As promised, this
week’s post examines television character clichés. I mentioned that I would
focus on one that I like to call The Man Hungry Floosie-you know the voluptuous
chick who oozes sensuality, always seeming to have more than enough willing
courters, yet can never just snag the right one?? Usually she’s privy to the
sexiest costumes, most perfect hair, the best one liners, and highest cleavage.
She saunters in and out of scenes. She rarely works. She speaks through a
perpetual pout, and most likely serves as the bane of some prudish female main
character’s existence. And when done well, the hot tamale can even garner
the actress who plays her an Emmy. Case in point: Jackee Harry from the 80s NBC
sitcom “227”.
For five seasons on
NBC, Ms. Harry expertly played “Sandra”, the Coke bottle figured tenant of
Building 227, with a nasally voice and sultry pout. She sashayed around the
building causing a stir and getting on the last nerves of her neighbor Mary,
played by Marla Gibbs. She received an Emmy for this role in 1987, becoming the
first African American woman to take home the gold for Outstanding Supporting
Actress.
’87 was apparently a
good year for vamps, as the late great Rue McClanahan won an Emmy that same
night for Outstanding Lead Actress in the NBC hit “Golden Girls”. She played the southern sex-pot “Blanche”,
who proved that just because a lady is post menopausal doesn’t mean she has to
stop gettin’ busy. And that she did.
I remember watching
these jazzy jezebels when their shows were at their peaks. As a socially
awkward 7th grader, they were most definitely intriguing to watch,
seeming to get anything they wanted from a man with just a come hither gaze and
six inch stilettos (let’s not forget shoulder pads…this was the 80s). The characters fit well in the dynamics of their fake
television societies because they were such obvious caricatures. The ladies
were not presented as necessarily role models, but as the woman to love and
hate. Most of all they were hilarious, thanks to talented writing and delivery.
Fast forward 25 years
later, socially awkward 7th grade girls have another version of that
same clichéd woman, but through the reality television format. Yikes.
The Man-Hungry Floosie seems to have melded into a 21st century character cliché that, according to Jennifer Pozner, author and founder of “Women in Media & News”, is nothing more than “…gold diggers, bimbos and bitches.”
The Man-Hungry Floosie seems to have melded into a 21st century character cliché that, according to Jennifer Pozner, author and founder of “Women in Media & News”, is nothing more than “…gold diggers, bimbos and bitches.”
This leads me to
ponder on the heaviness of these particular character clichés and what it says
about the roles of women through out television history. Laughing along with
the T.V. audience as Blanche and Sandra purred sexy one-liners has a much
different effect than watching the train wreck of Real Housewives or Basketball
Wives. Or does it??
Stay tuned!