For those of you who don't know, I love TV. Sports, crime documentaries, reality TV... you name it! I try to balance my love for TV with real life. You know... work, kids, family, reading (I'm still old school and like to hold an ACTUAL book in my hands). Anyway, this weekend was a mixed bag of TV emotions for this gal. First, my beloved Brewers, try as they might, just couldn't pull it together. Don't worry, Brew Crew, I ain't mad because it was an awesome season of ups and downs and like I said last week in my blog post; life is a roller coaster and I wouldn't have it any other way. I would have loved a world series showing but no matter how down I can get from time to time, I am still the eternal optimist and there's always next year. But the Brewers loss was even slightly overshadowed by the Green & Gold taking another win. Yep, that's right. This means that we are still undefeated and these are the moments in sports history that I live for. My home teams and bringing the excitement week after week and it is definitely a great time to be a Wisconsin sports fanatic. Or shall I say WINsconsin!?
There's a reason televised sports has been popular since its inception. Did you know that the first televised sporting event was a college baseball game between Columbia and Princeton in 1939, covered by one camera providing a point of view along the third base line? Compared to today, that doesn't sound all too intriguing but it was then. It was the next big thing. Sports has continued to influence our daily lives, playing a key role in our socialization and entertainment. Sports bring people together. It teaches us to respect one another and the strengths we bring to the table. It teaches humility and it teaches healthy competition. Something as simple as televising sports has changed the way we look at competing, winning and losing. How often do we take some of those mottos into our daily lives? You win some, you lose some. You can't win them all... hasn't it in some ways taught us how to treat one another? And I see that same respect level play out in so many relationships where each person really appreciates the other. Being humble when needed and being confident and strong with one another in a relationship when warranted.
Fast forward to Sunday night when I reluctantly watched one of my guilty pleasures (Real Housewives of New Jersey). It was the reunion show and I knew it was going to be intense. I mean, they played it up all week long between every commercial during every show on the network! And for those of you who are unfamiliar, it's basically a sit-down where the 'cast' sits and talks about the dramas of the season. What really affected me watching that reunion is that these people are primarily family. And those that aren't blood related have been friends through thick and thin for... forever. It seems like every season there emerges a 'common enemy' and then the reunion show turns into a full-on attack of that 'enemy'. Which begs the question WHERE HAS ALL THE LOYALTY GONE? Don't families stick up for each other, confront each other head on and explore faults instead of attacking them? And aren't friends; the REAL friends an extension of family. Don't the same rules apply?
In the case of seemingly mindless show about people from NJ who have WAY too much time and money on their hands, it wasn't about who was right or who was wrong. I'm not even going to pretend there wasn't legitimate grounds for the majority of people to be mad at one person. But it was about the approach, the tactic, or should I say the lack of tact. Part of the attack is where the common enemy's friends and family just started selling her out. You know 'she said this about you' or 'I know she told you this but she really meant that'. Then, when asked why they are tattling on her now, the common response was they felt compelled to finally come clean because they had now been impacted by this person. Okay, so let me get this straight... you kept somebody's confidence and secrets even though you apparently disagreed with them because you had a generally good relationship with them. But now that you don't, it's fair game? And what about the secrets the person you just sold out has? Assuming they are as petty as you, they might have a mental list of all of the crappy or shady things you have said and/or done in your life. Is it now fair game for them to betray you? It's like what came first, the chicken or the egg? And where does it end?
I think it's interesting that so many people say how they hate reality TV and it's not actual reality and how it's mind-numbingly boring or that they can see you losing IQ points as you watch it. I actually think all of those things are true to a certain extent, but the magic of it is that just like any scripted TV, a great Bible story or a tragic tale that ends with a sappy, happy ending. There's a moral to every story. Even if it comes in the form of big hair, short skirts and an East Coast accent.
Anyway, with all the 'drama' of the my reality TV reunion extravaganza, I decided to hit up the DVR for something a little less intense. And there it was, PSYCH, featuring James Roday who is my irrational celebrity crush and likely not at all like his witty, adorable, quick tongued alter ego, Shawn Spencer. But I still convince myself that he is EXACTLY that funny in real life, without writers, and that somehow he thinks I'm just as amazing, too. Even though we have and will never meet.
For those of you that have never seen the show, it's about a young, womanizing, insanely sharp guy who pretends to be a psychic and partners with his best friend who basically goes along with all of the the lead character's antics and behaves exactly like the text book best friend. It is kind of the light hearted alternative to my reality vice above but it's also strangely true to life. Those moments of sheer hilarity that we encounter every day but sometimes are too busy or too 'grown up' to acknowledge. The times where you are hanging around reading excerpts from damnyouautocorrect.com (which by the way if you haven't gotten this app, you must) or you're laughing so hard that you start to cry because a loved one fell UP the stairs. Which seems to happen to a lot of people I know. I guess it's true what they say about like-minded and like- coordinated. Those moments that only you and the other person think are funny and will giggle about it every time you hear a word, a name or a sound...? Those people in your life that you can say ANTYTHING to. Anything at all and they will get it. Even if they don't agree with it. They know you. They love you. And they always have your back.
TV is supposed to be an escape. And it is, mostly. But it's also a reality. It's a way to look at life when it's raw and ugly and when it's light and fun. Books used to do this for everybody; before radio, before telivision. But the concept, the idea... is the same. Next time you are watching television, think about that. What does it help you escape, what does it help you embrace and what does it teach you? About yourself? About the people in your life?
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