ghanimasun (
ghanimasun) wrote2010-07-11 01:17 am
Entry tags:
still drunk.
I re-watched some episodes of season one of The Pretender tonight. Okay, I fast forwarded through a lot of it, because really I just wanted to watch the Miss Parker bits. She's still hella awesome by the way. (The show however, plot and structure are pretty predictable.)
One episode in particular Miss Parker sleeps with a married dude she used to know. She is shown to have fun, and be a sexual person. She ends it when she looks at a picture of his family and at the same time has to go back to work. When she finds out he's been working against her, she basically just gives him a kick in the balls (as she's holding her gun over him and he's on the ground) and walks away. She's totally fine.
I don't think the show portrays her as a villain really. I mean yeah she's out to get the main character, Jarod, but she is still a complex character who the show seems to have an affection for. (In another episode she finds out stuff about her dead mom, its very emotional and sympathetic towards her character.) My point is, she wasn't punished for having sex. She wasn't punished for having sex with a married man! Sure he was working against her, but after a quick interaction, she's over it. She doesn't ever think about that dude again, and she was really more upset that he was working as a competitor than anything else about him. (Although during their confrontation she also said she was "faking it" which is meh. But hey, this episode was aired in 1996.)
drunk ETA: Yet another episode showed Miss Parker at Christmas time in her nice house, with a fancy tree. She was dressed up, and was drinking a martini. She was obviously alone. She receives a call from Jarod while she is enjoying her drink. I'm not sure what the show was trying to convey to the audience in this scene but I interpreted it as a successful, somewhat wealthy (white) woman who is enjoying her wealth and herself on the holiday. While yes that is problematic in that it's a rich white lady drinking and having fun. But as far as network tv in the nineties is concerned I feel it's also a fairly feminist scene because it shows a single woman enjoying her time alone and in her own way in her own house. Granted I am also reading it as positively feminist because a) I like the character a lot and b) am drunk.
One episode in particular Miss Parker sleeps with a married dude she used to know. She is shown to have fun, and be a sexual person. She ends it when she looks at a picture of his family and at the same time has to go back to work. When she finds out he's been working against her, she basically just gives him a kick in the balls (as she's holding her gun over him and he's on the ground) and walks away. She's totally fine.
I don't think the show portrays her as a villain really. I mean yeah she's out to get the main character, Jarod, but she is still a complex character who the show seems to have an affection for. (In another episode she finds out stuff about her dead mom, its very emotional and sympathetic towards her character.) My point is, she wasn't punished for having sex. She wasn't punished for having sex with a married man! Sure he was working against her, but after a quick interaction, she's over it. She doesn't ever think about that dude again, and she was really more upset that he was working as a competitor than anything else about him. (Although during their confrontation she also said she was "faking it" which is meh. But hey, this episode was aired in 1996.)
drunk ETA: Yet another episode showed Miss Parker at Christmas time in her nice house, with a fancy tree. She was dressed up, and was drinking a martini. She was obviously alone. She receives a call from Jarod while she is enjoying her drink. I'm not sure what the show was trying to convey to the audience in this scene but I interpreted it as a successful, somewhat wealthy (white) woman who is enjoying her wealth and herself on the holiday. While yes that is problematic in that it's a rich white lady drinking and having fun. But as far as network tv in the nineties is concerned I feel it's also a fairly feminist scene because it shows a single woman enjoying her time alone and in her own way in her own house. Granted I am also reading it as positively feminist because a) I like the character a lot and b) am drunk.

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But really I think I should go to bed.
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Thanks for your feedback :)
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P.S. I haven't been on your journal in forever, but I love your layout.
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Also how have you been responding to my posts without coming onto my journal??
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And thanks for the compliment about the layout (which I didn't make!).
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But yeah - Miss Parker remains very compelling and awesome :)