calzephyr: Scott Pilgrim generator (Default)
[personal profile] calzephyr
I binge watched Friday Night Lights some time ago and I recently recommended it to someone on Ask Metafilter. They were looking for shows with little violence that showed people working towards a common goal. I wasn’t alone - this show is popular! Before it was a TV show, it was a movie and before that, it was a non-fiction book by Buzz Bissinger.

I used to read about FNL all the time, browsing recaps here and there, but I didn’t think it was worth my time when it was on the air. It would be too easy to call FNL a soap opera with football. Everything is a soap opera with X these days! The sole reason I did start watching it was that I ran out of episodes of Nashville. I missed Connie Britton’s warm, sassy, motherly ways and acting. LOL if I had to name a fantasy TV mother, it would be Rayna James.

FNL ran for five seasons and like so many series, the first one is the best. Season 2 was heavily affected by a writer’s strike. I almost stopped watching at this point because it was so dreadful with lots of impossibly bad writing and scenarios. The last three seasons focus on repeating Season 1, but this time, surprise, Dillon has a sketchy part of town, East Dillon, and due to zoning changes, several of the, uh, West Dillon players and teachers find themselves as fish out of water in the underfunded, underdog high school.

One of the reasons that I felt Season 1 was the best was that it was the most organized and had a really interesting, documentary feel of small town Texas life. It had a real air of authenticity particularly as Matt struggles with his family life when an accident forces him into the spotlight as captain of the . The later seasons, while still good, were just not as great. Sometimes the show forgot that the main characters are still in high school (LOL a few of them take off for a week to Mexico). What kept me watching was that the actors, especially Connie Britton, Kyle Chandler and Brad Leland, kept bringing their A game no matter how ridiculous the dialogue or plot. Like most soap operas, or series in general, the show burned through a lot of material and characters. Some of these characters, like Waverly, who struggles with bi-polar disorder, appear a few times and are never seen again. It's important to note that none of the teenagers in FNL were actually actually teenagers - labour laws make it difficult to cast real teenagers, so the actors were in their 20s. Unfortunately this sets a dangerous precedent for audiences who forget what teenagers are actually like or look like (remember the "me at 14" meme?).

Personally, it was humbling to watch Britton and Chandler as parents because it gave me some insight into my own parents - such is the benefit of watching from far, far away. This is just one way to watch FNL though - you can watch it as a straights sports drama or teen drama, project your own youth onto it or consider all the times it slipped in sensitive topics to a conservative TV audience. Once theme it did not explore, surprisingly, was that one of the East Dillon assistant coaches is gay. He is spotted by Julie in a gay bar and it goes no farther than that. It really feels like FNL was just on the verge about what mainstream, prime time, Midwest audiences could tolerate - another few years and it could have handily pushed the envelope farther.

Date: 2018-04-07 12:55 am (UTC)
daryl_wor: tie dye and spiky bat (Default)
From: [personal profile] daryl_wor
Wow, that's fascinating. Not much for football, but that working towards a common goal is up my alley. And yes, it definitely seems like soap-operas for early in the day seem to drop off but then soap opera formats taking over other shows began to be on the rise. I recall that in the late 1990's too. We saw ads of high tension for situation-comedies and my sister reflected, "It feels like we're being set up for some big tragedy by the networks." And she might have been right.



Profile

calzephyr: Scott Pilgrim generator (Default)
calzephyr

March 2026

S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Mar. 8th, 2026 06:11 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios