Media Shmedia
by
Scott Patrick Wagner
When Guilty Pleasures Go Mainstream
IÕm
waiting for the second coming of Jesus. But since it didnÕt happen on Monday,
IÕm not holding my breath. IÕll explain what I mean in a bit. For now, please
donÕt start an indignant letter-writing campaign against the sacrilegious
heathen. Or do start one. What the hell.
I
got hooked on American Idol
relatively quickly in its first season; the combination of good singing, bad
singing, inconsistent judges, and a victim being voted out each week was the
crack cocaine of reality TV, and I was its playground addict. My dental
hygienist and I compared notes on the Idol and couldnÕt believe that it had become
televisionÕs mega-hit. We were accustomed to fixating on programs that stoked
our guilty-pleasure centers, and enjoying them until they were cancelled. But
this one had become AmericaÕs favorite. Whether that was good news for society
or not, at least it meant our guilty pleasure was sticking around.
And
now—as my hygienist and I both agreed at my last periodic
cleaning—itÕs over. This yearÕs American Idol was the least talent-packed and most
mediocre procession of the six years. And when the one outstanding talent,
Melinda, was passed over in favor of cute-but-average Blake, there was no
reason to even watch the finale. But are my hygienist and I feeling depressed
and deprived? Hell no! Another show has taken what I jonesed for on Idol and brought it to its feet.
Neither
my teeth cleaner nor I can believe that So You Think You Can Dance? is becoming a hit. Granted, it is not
the juggernaut in its third season that American Idol was, but itÕs captured enough of the
public imagination to insure that its run will last longer than its quality
(yes, Idol has made
me cynical). But never mind the future...right now, it is The Best Show On
Television, and has weekly been giving two nights of frighteningly ecstatic
pleasure and pathos for this addict and his hygienist.
Unlike
the insipid and overblown Dancing with the Stars,
SYTYCD features young
dancers so talented that they take my breath away while they fight for their
own by the end of some beautifully choreographed numbers. And while there were
astonishing dancers on the first two seasons, this year the talent level is the
highest itÕs ever been. And arenÕt we glad about it?
Yes...except
when the casualty who gets voted off is our favorite. Grrr.
Let
me tell you about Jesus for a moment. He was so poor that he and his family
picked grapes. Literally. (Or as literally as we can believe from his Òup close
and personalÓ package.) And the whole damn town raised the money to send this kid to
dancing school. Look...IÕve heard of towns raising the money to send kids to
college—but to dance classes?! That has got to be the oddest and most
enlightened charity of all time. To determine that a childÕs need for the Arts
was important enough for fund-raising—in this age of NEA-slashing and
Bush-level ignorance of ArtÕs importance—is transcendent. And to top it
all off, Jesus was great!
He danced his ass off, and made every piece of choreography resonate.
And
then Jesus left the building. And two weekÕs ago, his former partner
Sara—a breakdancer who seemed to grow and adapt preternaturally to every
style thrown at her—was also voted off. Tonight, we find out who is
ÒAmericaÕs favorite dancerÓ (as the showÕs noncommittal slogan goes). It has
come down to a Final Four announced on Monday: Lacey (who dances adequately but
seems like she might throw diva fits when off-camera), Neil (an incredible
technician who has improved radically...and elicits endless tween-girl
screaming), Danny (possibly the most startlingly good dancer of the group, but
still a little aloof), and Sabra (who has only been dancing for five years, but
whose talent tends to nudge anybody else offscreen).
So
Sara the peripatetic B-girl isnÕt up there instead of Lacey. And the judges
never accepted Jesus back into their hearts (though IÕm told he will be dancing
tonight along with the rest of the top 20). But at least their replacements
have real talent, unlike IdolÕs
Battle of the Marginal. So You Think You Can Dance? is delerious in its presentation of
brilliance; the only possible improvement would be shorter cutaways to audience
reactions. Because we know the audience. We are the audience. We are not elevated by the
audience. But the dancers...thatÕs another story. Those who dance on SYTYCD and those who choreograph the
often-stunning numbers—plus the occcasionally inspired judges who speak
in actual thoughts instead of glossy sound-bytes—elevate us and give us
glimpses of greatness. Lofty as that sounds—especially for a Fox reality
show—itÕs been happening weekly. And tonight, for two hours, television
is celebrating the good instead of the mediocre.