered by teens, let me suggest keeping the
Roswell dvds handy. They might save you from being driven from the room by what is on your screen. Be warned, though. You might find yourself watching them alone, too. I promise not to tell.
Oh I've got some anime guilty pleasures that even my wife shies away from. No, it's nothing in the adult variety. It's the oh so outrageous "Sailor Moon". For some reason I get a big kick out of that first season of shows with or without the hideous English dub. There is another show called "Revolutionary Girl Utena" that I love, but is so saturated with pink and pastels that can feel my testosterone dropping with each passing minute. But man if it isn't visually interesting, mysterious and just plain bizarre. And it features Japanese Rock Opera in full blown 70's style. Yeah it's great show. ;)
ReplyDeleteYou're a brave man, Roman.
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