I like TV. There, I admit it. I know I’m supposed to be
above it all and say something kind of smug like, “I don’t really watch much
TV…” but I cannot tell a lie (I’d no sooner drown my food or misuse a
conjunction—both of which I learned about from Saturday morning cartoons.). I
can almost chart the growth of my brand of humor and sense of timing to the
shows I watched growing up. Who would I be without “Gilligan’s Island” and “The
Brady Bunch” or “The Cosby Show” and “The Dukes of Hazzard”?
The thing to keep in mind when watching television is that
it’s not real. I realize that was one of the most obvious statements ever
recorded in blogosphere history but it never hurts to review some basic facts.
In honor of those days of old when we watched Saturday morning cartoons and
they slipped in lessons about how to use crackers and cheese to make a wagon
wheel and Superman taught us about bike safety in between commercial breaks, I
will give my own PSA with a list of “Top Seven Ways TV is Different from Real
Life.”
7. In real life you can’t always come up with ten things in
a list.
6. On TV, a character will say something witty or profound
and then he’ll walk away leaving his words hanging in the air like a floating bubble
of wisdom—no retort necessary. In real life, if you say something witty with
the authority of someone who knows he won’t be challenged (actors on TV can
rely on the fact that the other actors have to stick to the script), you will
most likely be disappointed. You’ll have to hustle out of the room before
someone says something like “Uh-uh!” or “What?” or “Get back here! That’s not
true.”
5. Some of the hair-do’s for TV characters are ridiculous. A
female surgeon scrubs her hands in the OR. Though she’s on the tail end of her 36-hour
shift, her hair is perfectly twisted and pinned into a neat chignon—not a hair
out of place. Where’s the messy ponytail with unkempt wisps all over her
forehead?
4. Romantic relationships on TV are almost always
unrealistic but nothing tops the “teen boy pines away for the shy, pretty girl”
scenario. How often do we really see the guy with the boom box in the girl’s
front yard?
3. It cracks me up when a woman wears a lot of makeup to
bed. Ok, I realize you’ve got the studio lighting to battle but does she
really need charcoal eyelids and ruby lips with her flannel pajamas?
2. TV drivers look at the passenger too frequently. Keep
your eyes on the road, people!
1. Anytime someone comes home after going to the grocery
store on TV, that person must always carry a paper grocery bag with celery or
the green part of carrots sticking out of the bag. It’s a law.