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'Pizza is a vegetable, right guys?' |
Everyone looks perfect all the time
Whether
you’re relaxing with a sit-com or delving into a tense drama, there are no
spots, split ends or unruly teeth on show. Whether these characters are, like,
hanging out at the mall, tackling a supernatural force of doom or investigating
a crime scene, expect nothing less than glossy hair, perfect make-up, and flawless skin. Given the amount of time they must spend on their appearance, it’s
perhaps not surprising that they seem to be able to apply make-up and rollers
in their sleep, allowing them to roll of bed looking like a Max Factor advert. That or there's an army of kindly pixies flitting around these characters fixing them up in their sleep and performing touch ups during the day. Either way, there's something unnerving about a world where even bed hair and dark circles are expertly applied.
Living
off junk food will have no adverse effects
There is
only one food group on American TV: junk. We’ve all drooled while watching
these characters tuck into mountains of M&Ms, piles of peanut butter and 'jelly' sandwiches, pizza, takeaway noodles, tubs of ice cream with a higher gravitational pull than the Sun, and countless glazed donuts, and that’s just breakfast. While
this kind of diet would leave even the most genetically blessed among us an obese
and malnourished mess, none of these characters will put on so much as a pound. Aside from this, and despite the potential drama a case or two of scurvy could provide to an ailing
plotline, there’s no mention of gruesome vitmain deficiencies either. However, there might be a simple explanation for these oversights: no matter how loudly they insist
that they are starving, or how much they order, none of these characters eat
the food. It gets prodded, poked and pulled, all the better to taunt us as we nibble on our solid British fare, but never eaten. Sometimes they leave
as soon as the food arrives. All in all, American TV should only be faced on a
full stomach or with an oversized bag of popcorn and gallon of Ben & Jerry’s.
Anyone of any age can drive
The
thought of teenagers wielding any sort of power is alarming enough, but the
sight of them behind the wheel of a car is terrifying. And these aren’t just
any cars: apparently the makers of lean, mean, environment-exterminating
machines have a monopoly in the world of American TV. A quick look at all these rides also
reveals why every desperate fundraising attempt ever portrayed on film involves a
charity car wash. Aside from the extras who populate the background of scenes in leafy suburbs, no one ever
seems to wash their car, yet there is not a speck of dirt on any of them. Then again, if there is, it’s a type that is only found in one square metre in Carson City,
proving beyond all doubt that the murderer was the guy with limp.
No
one wears clothes more than once
Another
day, another on-trend, perfectly-fitted, never-before-seen outfit. When these
people go to work, they have a new outfit. When they’re on a date, they have a
new outfit. When they’re standing in their huge apartments moaning about how
they have no money, they are doing so in an expensive, flattering, brand new outfit. Oh yes, they may live in some of the most expensive cities in the world, but even characters with no job or a job that wouldn’t buy you a salad let alone cover rent have somehow found palatial flats. Furthermore, no male character will admit to shopping, yet there they are, nonchalantly
strolling around in this season’s jeans and next season's jacket. Then there's the matter of clothing care. While laundry is the perfect way to
display a female character’s oh-so-quirky inability to fulfil her domestic role, or for characters to exchange numbers
and seduction techniques over pairs of dirty pants, these clothes will never be
seen again. That red sock just keeps getting in with the whites, resulting in
daily trips to Calvin Klein and a fresh new fancy wardrobe every day. Cue envy, shock or giggling, depending on your decade of choice: yes nineties shows, we're still judging you.
Brits
are evil
The
moment that dry, clipped accent trips off a character’s tongue, you can be
certain they’re trouble. Initially, hearts will flutter and melt in the face of
this sophisticated Old World charm, but in the end, Brits on American TV tend to be adulterers, murderers and/or demons. While Giles, of Buffy the Vampire Slayer fame,
is a notable exception, he serves to demonstrate another British stereotype: if
we can’t be charming and evil, we are knitwear-clad, spectacle-sporting
bookworms, bumbling our way through these wild American ways while slurping tea
and apologising to everything with a pulse. Or, we’re royalty. Here’s hoping that one day we'll get a weird and wonderful combination of all three.
Of
course, these points are all ridiculous. No one wants to watch regular-looking people
put on the same clothes, wash dirty ones, cook, clean, get bored at work and return to a
cupboard-sized flat to eat fruit. That’s what real life is for. We want to see sexy people flick glossy hair, drive impossibly shiny cars, solve crimes, fight demons, suffer through high school,
produce genius ad campaigns and eat lethal amounts of ice cream. This is not The Jungle, this is escapism, so leave reality eating carrots on
the sofa in yesterday’s jeans, and get on board with this American dream.
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