Friday, 21 December 2007

Historical texts i will be looking at:






Fatal Attraction







Dynasty





Dallas




















Dynasty: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dcdhdzfbR_o

Dynasty is an American prime time television soap opera that aired from 1981 to 1989. The series revolved around the Carringtons, a wealthy oil family living in Denver, Colorado.



Analysis: This clip is hilarious! Two women: Alexis (yellow) and Krystle (pink) fighting over a man. Alexis is obviously the baddy, she comes across as bitchy (like Edie from DH). She is constantly trying to aggravate Kyrstle. The names themselves reflect the characters, Kyrstle=angelic like. Alexis=conniving. This scene is set in a clothing factory/studio. Alexis is a fashion designer (im guessing). Kyrstle comes along to ask her if she can have a broach that Alexis bought which was in fact Kyrstles. This broach is of sentimental value because it was given to Kyrstle by a...MAN. Alexis tells her it is sobby and she got rid of it. Kyrstle then asks her "aren't you woman enough to understand that?" (the sentimental value). This connotes that women should know how precious a gift from a man is and what it means to a woman. In Kyrstle's case, it obviously means a lot as she starts a fight by grabbing her hair and chucking sequins over her! This fight is over a man, shows woman as man obsessed. Alexis gets to Kyrstle by making her feel jealous about a certain man. At the beginning of the clip, Alexis tells Kyrstle to stop 'gloating' (A feeling of great, often malicious, pleasure or self-satisfaction)=shows they are contstantly trying to compete with eachother.. They are obviously rivals, and here is some information i got on the two characters from the net:


Krystle and Alexis
The rivalry between Blake Carrington's current and former wives became a driver for the melodrama. Alexis resented Krystle's supplanting of her position as mistress of the Carrington household and tried to undermine her at every opportunity.
Alexis caused Krystle's miscarriage and tried repeatedly to ruin her marriage, most notably by finding Krystle's former husband (Samuel) Mark Jennings and proving that their divorce was never finalized (and that, consequently, Krystle's marriage to Blake was invalid).
They had many verbal confrontations. On one occasion Krystle overheard Alexis gossiping about her in an adjoining cubicle at the beauty parlour. Krystle appeared and announced that she too could "throw mud", and tossed a bowl of face mud over Alexis.
There are a handful of trademark catfights, beginning with one in Alexis' art studio on the Carrington estate (in which Krystle won soundly, destroying Alexis's art studio and a painting of Blake in the process. Another in the lily pond, one in a mud pool in a park and a final spat (in Dynasty: The Reunion) in a fashion studio. The verbal spars between Krystle and Alexis also marked one of the first times the word "bitch" was used on US television.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynasty_(TV_series)

From this description, it shows how all the women cared about was the man, he was the object they all wanted and so faught over him. it says it was the first time the word 'bitch' was used on US television. This word is often used as a synonym for "woman". . It is a very offensive word because it dehumanises the woman by referring to her as a female dog.
http://www.saidit.org/archives/jun06/article4.html



Fatal Attraction: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYpeKbHKVbU (trailer)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZmbXN_pcjI (tormenting the man)

Fatal Attraction is a 1987 thriller about a married man who has a weekend affair with a woman who refuses to allow it to end and who becomes obsessed with him. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatal_Attraction

After reading the synopsis of this film (which i will soon be watching to get a better idea of the rep of women) it totally represents the woman as 'mad', 'crazy', 'man obsessed', 'whore', 'conniving' and many more objectifying words which i can not think of at this present moment.

I have now watched the movie. This movie is where the phrase 'bunny boiler' came from. I now understand. Out of all the women from Desperate Housewives, the one who most relates to Alex is probably Susan because she is the most obsessive. Also Edie can be compared to her, she is single and blonde and comes across as calouss at times, like Alex.
Dallas: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3X90dCJAOQ&feature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jvylYy8ccGc&feature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NhG78xcNWo&feature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xL2GwhyZgSg&NR=1

In all of these clips the women are shown as :
objects to look at "couldn't look that good on a hanger". A guy talking about a dress a woman is wearing, saying that her body makes it look good (pervert).
Present to make the man feel good about himself.
Act as a maternal figure (packing the man's clothes).






Monday, 5 November 2007



Blog buddies



Tanya:
Tanya is my blog buddy from out of my class. Tanya is doing the representation of women in Eastenders. Both our study talks about Laura Mulvey. She also has some books which she has researched, and because we are both doing our independent studies on rep of women i can also research those books.


Zainab
my blog buddie from my class. Zainab is doing representation of women in the crime genre. I think this would help with my coursework because in Desperate housewives the women are not as independent as women would be in the crime genre, so it would be a good comparison.




Comparison of texts
















i will be comparing my coursework to 'Sex and the City' because they have similar themes, eg, relationships, romance, friendship...Also, the narrative is similar, a bunch of women who get together and discuss their relationship problems etc. To help me build this comparison, i looked at a previous year thirteen media students blog on Sex and the City. I am also going to research the reality TV programme 'Wife Swap', i have chosen Wife Swap because in each episode there are two different families. In one household the woman is shown as a traditional 'housewife' who stays at home, cooks, cleans and looks after the children. In the opposing household, the wife has a job and does not do as much housework a 'housewife' should. Overall, this show portrays that without a woman the household goes chaotic, which is why the show is called 'wife swap' to entertain the public and show what goes wrong and how the families cope. Again, the stereotype is reinforced in this programme.



Here is some useful info i found:


LETTER: Sex and the City women broke boundaries



some information i have on Desperate housewives:


Desperate Housewives also offers a variety of female characters who range from the perfect mother to the trophy wife.


Housewife WarsThe cultural conversation behind the hedges of Wisteria Lane by Catherine Orenstein
A few years back, Cosmopolitan ran an article titled “Meet the New Housewife Wanna-Bes,” in which young professional women described their desire to marry, quit their jobs and pursue “the new domestic dream.” Erica, a 23-year-old investment banker, wanted nothing more than to “marry that cute associate two cubicles down and embark on a full-time stint as his housefrau.” This was back in the days of Sex and the City, when marriage was still a lovely fallback fantasy on television. If only Erica had known. Right now we’re inundated with dramas about the married woman, and “domestic dream” is hardly the vibe. If yesterday’s hit show Sex and the City was about single women who seemed to want desperately to be married, ABC’s current Sunday-night smash Desperate Housewives is about married women who would, by all appearances, be better off single. Trapped behind the hedges of affluent suburban Wisteria Lane, the five female leads experience life and marriage through a haze of infidelity, loneliness, thwarted ambition, sexual dysfunction and drug addiction. Gabrielle cheats on her husband with the teenage gardener. Bree terrorizes her family with her perfectionism. Susan sets slutty Edie’s house on fire in the course of their competition over a man, and Lynette, who opted out of her high-powered career but cannot seem to keep up the pace as a housewife, steals her children’s ADD pills. The show is posthumously narrated by a sixth neighbor, Mary Alice, who shot herself in the pilot episode, leaving behind a secret buried beneath her swimming pool and a stubborn bloodstain on her nicely lacquered floors. “I performed my chores. I completed my projects. I ran my errands,” Mary Alice says by way of explanation, in a voice-over that perfectly captures the show’s cheery, neo-Stepfordian fatalism. “In truth, I spent the day as I spent every other day, quietly polishing my life until it gleamed with perfection.”
The plotlines of Desperate Housewives unfold with such camp, glamour and gleeful bad taste (a nosy neighbor discovers Mary Alice’s body, then rushes home to peel her name off of a borrowed blender; let no one say there’s not a bright side to suicide!) that one might be inclined to dismiss the show’s portrait of domestic dystopia
— if
not for the fact that it is echoed by the current crop of “reality” TV shows that also explore the plight of the housewife. Take ABC’s Wife Swap and FOX’s Trading Spouses, in which two wives from different backgrounds swap places and problems (the shows are so alike that ABC has sued FOX for copyright infringement). The camera follows each woman as she performs her counterpart’s routine, exposing the dirty laundry (literally) and zooming in on quirky behavior, small cruelties and moments of quiet despair. Because the entertainment hinges on conflicts that emerge from pairing and swapping contradictory characters, both shows tend to reduce the women and their families to types, pitting slobs against control freaks, spendthrifts against killjoys, and hardworking Cinderellas against spoiled heiresses. Although the “characters” follow carefully edited narrative arcs in which they supposedly come to better understand themselves and appreciate their spouses, both shows’ allure — like that of the sudsy Housewives — lies in showing us the hysteria behind the hedges. As on Desperate Housewives, the “new” wives take us inside private spaces, inevitably turning households upside down in revealing and sometimes dismaying ways. In one episode of Wife Swap, Wife No. 2 forced her counterpart’s “house husband” to burn his would-be actor résumé and seek work as a janitor. In another episode, a stay-at-home wife who took the place of a spoiled heiress dismissed the household’s multiple nannies. Husband No. 1 inquired — seemingly in earnest — whether they would be taking the children with them. Meanwhile, two new reality shows, ABC’s Supernanny and FOX’s Nanny 911, bring in British child-care “experts” to instruct the poor American housewife in parenting. Supernanny’s website sums up the zeitgeist: “Are your kids driving you nuts? Is your house a zoo?” “These days, with the political emphasis on family values and the so-called opt-out revolution making headlines, there’s a ‘send women back to the home’ vibe,” says Deborah Siegel, director of special projects at The National Council for Research on Women, a coalition of women’s research and policy groups. “Only, as the TV shows seem to be telling us, once you open up the doors and take a closer look, life inside that house is not always so great.”
With such matrimonial exposés dominating the airwaves, only one mystery remains: Why would anyone want to buy into this mess in the first place? In fact, the one group that does want to buy in — gays and lesbians, whose right to marry was recently denied by voters in 11 states — spotlights a reason for our current fascination with marriage: The American family is changing, dramatically, right beneath our noses. In recent decades, we’ve redefined family in enormous ways. The so-called traditional family — married heterosexual parents with children, which policy-makers have long held up as the ideal — is quickly becoming a relic of the past. According to the most recent U.S. census, just over half of American households consist of married couples, and less than a fourth of American households are made up of nuclear families (down from 39 percent in 1990). More than half of American marriages will end in divorce (52 percent), the number of single mothers has shot up, and the number of children born out of wedlock has reached 33 percent — up from just 4 percent in 1950. Women now marry on average five years later than they did in the mid-20th century (now it’s at age 25) and, in part because of delayed marriage, over a quarter of households now consist of singles living alone. Finally, between 1990 and 2000, the number of unmarried couples — straight and same-sex — living together out of wedlock rose by 72 percent. Conservatives have framed these statistics as a crisis of moral values, with modern beliefs clashing against and threatening to destroy the traditional American family. In essence, this is what Desperate Housewives captures so well: The drama takes place not so much between the five women as between time periods and conflicting generational ideas of marriage. The main characters are 21st-century women, with 21st-century wardrobes and attitudes, but they’re dropped into 1950s suburbia, or at least into the Hollywood sets of 1950s TV shows about suburbia (the dozen or so houses on Wisteria Lane are repurposed facades; Beaver Cleaver’s actual TV house now belongs to Mary Alice’s family). Even as they languish in their retrograde cul-de-sac, the women of Wisteria Lane resonate with the history of the last 50 years — feminism, the sexual revolution, the struggle to balance family and career, even the impact of Martha Stewart.
Sly juxtapositions, along with the show’s many product placements, remind us of the telescoped time frame: Bree seduces her husband wearing nothing but a bra and panties under a fur coat, recalling Liz Taylor’s get-up in Butterfield 8, circa 1960, only now the underwear is La Perla. Even the show’s title, Desperate Housewives, recalls the subjects of Betty Friedan, while at the same time sounding a campy, erotic tone. It’s as if we’re watching a hypothetical experiment: How would June and Ward and Ozzie and Harriet have fared under today’s terms of matrimony? Or, more generally (and conservatively) stated: Are modern values destroying the traditional American marriage? It’s been reported, in tones of mystification, that Desperate Housewives is rated first and fourth, respectively, in red-state Bush bastions Atlanta and Salt Lake City, where “moral values” are supposedly of greater concern — but should this be surprising? Shouldn’t red-state viewers be all the more inclined to watch a show that dramatizes a conservative argument? Of course, the drama playing out on our television screens, like the greater ongoing national debate on marriage, is more of a clash of mythologies than of historical truths. As Stephanie Coontz, author of The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap (Basic Books, 1992), points out, the happy 1950s household represented by Ozzie and Harriet or the Cleavers — male breadwinner, stay-at-home mom — was neither traditional nor accurate. It was a relatively new domestic arrangement, and the Father Knows Best facade was just that: a cover-up for a quite different reality. In fact, 50s families often had two standards of living — one for male household heads and another for wives and children. Wife-beating was tolerated by authorities and spousal rape was legal through the 1970s. Drug use was widespread, as was prostitution, and the virtuous chastity of the times is widely misunderstood: Terms like “going steady” and “petting” described not innocence but sexual exploration by teens. Plenty of unmarried girls became pregnant, but they were sent away and came back “rehabilitated” virgins, or felt compelled to marry (the number of pregnant brides skyrocketed mid-20th century). Above all, marriage in this era was hardly ideal for women because they were economically and reproductively dependent upon men. “It’s these women,” says Coontz, “who were the truly desperate housewives.” If we’ve mythologized the past, we’re equally apt to misinterpret the present. Our high divorce rate, for example, may indicate that indeed marriage is failing more people. Or, as Nancy Cott, author of Public Vows: A History of Marriage and the Nation (Harvard University Press, 2000), points out, it may simply reflect the fact that people live longer now than in previous centuries. A few hundred years ago, when people died (or were widowed) in their 40s, divorce was less of an issue. And those spouses who did part ways were less likely to bother with divorce. If conservatives see American families as being in a state of crisis, it’s equally possible to see the changing marriage statistics as signs of opportunity — the result of economic and cultural shifts that have made marriage less mandatory, less desirable even. Feminism, the sexual revolution and the Pill — along with new ideas about family in general — have given us additional ways to organize our lives and families. My grandmother, who graduated Phi Beta Kappa, often spoke of getting her “Mrs.” degree; today she might have chosen to go to graduate school as well. Gays and lesbians who might once have spent a lifetime in the closet now have the possibility — in Massachusetts , Vermont and Canada , at least — of official recognition, and the myriad rights and responsibilities that come with it. “Marriage has changed more in the last 30 years than in the last 3,000,” says Coontz, whose forthcoming book explores the institution’s changes (Marriage, a History: From Obedience to Intimacy or How Love Conquered Marriage, Viking Adult, 2005). The biggest change is that we now have much higher expectations. Only in the last century have we come to expect emotional and sexual fulfillment from marriage (love used to be viewed as a potential impediment), and only in the last 30 years have women enjoyed a degree of independence from their husbands. “Marriage is harder today,” Coontz adds, “because it’s more optional. There are more choices. The very things that make it better also make it more difficult, and vice versa. It’s precisely because marriage can be more fulfilling today that it’s more of a struggle.” So Housewife Wanna-Bes be warned: Wisteria Lane may be just the tip of the iceberg.
http://www.msmagazine.com/spring2005/housewifewars.asp

Desperate to be thin? Cult show blamed for middle-age anorexia
SHAN ROSS
AN INCREASING number of middle-aged women are suffering from potentially life-threatening eating disorders as they strive to emulate the characters of Desperate Housewives, the cult American television series, according to a leading eating-disorder specialist.
Since the show, starring petite Teri Hatcher and her equally slim co-stars, became a hit, eating disorder clinics across the UK have seen an increase in older women suffering from anorexia and bulimia.

Clinics in Scotland report a fourfold increase in the number of women aged between 30 and 50 seeking treatment for anorexia.
Experts have said a "Desperate Housewives syndrome" has caused a significant rise in illnesses such as bulimia and anorexia normally associated with teenagers and younger women.
Dr Chris Freeman, consultant psychiatrist at the Royal Edinburgh Hospital, in an interview with Closer magazine, said: "Desperate Housewives is a very popular programme showing older women who are attractive and have rampant love lives.
"They're also thin and it puts pressure on women in their thirties, forties and fifties to think that it is possible to have this glamorous lifestyle and a great sex life if you're skinny," he added.
"I believe it's influencing women to have eating disorders. Lots of women diet and lose weight quickly, but they aren't obsessive and perfectionist enough to sustain it.
"They might discover that, if they make themselves sick after eating, they can keep their weight down. That's the start of an eating disorder," he said.
However, Dr Alex Yellowlees, medical director of the Priory Hospital in Glasgow, Scotland's only clinic for adults with eating disorders, said it was inappropriate to link women suffering eating disorders with "shallow" television characters.
"There is a 20 per cent mortality rate among women with eating disorders and there is no evidence to suggest their illness has been driven by vanity.
"These women are not all the same. Some have had the illness all their lives and it only comes to medical attention in their thirties or forties. Others never develop the full-blown illness and others have had it triggered off by something in their lives."
Dr Yellowlees said that five years ago it would have been unusual for a middle-aged woman to attend his clinic but the age group now accounted for a fifth of his patients.
"I don't like the phrase 'Desperate Housewives syndrome' because it does affect all women and it sounds quite cruel. But we need to choose our role models very carefully, because if they are dysfunctional then it could hold serious consequences," he said.
"Eating disorders are multi-factorial, and you have to combine certain ingredients to have a recipe for anorexia.
"One of these ingredients is the modern-day idealisation of thinness. We have gone kind of mad and women have taken it to the extreme.
"More older groups of celebrities are expressing concern about their bodies and it increases the intense obsession with thinness.
"They think that to stay young they have to be thin and if you have low self-esteem or confidence then you will be more vulnerable.
"Women are very sensitive to the images that are being given out.
"It is not just housewives, but women from all walks of life - no matter how intelligent or successful they are."
Deanne Jade, of the National Centre of Eating Disorders, said women had to learn to like themselves first before they could start improving their own appearances or lives.
She said: "We are seeing more older women who are suffering eating disorders at a time when they should be at peace with themselves.
"They are under increasing pressure to look younger and thinner. They look around and they see people like Teri Hatcher, Liz Hurley and Carol Vorderman. They could be running a multi-million-pound company, but if they don't look glamorous and thin, they feel they are lacking."
This article: http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=1832272005




Sunday, 4 November 2007

feminism, femininity and popular culture




author: joanne hollows




published:2000




published by manchester university press (manchester and new york)









the female frontier, a comparative wiew of women on the praire and the plains.




author: glenda riley




publisher: university press of kansas




published 1988









media gender and identity, an introduction




author: david gauntlett




publisher: routledge




published: 2002









representing men maleness and masculinity in the media




author kenneth macKinnon




published in great britain 2003




publisher arnold, a member of the hodder headline group









Working girls, gender in sexuality in popular crime:




author Yvonne tasker




published 1998




by routledge









representing women, myths of femininity in the popular media




author myra macdonald




first published in great britain in 1995, this impression reprinted in 2003 by edward arnold, a member of the hodder headline group.









Reading Desperate Housewives: Beyond the White Picket Fence







author: Kim Akass and Janet McCabe







Publisher: I.B. Tauris Publishers 2006



sally brady


"lives of quiet (and not so quiet) desperation"


Media Magazine


april 2005

Thursday, 1 November 2007


Quotes on women from books:



Female Frontier:

"they were expected to participate fully in domestic duties, whether for themselves, their parents, and other families." pg2

"the common conception...women would become wives and mothers."pg154

"domestic service attracted a wide variety of women." pg 126





feminism, femininty and popular culture:

"male character is presented as doing a favour for his wife by helping out in order to get in her good books, thereby confirming the nation that it is normal for women to be responsible for domestic labour." pg 23

"second-wave feminism is seen as a product of the past." pg1

"romantic love is pathological, she argued:it is love corrupted by the unequal relationship between the sexes and is used to reproduce patriachy...first, love becomes a woman's vacation, diverting her energies from other pursuits. second, a woman's sense of identity and self-esteem depends on a man's valuation of her as worthy of being loved. third, because romantic love makes women economically dependent on men, it is not about mutual vulnerability but female vulnerability, leaving women open to abuse" Shulamith Firestone thought this pg 73

"the romantic narrative also deals with a basic conflict that Modleski claims faces all women-women's goal in life is meant to be getting a husband, but they must not let it appear to be a goal which is consciously or calculatedly pursued." pg 76




media, gender and identity, an introduction.

"advertisers have by now realised that audiences will only laugh at images of the pretty housewife" pg57

"the 1995-1996 study found that men took 63% of the speaking roles." pg 58

"Gunter goes on to show how studies in the 1970s consistently found that marriage, parenthood and domesticity wer shown on television to be more important for women than men (1995: 13-14)." pg43

"married housewives being the main female role shown. women's interactions were very often concerned with romance or family problems." also in the 1970s bit pg43

"Female characters were unlikely to work, especially not if they were wives or mothers, and even when they did, this work was typically not seen on screen." 1970s part pg43

"men were more likely to be adventurous, active and vicorious, whereas women were more frequently shown as weak, ineffectual, victimised, supportive, laughable or 'meerly token females' (Gunter, 1995)." pg43

representation of gender today:

"gender roles on television became increasingly equal and non -stereotyped." pg 58

"women usually got to be love interests and helpers." pg 64

"the 1992-1993 study found that only 3 per cent of women were represented as housewives as their main occupation." pg 58

"women are seen as self reliant heroes quite often today" pg 90

"representations of gender today are more complex and less stereotyped" pg 90

Germaine Greer: "every woman knows that regardless of her other achievments, she is a failur if she is not beautiful." pg77





The Gender Issue:

"women perform 80% of household tasks and they spend nearly twice as much time as men in child care" pg 33





Representing Men:

"men exhibited less emotional distress than women and traditionally solved their own problems, while women were more likely to deal with the problems of others or to need help in dealing with thier own." pg66

"images of 'soft' men were common...designed to appeal to women." pg 71




Working girls, gender in sexuality in popular crime:

"there are only three ages for women in Hollywood:babe, district attorney and driving miss daisy."






Monday, 22 October 2007

Basmati Advertisement









http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RvNrJk0Z2-A
shows women as:
housewives
emotional/sobby
uneducated?

the mother, who is complaining that her son is using microwave Basmati is probably a housewife because she is at home and obviously cooks. She is portrayed as traditional because she disapproves of microwave rice and thinks it should be cooked properly. It also shows her as being good for two things, cooking and children, when she talks about giving birth to him (stereotypical 'mother').
The woman sobbing on the sofa, shows women as emotional.
The girl sitting on the sofa, shows girls should be at home with their mothers, she is not at work, in the whole advert there is no man shown to be at home, the only male shown is successful because there is a picture of him at his graduation, also the guy in the supermarket who is obviously of a high position because he is dealing with complaints and is dressed smartly, as apposed to a supermarket uniform, the people who are at the checkout are women=uneducated.

Sunday, 21 October 2007

Close textual analysis of a chosen scene
This clip shows Bree as being an old fashioned obsessive mother. Gabi as being sex obsessed and 'desperate' and unfaithful.

Friday, 12 October 2007

Dictionary words

Advertisement:when Desperate housewives first started, their marketing was successful as they aired plenty of adverts on tv, and a lot of billboards were also promoting it. the adverts during the programme also suggest the target audience of women, as the adverts are advertising, shampoos, and in general women products.

Billboard:when Depserate housewives was first starting, there were loadsss of advertisements on billboards, and were eye catching because the women were looking very glam.

Celebrity:Susan Myer, also known as Teri Hatcher, is a hugeeee celeb. she is best known from Superman. She is the biggest celeb out of them all, and it think her being in the programme obviously did attract more people to watch it because she is well known, and therefore the show did not make the programme look like 'any old new programme'.

Diegetic Sound:the programme has both diegetic and non diegetic sounds. the non diegetic sound is a very affective music playin which is similar/same as the theme tune, it plays when something is about to happen, such as when one of the women get angry and take action. Also, there is a voiceover who talks us through the programme.

Equilibrium: Todorov's theoryis supported in Desperate Housewives. the beginning starts with the characters jus beginning to plot their revenge on someone or something similar (equilibrium), the dsruption is done, then in the end everything will be fine amongst the characters, however, the audience know something 'bad' is happening, which the charcters discover in the next episode, and the cycle goes on...

Fantasy: the lives of the desperate housewives could be seen as a 'fantasy' because they live in massive houses, have loads of money, nice cars and fit partners!

Genre: the genre of Desperate Housewives is comedy/drama.

Hypothesis: the hypothesis of my coursework is going to be along the lines of: the women in desperate housewives are portrayed in an objectifying way as they are seen as causing disrutption, the title etc.

Institution: the institution is Channel 4 which is well established.

Kiss and tell: desperate housewives seem like women who men would do a 'kiss and tell' on.

Linear narrative: desperate housewives does not have a linear narrative, i think...it has flashbacks.

Mis en scene: it is set on a street, Wysteria Lane. the clothes the women wear are very glamerous (apart from Lynette) this helps with fantasy.

Thursday, 4 October 2007

Laura Mulvey


Research on Laura Mulvey:

British feminist film theorist.
Mulvey's contribution was to inaugurate the intersection of film theory, psychoanalysis, and feminism.
She instead stated that she intended to make a "political use" of Freud and Lacan, and then used some of their concepts to argue that the cinematic apparatus of classical Hollywood cinema inevitably put the spectator in a masculine subject position, with the figure of the woman on screen as the object of desire.
Hollywood female characters of the 1950s and 60s were, according to Mulvey, coded with "to-be-looked-at-ness." Mulvey suggests that there were two distinct modes of the male gaze of this era: "voyeuristic" (i.e. seeing women as 'whores') and "fetishistic" (i.e. seeing women as 'madonnas').
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laura_Mulvey


Mulvey distinguishes between two modes of looking for the film spectator: voyeuristic and fetishistic, which she presents in Freudian terms as responses to male ‘castration anxiety’. Voyeuristic looking involves a controlling gaze and Mulvey argues that this has has associations with sadism: ‘pleasure lies in ascertaining guilt - asserting control and subjecting the guilty person through punishment or forgiveness’ (Mulvey 1992, 29). Fetishistic looking, in contrast, involves ‘the substitution of a fetish object or turning the represented figure itself into a fetish so that it becomes reassuring rather than dangerous.
http://www.aber.ac.uk/media/Documents/gaze/gaze09.html


Saturday, 22 September 2007

Media Representations Who is being represented?
Women are being represented in a stereotypical way, because they are portrayed as 'housewives', hence the title. Also, they always look immaculate and range from the perfect mother to the trophy wife.
Why is the subject being represented in this way?
They are being represented in this way because this is the stereotypic woman. Also because they want to live up to their title, so obviously the programme is going to be about 'housewives' and their problems.
Is the representation fair and accurate?
the representation is not fair and accurate because not all females (mothers or wives) are housewives and behave the way some of the characters do, for example, Edie and Gabi.


Media Languages and Forms
What are the denotative and connotative levels of meaning?
When Gabi is wearing a bikini then that is just her clothes, but the representation of that is her being a sex symbol especially because she is tryin to impress her husband.
What is the significance of the text’s connotations?
the significance of this is to show that 'housewives' are always looking good for their husbands, as that is part of their jobs to also cater for thei partners needs.

What are the non-verbal structures of meaning in the text (e.g. gesture, facial expression, positional communication, clothing, props etc)?
The clothes are very important as that outilines each of the characters personality, for example, Bree is always looking presentable and smart-and her character is known to be tidy and a clean freak. Gabrielle is always dressed 'sexy' - she used to be a model and has affairs, so the clothes give away her personality. Lynette is the worn out housewife- he clothes are mostly baggy and her hair is tied up and not done up whilst at home, as he does not have much time because she is looking after the children.
What is the significance of mise-en-scene/sets/settings?

the mis-en-scene is important because most of the programme is set on the one street, Wysteria Lane. This has an affect that what is being shown is the characters everyday life, also the audience can relate to it becuase even though it is a rich area, it is realistic. However, this also shows that as they are 'housewives' they stay at home most of the time, home being Wysteria Lane.
What work is being done by the sound track/commentary/language of the text?

The commentary is also important because the narrator who is dead, used to be the characters' friend, so she used to be one of them, therefore she comes across as knowing the characters well because they were her friends and as she is watching them and telling the story it is almost as if she is there amongst them. which also makes the audience seem secure about what she is saying as she also talks about how the characters are generally, however, it is not a bias point of view becuase she just basically tells the story.
What are the dominant images and iconography, and what is their relevance to the major themes of the text?

What sound and visual techniques are used to convey meaning (e.g. camera positioning, editing; the ways that images and sounds are combined to convey meaning)?
At the end the narrator always tells the moral of the story etc and this tells the audience about what is 'right' and 'wrong'.
Narrative
How is the narrative organised and structured?

The narrative is in chronological order, however, there are also some flashbacks now and again.
How is the audience positioned in relation to the narrative?

The narrative is easy to follow, especially as there is a voice over who guides us along the story and also adds humor.
How are characters delineated? What is their narrative function? How are heroes and villains created?

Edie and Gabi both create humor to the episodes as they are both portrayed as 'drama queens'. Bree is seen as the villain because she is very cruel to her children but in a sly way as she also blackmails them. In some episodes the villains seem to be the women becuase they act malitious towards their husbands, for example Gabi and Carlos, when they were going through their divorce, Gabi did all she could to keep the house. Also Lynette being the control freak makes the audience sympathise with her husband. However, even though the women are portrayed like this, the audience also sympathise with them becuase we hear their troubles and are not shown the point of view of the men or them talking about their feelings, inlike the women who we all understand the reasons for their actions.
What are the major themes of the narrative? What values/ideologies does it embody?
Genre
To which genre does the text belong?

comedy drama
What are the major generic conventions within the text?

Both comedy and drama are combined, for example, the funny bits are not over the top, there are also emotional scenes.
What are the major iconographic features of the text?
What are the major generic themes?
To what extent are the characters generically determined?
To what extent are the audience’s generic expectations of the text fulfilled or cheated by the text? Does the text conform to the characteristics of the genre, or does it treat them playfully or ironically?
Does the text feature a star, a director, a writer etc who is strongly associated with the genre? What meanings and associations do they have?

Media Institutions
What is the institutional source of the text?

The institution of the text is Channel 4.
In what ways has the text been influenced or shaped by the institution which produced it?
Is the source a public service or commercial institution? What difference does this make to the text?
Who owns and controls the institution concerned and does this matter?
How has the text been distributed?
Media Values and Ideology
What are the major values, ideologies and assumptions underpinning the text or naturalised within it?
What criteria have been used for selecting the content presented?
Media Audiences
To whom is the text addressed? What is the target audience?

The main target audience for this text are females as they can relate and understand the issues.
What assumptions about the audience’s characteristics are implicit within the text?
What assumptions about the audience are implicit in the text’s scheduling or positioning?
In what conditions is the audience likely to receive the text? Does this impact upon the formal characteristics of the text?
What do you know or can you assume about the likely size and constituency of the audience?

I assume the audience for Desperate Housewives is large as they continue to make more episodes/series.
What are the probable and possible audience readings of the text?

As it is a comedy, it is not taken too seriously but more of a comedy and drama.
How do you, as an audience member, read and evaluate the text? To what extent is your reading and evaluation influenced by your age, gender, background etc?

I really enjoy the programme because i find it funny and interesting the way the women deal with their dramas. this is definately influenced by my gender because i can relate to these problems with my friends.
Research...


Housewife WarsThe cultural conversation behind the hedges of Wisteria Lane by Catherine Orenstein
A few years back, Cosmopolitan ran an article titled “Meet the New Housewife Wanna-Bes,” in which young professional women described their desire to marry, quit their jobs and pursue “the new domestic dream.” Erica, a 23-year-old investment banker, wanted nothing more than to “marry that cute associate two cubicles down and embark on a full-time stint as his housefrau.” This was back in the days of Sex and the City, when marriage was still a lovely fallback fantasy on television. If only Erica had known. Right now we’re inundated with dramas about the married woman, and “domestic dream” is hardly the vibe. If yesterday’s hit show Sex and the City was about single women who seemed to want desperately to be married, ABC’s current Sunday-night smash Desperate Housewives is about married women who would, by all appearances, be better off single. Trapped behind the hedges of affluent suburban Wisteria Lane, the five female leads experience life and marriage through a haze of infidelity, loneliness, thwarted ambition, sexual dysfunction and drug addiction. Gabrielle cheats on her husband with the teenage gardener. Bree terrorizes her family with her perfectionism. Susan sets slutty Edie’s house on fire in the course of their competition over a man, and Lynette, who opted out of her high-powered career but cannot seem to keep up the pace as a housewife, steals her children’s ADD pills. The show is posthumously narrated by a sixth neighbor, Mary Alice, who shot herself in the pilot episode, leaving behind a secret buried beneath her swimming pool and a stubborn bloodstain on her nicely lacquered floors. “I performed my chores. I completed my projects. I ran my errands,” Mary Alice says by way of explanation, in a voice-over that perfectly captures the show’s cheery, neo-Stepfordian fatalism. “In truth, I spent the day as I spent every other day, quietly polishing my life until it gleamed with perfection.”
The plotlines of Desperate Housewives unfold with such camp, glamour and gleeful bad taste (a nosy neighbor discovers Mary Alice’s body, then rushes home to peel her name off of a borrowed blender; let no one say there’s not a bright side to suicide!) that one might be inclined to dismiss the show’s portrait of domestic dystopia — if not for the fact that it is echoed by the current crop of “reality” TV shows that also explore the plight of the housewife. Take ABC’s Wife Swap and FOX’s Trading Spouses, in which two wives from different backgrounds swap places and problems (the shows are so alike that ABC has sued FOX for copyright infringement). The camera follows each woman as she performs her counterpart’s routine, exposing the dirty laundry (literally) and zooming in on quirky behavior, small cruelties and moments of quiet despair. Because the entertainment hinges on conflicts that emerge from pairing and swapping contradictory characters, both shows tend to reduce the women and their families to types, pitting slobs against control freaks, spendthrifts against killjoys, and hardworking Cinderellas against spoiled heiresses. Although the “characters” follow carefully edited narrative arcs in which they supposedly come to better understand themselves and appreciate their spouses, both shows’ allure — like that of the sudsy Housewives — lies in showing us the hysteria behind the hedges. As on Desperate Housewives, the “new” wives take us inside private spaces, inevitably turning households upside down in revealing and sometimes dismaying ways. In one episode of Wife Swap, Wife No. 2 forced her counterpart’s “house husband” to burn his would-be actor résumé and seek work as a janitor. In another episode, a stay-at-home wife who took the place of a spoiled heiress dismissed the household’s multiple nannies. Husband No. 1 inquired — seemingly in earnest — whether they would be taking the children with them. Meanwhile, two new reality shows, ABC’s Supernanny and FOX’s Nanny 911, bring in British child-care “experts” to instruct the poor American housewife in parenting. Supernanny’s website sums up the zeitgeist: “Are your kids driving you nuts? Is your house a zoo?” “These days, with the political emphasis on family values and the so-called opt-out revolution making headlines, there’s a ‘send women back to the home’ vibe,” says Deborah Siegel, director of special projects at The National Council for Research on Women, a coalition of women’s research and policy groups. “Only, as the TV shows seem to be telling us, once you open up the doors and take a closer look, life inside that house is not always so great.”
With such matrimonial exposés dominating the airwaves, only one mystery remains: Why would anyone want to buy into this mess in the first place? In fact, the one group that does want to buy in — gays and lesbians, whose right to marry was recently denied by voters in 11 states — spotlights a reason for our current fascination with marriage: The American family is changing, dramatically, right beneath our noses. In recent decades, we’ve redefined family in enormous ways. The so-called traditional family — married heterosexual parents with children, which policy-makers have long held up as the ideal — is quickly becoming a relic of the past. According to the most recent U.S. census, just over half of American households consist of married couples, and less than a fourth of American households are made up of nuclear families (down from 39 percent in 1990). More than half of American marriages will end in divorce (52 percent), the number of single mothers has shot up, and the number of children born out of wedlock has reached 33 percent — up from just 4 percent in 1950. Women now marry on average five years later than they did in the mid-20th century (now it’s at age 25) and, in part because of delayed marriage, over a quarter of households now consist of singles living alone. Finally, between 1990 and 2000, the number of unmarried couples — straight and same-sex — living together out of wedlock rose by 72 percent. Conservatives have framed these statistics as a crisis of moral values, with modern beliefs clashing against and threatening to destroy the traditional American family. In essence, this is what Desperate Housewives captures so well: The drama takes place not so much between the five women as between time periods and conflicting generational ideas of marriage. The main characters are 21st-century women, with 21st-century wardrobes and attitudes, but they’re dropped into 1950s suburbia, or at least into the Hollywood sets of 1950s TV shows about suburbia (the dozen or so houses on Wisteria Lane are repurposed facades; Beaver Cleaver’s actual TV house now belongs to Mary Alice’s family). Even as they languish in their retrograde cul-de-sac, the women of Wisteria Lane resonate with the history of the last 50 years — feminism, the sexual revolution, the struggle to balance family and career, even the impact of Martha Stewart.
Sly juxtapositions, along with the show’s many product placements, remind us of the telescoped time frame: Bree seduces her husband wearing nothing but a bra and panties under a fur coat, recalling Liz Taylor’s get-up in Butterfield 8, circa 1960, only now the underwear is La Perla. Even the show’s title, Desperate Housewives, recalls the subjects of Betty Friedan, while at the same time sounding a campy, erotic tone. It’s as if we’re watching a hypothetical experiment: How would June and Ward and Ozzie and Harriet have fared under today’s terms of matrimony? Or, more generally (and conservatively) stated: Are modern values destroying the traditional American marriage? It’s been reported, in tones of mystification, that Desperate Housewives is rated first and fourth, respectively, in red-state Bush bastions Atlanta and Salt Lake City, where “moral values” are supposedly of greater concern — but should this be surprising? Shouldn’t red-state viewers be all the more inclined to watch a show that dramatizes a conservative argument? Of course, the drama playing out on our television screens, like the greater ongoing national debate on marriage, is more of a clash of mythologies than of historical truths. As Stephanie Coontz, author of The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap (Basic Books, 1992), points out, the happy 1950s household represented by Ozzie and Harriet or the Cleavers — male breadwinner, stay-at-home mom — was neither traditional nor accurate. It was a relatively new domestic arrangement, and the Father Knows Best facade was just that: a cover-up for a quite different reality. In fact, 50s families often had two standards of living — one for male household heads and another for wives and children. Wife-beating was tolerated by authorities and spousal rape was legal through the 1970s. Drug use was widespread, as was prostitution, and the virtuous chastity of the times is widely misunderstood: Terms like “going steady” and “petting” described not innocence but sexual exploration by teens. Plenty of unmarried girls became pregnant, but they were sent away and came back “rehabilitated” virgins, or felt compelled to marry (the number of pregnant brides skyrocketed mid-20th century). Above all, marriage in this era was hardly ideal for women because they were economically and reproductively dependent upon men. “It’s these women,” says Coontz, “who were the truly desperate housewives.” If we’ve mythologized the past, we’re equally apt to misinterpret the present. Our high divorce rate, for example, may indicate that indeed marriage is failing more people. Or, as Nancy Cott, author of Public Vows: A History of Marriage and the Nation (Harvard University Press, 2000), points out, it may simply reflect the fact that people live longer now than in previous centuries. A few hundred years ago, when people died (or were widowed) in their 40s, divorce was less of an issue. And those spouses who did part ways were less likely to bother with divorce. If conservatives see American families as being in a state of crisis, it’s equally possible to see the changing marriage statistics as signs of opportunity — the result of economic and cultural shifts that have made marriage less mandatory, less desirable even. Feminism, the sexual revolution and the Pill — along with new ideas about family in general — have given us additional ways to organize our lives and families. My grandmother, who graduated Phi Beta Kappa, often spoke of getting her “Mrs.” degree; today she might have chosen to go to graduate school as well. Gays and lesbians who might once have spent a lifetime in the closet now have the possibility — in Massachusetts , Vermont and Canada , at least — of official recognition, and the myriad rights and responsibilities that come with it. “Marriage has changed more in the last 30 years than in the last 3,000,” says Coontz, whose forthcoming book explores the institution’s changes (Marriage, a History: From Obedience to Intimacy or How Love Conquered Marriage, Viking Adult, 2005). The biggest change is that we now have much higher expectations. Only in the last century have we come to expect emotional and sexual fulfillment from marriage (love used to be viewed as a potential impediment), and only in the last 30 years have women enjoyed a degree of independence from their husbands. “Marriage is harder today,” Coontz adds, “because it’s more optional. There are more choices. The very things that make it better also make it more difficult, and vice versa. It’s precisely because marriage can be more fulfilling today that it’s more of a struggle.” So Housewife Wanna-Bes be warned: Wisteria Lane may be just the tip of the iceberg.
http://www.msmagazine.com/spring2005/housewifewars.asp

Desperate to be thin? Cult show blamed for middle-age anorexia
SHAN ROSS
AN INCREASING number of middle-aged women are suffering from potentially life-threatening eating disorders as they strive to emulate the characters of Desperate Housewives, the cult American television series, according to a leading eating-disorder specialist.
Since the show, starring petite Teri Hatcher and her equally slim co-stars, became a hit, eating disorder clinics across the UK have seen an increase in older women suffering from anorexia and bulimia.
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Clinics in Scotland report a fourfold increase in the number of women aged between 30 and 50 seeking treatment for anorexia.
Experts have said a "Desperate Housewives syndrome" has caused a significant rise in illnesses such as bulimia and anorexia normally associated with teenagers and younger women.
Dr Chris Freeman, consultant psychiatrist at the Royal Edinburgh Hospital, in an interview with Closer magazine, said: "Desperate Housewives is a very popular programme showing older women who are attractive and have rampant love lives.
"They're also thin and it puts pressure on women in their thirties, forties and fifties to think that it is possible to have this glamorous lifestyle and a great sex life if you're skinny," he added.
"I believe it's influencing women to have eating disorders. Lots of women diet and lose weight quickly, but they aren't obsessive and perfectionist enough to sustain it.
"They might discover that, if they make themselves sick after eating, they can keep their weight down. That's the start of an eating disorder," he said.
However, Dr Alex Yellowlees, medical director of the Priory Hospital in Glasgow, Scotland's only clinic for adults with eating disorders, said it was inappropriate to link women suffering eating disorders with "shallow" television characters.
"There is a 20 per cent mortality rate among women with eating disorders and there is no evidence to suggest their illness has been driven by vanity.
"These women are not all the same. Some have had the illness all their lives and it only comes to medical attention in their thirties or forties. Others never develop the full-blown illness and others have had it triggered off by something in their lives."
Dr Yellowlees said that five years ago it would have been unusual for a middle-aged woman to attend his clinic but the age group now accounted for a fifth of his patients.
"I don't like the phrase 'Desperate Housewives syndrome' because it does affect all women and it sounds quite cruel. But we need to choose our role models very carefully, because if they are dysfunctional then it could hold serious consequences," he said.
"Eating disorders are multi-factorial, and you have to combine certain ingredients to have a recipe for anorexia.
"One of these ingredients is the modern-day idealisation of thinness. We have gone kind of mad and women have taken it to the extreme.
"More older groups of celebrities are expressing concern about their bodies and it increases the intense obsession with thinness.
"They think that to stay young they have to be thin and if you have low self-esteem or confidence then you will be more vulnerable.
"Women are very sensitive to the images that are being given out.
"It is not just housewives, but women from all walks of life - no matter how intelligent or successful they are."
Deanne Jade, of the National Centre of Eating Disorders, said women had to learn to like themselves first before they could start improving their own appearances or lives.
She said: "We are seeing more older women who are suffering eating disorders at a time when they should be at peace with themselves.
"They are under increasing pressure to look younger and thinner. They look around and they see people like Teri Hatcher, Liz Hurley and Carol Vorderman. They could be running a multi-million-pound company, but if they don't look glamorous and thin, they feel they are lacking."
This article: http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=1832272005

Thursday, 20 September 2007

The Characters:

Susan




It was common knowledge on Wisteria Lane that where Susan Mayer went, bad luck was sure to follow. Her misfortunes ranged from the commonplace, to the unusual, to the truly bizarre.”

Mary Alice Young

Neurotic, ditzy, clumsy, geeky. Take your pick. Lovelorn single mom Susan is desperate to settle down with a good man. She thought Mike was it, until he turned out to be a killer. Now it could be Ian. But if he is, you know it won't be easy.

Quotes
To Mike: "I'm mad because I like you so much without really knowing anything about you."
"This dress is riding up as it is. If I walk any faster, it's going to be Happy Valentine's Day for everyone."
"Edie'll get there at five forty-five, which means her breasts will arrive at five-thirty, so I should shoot for five."
To Edie: "Oh, good! Then you'll be prime meat picking when you go to jail!!"
To Edie: "Oh, you know what? It wasn't until your rotten nephew came to town that Julie was a perfect kid. And now she's lying and scheming and having casual sex! She's just a boob job away from being you!"
(on the phone), "Hi, Kurt, Susan Mayer. You did my wedding invitations. Ah, I’m gonna need another batch. Exactly the same. Only change the name Ian Hainsworth to Mike Delfino. Long story. Call me!"

http://www.whatsontv.co.uk/primetime/desperate_housewives/whos_who/susan_mayer

how is Susan represented?

Susan is represented as always needing a man in her life otherwise she does not feel stable-in other words, she is 'desperate'.


Gabrielle




I should have seen how unhappy she was. But I didn't. I only saw her clothes from Paris, and her platinum jewelry, and her brand new diamond watch. Had I looked closer, I'd have seen that Gabrielle was a drowning woman, desperately in need of a life raft. Luckily for her, she found one.”

— Mary Alice Young

Gabrielle, a retired model in her late 20's, married Carlos Solis for money but found satisfaction with John Rowland, her teenage gardener. She questions her relationship with Carlos, commenting once that she loved him and all her teenage fantasies had been fulfilled, yet she still wasn't happy

This Hispanic princess won't let anything come between her and what she wants. Self-centred, manipulative, over-sexed - butter wouldn't melt in her mouth… because she'd never let anything that might ruin her pint-sized perfection near her.
"Before we got married, we made a deal, remember? No kids!"

Manipulative & conniving:
Bree:”Girls, you don’t understand. This poor kid is scared out of his mind”
Gabrielle: “oh, for gods sake Bree. You’re a woman. Manipulate him. That’s what we do.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabrielle_Solis
http://www.whatsontv.co.uk/primetime/desperate_housewives/whos_who/gabrielle_solis



Lynette



She used to see herself as a career woman, and a hugely successful one at that. She was known for her power lunches, her eye-catching presentations, and her ruthlessness in wiping out the competition. But unfortunately for Lynette, this new label frequently fell short of what was advertised.”

— Mary Alice Young



Another ‘Housewife’ as she stays at home and looks after the kids.
Stereotype of mothers as being drained out both physically and mentally.


Frequently harassed mother of three terrifying boys, Lynette still manages to be the most real of all the housewives. She's down to earth in the extreme, except when she takes her sons' ADD medicine to cope with her demanding life.
"Are you saying I'm a bad mother?!"


Bree



...Everyone on Wisteria Lane thought of Bree as the perfect wife and mother. Everyone that is, except her own family.”

— Mary Alice Young


Bree is recognized for her perfectionist attitude and work ethic, which at times borders on neurosis and obsessive compulsion.



Brittle, frigid, uptight, Bree is more concerned than all her neighbours about keeping up appearances. Late husband Rex tried to get her to unwind, but she couldn't identfiy with hanky-spanky. So she's turned to alcohol to deal with her problems.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdmp2Mr2yLQ
-Perfect ‘Housewife’ as she is forever cooking and cleaning (typical stereotype).
-Very ladylike and her appearance is immaculate.
-Very family orientated. Hide stories which might make her family look bad





Edie



Edie has one of the worst representations of a woman as she is knows as the local ‘hoochie’, because she is old, not married, was seeing Susan’s ex husband and never seems to have long relationships.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZMXx77uF_c

Monday, 27 August 2007

PROPOSAL
my coursework will be about the representation of women in 'desperate housewives' and how the women or 'desperate housewives' are portrayed. i am going to prove that it is a negative representation.
Media language
Desperate housewives is set in Wysteria Lane. As it is mostly about women the houses are stereotypically immaculate, as are most of their appearences.
Institution
The programme is aired on Channel 4 and...
Genre
The genre for desperate housewives is comedy.
Representation
the main representation in desperate housewives is of women and housewives. The show portrays housewives as 'desperate' (hence the title) and of women as living off their husbands, e.g., Gabi who used to be a model and now is in a divorce and trying to keep her husbands house. Susan who does not work. Bri who also does not work and is portrayed as a 'clean freak' as she is obsessed with housework. Men are represented as forever breaking the womens hearts.
Audience
The target audience for this programme is women as they can relate to the women. Of course men too so they can perv! Definately adults as it comes on late, ( 10:00pm).
Ideology
?
Narrative
In each episode there is always a disaster which needs to be resolved, and usually is after all the women get together and discuss. Its pretty much the same in every episode though is done very well as it does not come across as boring or repetitive.