lol his justification and Dunham's response to his quitting are both kind of douchey:
http://www.glamourmagazine.co.uk/news/celebrity/2013/04/05/girls-star-christopher-abbott-quits"The world that Lena [ Dunham ] wrote was very real, especially in New York, but it wasn't as relatable for me on a personal level."
---
Speaking to The Los Angeles Times, Dunham said: "I've had so many concerned Twitter followers ask: What are you going to do without Charlie?... I want to say, 'If the show Girls relied on guys, we'd be up a creek without a paddle.'"
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Friday, 27 December 2013 18:47 (twelve years ago)
like, dude, you're an actor
and like, dude, your fans aren't saying Girls "relies" on guys, they're just expressing regret at the loss of a character they like, you don't have to turn it into a political point
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Friday, 27 December 2013 18:48 (twelve years ago)
Wallace Shawn as Charlie
― Ayn Rand Akbar (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 27 December 2013 19:04 (twelve years ago)
show of hands who will miss charlie
*crickets*
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Friday, 27 December 2013 19:10 (twelve years ago)
yeah I can't say it's a huge loss. The show DOES rely on Adam to an extent, but definitely not Charlie.
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Friday, 27 December 2013 19:22 (twelve years ago)
Not getting much play itt
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68cmKBbE_gc
― tbd (Eazy), Friday, 27 December 2013 20:20 (twelve years ago)
oh I thought that scene was really well done -- you feel almost as uncomfortable as the in-show audience
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Friday, 27 December 2013 20:25 (twelve years ago)
they really nail it with her singing being just good enough for her to think she has a shot at a career and not good enough for her to actually have a shot at a career. if it were actually *bad* it would be too obvious.
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Friday, 27 December 2013 20:26 (twelve years ago)
"The clay is dry. You can't dress like a magician's assistant for very much longer."
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Friday, 27 December 2013 20:27 (twelve years ago)
she has like a church voice
― queen bey backers (Stevie D(eux)), Friday, 27 December 2013 20:35 (twelve years ago)
I like that they didn't go for the obvious gags like having her go flat or do exaggerated melisma
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Friday, 27 December 2013 20:36 (twelve years ago)
Oh I also thought the Booth Jonathan party scene was excellent. "I've seen you cry...like six or seven times"
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Friday, 27 December 2013 20:37 (twelve years ago)
watched two episodes of this on the plane, otherwise have never seen this
never not happy to see becky ann baker, she was predictably good in this
first ep was the "ocd reveal," second was the season 2 finale, which functions -- for someone who has not been watching the show -- as a portrait of a sick, basically bad character who is trying her best to drag everyone around her down with her into the hole. but based on what i read here i don't think hanna reads this way as a whole?
also, a book publisher would never sue an author for not turning the first batches in on time! people are routinely YEARS LATE with manuscripts and they never pay back their advance. last year one of the houses, i forget which, did actually sue some authors for advances, incl. elizabeth wurtzel, but this was for stuff that was literally seven years past due with no pages turned in
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Saturday, 28 December 2013 21:17 (twelve years ago)
Actually that very much depends on who is writing the book - a mid-list first-timer might well be told to pay back the signing advance if deadlines are missed. Wurtzel, not so much.
― hatcat marnell (suzy), Saturday, 28 December 2013 21:20 (twelve years ago)
Yeah but when you're 23 and it's your first deal ever you don't know that
― 乒乓, Saturday, 28 December 2013 21:21 (twelve years ago)
"Hannah's OCD also feels like something forced into the show, and I also feel like she tried to make the parents seem worse than they did in the past in order to make her character more sympathetic, like "see, she actually has it just as bad as Jessa.""
This is ridiculous
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Friday, 3 January 2014 18:35 (twelve years ago)
I don't think her parents come off badly at all
― Ayn Rand Akbar (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 3 January 2014 18:47 (twelve years ago)
Becky Ann Baker may be a little harsh but imagine how annoying a child Hannah would be
― Ayn Rand Akbar (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 3 January 2014 18:48 (twelve years ago)
im totally behind on the debates around this show but i finally saw the first two seasons. the last episode was enjoyably sweet/irritatingly rom-com-ish.
am dissapointed that charlie wont be returning in season 3 but from watching the 'boys of girls' roundtable, he obv looked pretty pissed off being there. am guessing dunham being in some sort of awe over the adam character and belittling charlie (at one point she basically says that charlie is a pussy) had something to do with that, or it might just be down to chris abbott tired of playing a guy who everyone seems to think is a pushover (which i think is a bit too easy a charge to make, but then when the shows creator is reducing men to binaries herself, you cant really blame everyone else for doing it).
that aside, i find it hard to really like any of the girls in girls (i feel like the ray character). compelling, sure, but not really likeable. the only one who i find funny at least is hannah.
but then i am a man.
― StillAdvance, Thursday, 9 January 2014 15:51 (twelve years ago)
The show is much easier to enjoy when you accept they're all assholes.
― eclectic husbandry (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 9 January 2014 15:53 (twelve years ago)
assumed that was a given....? Ray seems the least horrible.
― Ayn Rand Akbar (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 9 January 2014 16:41 (twelve years ago)
yeah, as I think I said upthread, Jessa is actually the most likeable of the female characters, which says a lot. Ray is ok I guess because at least he's the kind of jerk who's upfront about being a jerk.
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Thursday, 9 January 2014 17:02 (twelve years ago)
Or acts the most openly like a jerk and yet has better intentions usually than the other characters. But he's also supposed to be like 10 years older than them.
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Thursday, 9 January 2014 17:03 (twelve years ago)
The series, aside from the jokes (and there gen are good ones), has this aura of Dunham doling out life lessons which (given her age) I suspect she learned five months ago.
― eclectic husbandry (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 9 January 2014 17:08 (twelve years ago)
The OCD definitely seemed to come out of nowhere in the season 2 premiere as a new focal point of the story/character -- Dunham's performance seemed a little over-the-top too, to the point that I was wondering whether we were supposed to think Hannah was contriving a mental illness or if it was supposed to be legit and the storytelling itself was contrived.
― some dude, Thursday, 9 January 2014 17:19 (twelve years ago)
having watched both seasons recently there are hints of the OCD earlier in season 1 when she goes to the gynecologist, which makes me a little more forgiving of its abrupt reintroduction at the end of S2. but only a little.
― Ayn Rand Akbar (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 9 January 2014 17:28 (twelve years ago)
I think the show has a callowness that veers awfully close to smugness at times--but I have to admit that watching LD attempt to work through and against her own youth is pretty fascinating art, the ultimate value of it aside.
― ryan, Thursday, 9 January 2014 17:33 (twelve years ago)
haha love all the assholes going 'OBV RAY'S THE MOST SYMPATHETIC CHARACTER!'
― balls, Thursday, 9 January 2014 20:13 (twelve years ago)
well really my favorite is Shoshona but I have hard time considering someone so priveleged and naive as sympathetic
― Ayn Rand Akbar (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 9 January 2014 20:57 (twelve years ago)
― eclectic husbandry (Dr Morbius), Thursday, January 9, 2014 12:08 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
otm
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Thursday, 9 January 2014 20:59 (twelve years ago)
maybe I'm not giving her enough credit, but when Terry Gross interviewed her during the first season, Terry said something about how the characters were not very likeable, with a little bit of a laugh, and I could swear Dunham did this awkward laugh-along thing with a trace of "Right, yeah, haha, they're unlikeable (wait, they are?)"
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:01 (twelve years ago)
shows with unlikeable characters are the best shows tho
― Ayn Rand Akbar (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:07 (twelve years ago)
I mean I don't wanna hang out with Tony Soprano or Kenny Powers or Larry David etc
― Ayn Rand Akbar (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:08 (twelve years ago)
curb is hard to watch in large doses precisely because the characters are so unlikeable
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:09 (twelve years ago)
rather sweeping xxp
what about the MTM crew? Dr Hartley's analysands?
― eclectic husbandry (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:09 (twelve years ago)
i haven't sufficiently formulated a kinda ouroboros-motif metaphor that's watertight enough to use itt yet, but: i feel like how far ahead of contemporary discourse dunham was - in foregrounding all of her concerns about youth & introducing them on her show - should kinda insulate her from a lot of criticism about its value. like the portrayals of sex & money & work, that get lazily talked down as if they're incorporated uncritically, are just so fucking advanced from a landscape of shitty kate hudson romcoms & unreal Anne Hathaway As New York Adult movies & dumb male novelists striving for joseph hellerism, that to rip into this thing for lack of nuance, as if we were all there before her, just feels so ungenerous.
ps i love shoshana so much
pps anyone introducing the idea of 'likeability' itt should be banned from all future physical & digital interpersonal interaction with others from now on, & forever, it's like criticising people in faulkner novels for not behaving admirably, it's art, jesus h fuck
― mustread guy (schlump), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:14 (twelve years ago)
I never got the impression that they were incorporated "uncritically," I just don't if the criticism is sharp or knowing enough. I mean maybe I'm just reading in what I know, but it very much feels like a sardonic look at spoiled 23-year-olds from the POV of a spoiled 25-year-old, albeit a very sharp and witty one.
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:17 (twelve years ago)
I get that Dunham isn't Hannah Horvath, and I agree that it's a little stupid to conflate them.
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:18 (twelve years ago)
gen speaking, the demands of/compact with the audience differ btwn a sitcom and Absalom, Absalom
― eclectic husbandry (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:20 (twelve years ago)
sure. but there's a degree to which watching hannah horvath be a brat during an hiv test & understanding the show as indulgent, rather than laceratingly critical, of bratty rich white kids is like foregrounding good behaviour throughout as important in any other artistic medium. her generational critique is searing & deep, i think, maybe in tiny furniture more directly than girls, & so much criticism of this show is just wasted on deciding whether or not she knows that. i love the talk - iirc itt - about how good she is with just things like clothes; neither a million miles from what she might be like but also incredibly well observed.
― mustread guy (schlump), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:24 (twelve years ago)
see that's the thing though. not sure if im ok with the options being "indulgent" or "laceratingly critical"--i mean, i def sense there's satire at work, but i dont get the sense that there's all that much teeth in it so far. i mean, take the last shot of the first episode and the last shot of the first season and tell me there's not some weird self-regard going on there. or is that my mis-reading? i dunno. this can be a tough show to get a handle on, which is to its credit.
― ryan, Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:29 (twelve years ago)
and yeah of course who cares how "conscious" she is about any critique in her work. it doesn't need to be that cut and dried. and she's under no more obligation to curb indulgence than anyone else.
― ryan, Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:30 (twelve years ago)
Likability is a thing with TV characters. We choose to spend 30-60 minutes with them a week (or in this era, perhaps three hour blocks for weeks on end) - there's a level of grating that can be hard to look past.
Tony Soprano and Stringer Bell were vicious sociopaths - but they were also charming and had enough depth that the show made you forget that you were watching someone you wouldn't want to be alone with IRL. No one on Girls (except Shoshanna) has shown much in the way of redemptive qualities as either a (fictional) human being or as a character.
― Kiarostami bag (milo z), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:36 (twelve years ago)
what's wrong with Ray? you got something against homeless guys?
― Ayn Rand Akbar (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:38 (twelve years ago)
i feel like i am okay with that binary. i don't know if it's blog fatigue, resistance to just the collective noise of like pedantic independent takedowns of imperfect but conversationally catalystic art. i remember thinking that brokeback mountain was somewhat reductive in its portrayal of gay relationships amongst cowboys; the couple separate, quickly, into a traditional-gender-role-seeming dynamic, one partner needy, the other aloof. but guess what it's a gay cowboy movie & probably had enough of an uphill climb without being able to round off its last five percent into nuanced perfection. girls is obviously imperfect, in so many ways - mainly, actually, the kinda apolitical stuff, like how syrupy & dawsons creekish & involved with its characters emotionality it got in the second season, which i'm not addressing here - but i think as a text that does like a lot - ie it puts new angles on stuff that was pretty much disenfranchised from discourse before, it provides weird modern brooklyny character archetypes, it works as a syrupy show for teenagers, &c - it should be kinda "accepted", at some level, rather than just flogged for the shortsightedness of its every failure. i don't mean not criticised; i just mean not criticised as if its failure to absolutely transcend limitations is a weakness rather than a formal inevitability. there's total self-regard throughout (sorry, i forget the shots you talk about, but i believe you), there are failings, but it's just frustrating that they're kinda laid on the doorstep of ld as if she's sleepwalking, or as if it isn't valuable as a stimulus as much as as an exemplar.
xxxxp @ ryan
― mustread guy (schlump), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:39 (twelve years ago)
― Kiarostami bag (milo z), Thursday, January 9, 2014 5:36 PM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
oh god this is just so awful you can not watch itseriously they made friends for you
you can just not watch it
seriously i demand that a depiction of somebody be at some point passed to a Sweetening Committee - perhaps some people from the midwest with experience of redemptive everyday niceness - and be at a minimum 10% sweetened, removing vulgarities, adding acts of general american generosity, so that i might avoid too deeply contemplating actual human behaviour
― mustread guy (schlump), Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:41 (twelve years ago)
even if you set aside all the "why are we telling stories about these people" stuff (these people = white, non-impoverished, young etc.) then i still think you're left with a kind of narcissism that feeds into itself rather than exposed as such. the politics of the show, such as they are, are more about a kind of banal consciousness raising from within rather than any kind of genuine clash with anything other. (forgive the abstractions). that may be intentional and pointed but it's also really limited.
xp: very well said, schlump. and yeah i dont wanna hit this show over the head for failing to transcend its inherent limitations. but maybe LD's potential is such that I'm gonna go ahead and do that anyway! i think you're probably right and I'm wrong.
― ryan, Thursday, 9 January 2014 21:41 (twelve years ago)
ps these people should be more like tony soprano is just like the ninth symphony of terrible responses to art