When the American presidency becomes an incomparable farce, creators of fictional worlds have to bend and twist their tales to avoid the lure of entertainment breaking in the face of hypnogogic reality.
And so new
Netflix series The Politician kicks off, fittingly, with the lives of the one
percent characters so rich and lost they live like caricatures. And they seemed
familiar.
When I was
little, I used to play with Barbie dolls. My cousin and I would eat tea
biscuits covered in pink icings and sprinkles while Barbie lived a wealthy
life. Lots of afternoon teas, and outfit changes. She was beaten, chased, raped
and had sex with every other doll on the bus. Occasionally, she murdered Ken,
and her fellow Barbie doppelgangers. There were drugs, alcohol, dramatic
arguments and weird stilted conversations both profound yet empty, entertaining
yet hyper-real. We didn't understand the context of anything we were acting out.
Like sponges we soaked up elements of the dramatic, with no true understanding
of meaning, but disturbing in retrospect.
Welcome to
the wealthy leads of The Politician. They say glib, clever things, like shadows
of profound thought. Ludicrous exaggerations in an era where exaggeration is
sometimes accurate. Like my Barbies, they enact outrageous plotlines without
hesitation because the acts lack engagement. These teens possess only a bare
inkling of the oddness as they go through the motions. But by graduation, they,
too, look back with a matured awareness of the disturbing nature of the
incidents at play. At play itself.
Payton
wants to be student body president. That is the seam of gold we chase with him.
Each season of this series will follow an election. But the vote they're truly chasing
is the viewer's. Onscreen and off, the hope of adoration: simpatico. And therein
lies the ugly beauty and the beautiful art that is the structured falsity and
fractured genius of these storytellers at play. The Politician is an entertainment
sell as clear and deliberately murky as any political campaign in the real
world.
Payton's
team has evaluated modern politicians to work out a plot, if you will, a strict
regime of self that ends with him becoming the American President. Some critics
have pointed out the present day situation ruins the premise, but why not view
the current presidency as a statistical anomaly? That denial in the script is
not a flaw, but a reflection. The great wish of the American people. A hope
that seems crass in the face of a crass presidency. In a fictional reality,
reality could become less than fiction. True crime, while still in play.
In Payton's
world, politics is perception. Even inside the screen, reality remains in flux.
To describe the pace as erratic is to misunderstand the intent. The erraticism
matches a world off-kilter, where pace and predictability can give way to the
unexpected and surreal at any moment. People who live their lives like
characters in a drama are watching characters in a drama live their lives. In a
modern world no fictional writer could compete with, the imagined must become
real. Su-rreal. SO REAL.
The
Politicians is very, very clever in an era of sometimes rampant, often veiled
anti-intellectualism. Where those who cling to traditional hierarchies of
critical thought save their judgment almost exclusively for clever fare, as if
threatened by the ideas of others, and betrayed by the powers giving them a
platform. A quick search of online reviews shows the compliments are mostly begrudging,
like sugar-free sprinkles.
And they,
too, become part of the story: the expected statistics. Criticism outside the
screen, yet representative of the culture of criticism inside the screen. How
we judge defines us. What we judge, defines us. In judging such a program, the
clueless become another exaggeration. The premise disarms critiquers of their
power. But television that challenges is used to being railed at. A
recalcitrant child who keeps misinterpreting the instruction "be
good".
The
storylines amplify and distort. They steal from the rich(ness of the real
world) and give to the poor (onscreen lives). But what they steal was often
already stolen. An ouroboros between 3D and 2D living. Television incarnate. A
kind of demented Robin Hood reworking through an entertainment filter. Even as
the characters grow, they evolve into variations of other caricatures. Carrying
their old caricatures inside them. Like costuming that survived a set upgrade.
Everyone is
real. Everyone is not. Everyone is aware entertainment is reality. Everyone is
aware reality is entertainment. The filters are endless. The kaleidoscope is made
of gold, like the toilet rejected by Trump's White House. Like an Instagram
account that is live, forever.
The
characters try to earn points with wokeness, to be seen as seeing the unseen. But
every gesture is a pose in a funhouse of mirrors. A litany of inauthentic
reflections more solid than the person found in the center, written to the
core. We wander from episode to episode. We run. We watch them follow the patterns
of wealth. We watch them follow the patterns of poverty. Everyone is not real.
Nobody's pain is of value. Everyone is in pain. The colors are saturated, but
neatly contained. We laugh at tragedy, and it's tragic, how we laugh. Nobody
can control the humor. We are all here, together, on the Barbie bus. Popular
culture, twisting the knife.
Payton
wants to be student body president—so he can be an American president. Because
the fictional character has found a pattern in the non-fictional, who present as
fictional in a non-fictional world. The Politician is like a YouTube channel
that opens toys so we can see inside the box. Except the box contains another
box, and in a scathing indictment, the toys are crying. Laughing while crying.
Payton sings to cry. His tears are in tune. We are all in tune.
We are
amused, we are endlessly amused.
By the pain. Bothered by the pain. Both real, and unreal.
By the pain. Bothered by the pain. Both real, and unreal.
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