Un-reality TV, from 'Lost' to 'Desperate'
By Noel Holston
Staff Writer
December 3, 2004, 6:41 PM EST
How about this fall TV season we're having? Unreal, huh? And I mean that literally.
All the buzz has been about the re-emergence of the scripted dramatic series at a time when unscripted, though heavily manipulated, "reality" shows appeared to be on the verge of taking over prime time. But it's the nature of most of the new scripted hours, particularly the breakout hits "Lost" and "Desperate Housewives," that's really interesting. They're highly stylized and basically preposterous. They take place in alternative universes that are sort of like ours -- and sort of not. They depend on viewers freely buying into their peculiar logic, suspending disbelief.
Now, it's arguable that all TV entertainment series fit this definition. But it's also fair and reasonable to say that "NYPD Blue" more accurately reflects police work than "Lost" does the aftermath of a jetliner crash.
Ah, "Lost." It's the most creative and engaging new show of the fall (Wednesdays at 8 p.m. on ABC 7), a dependable source of surprises, but its premise is patently ridiculous. Salon.com's "Ask the Pilot" columnist, Patrick Smith, recently deconstructed the show at length, expertly correcting absurdities ranging from the implausible depiction of an L-1011's midair breakup to the convenient absence of "burned corpses and heaps of unidentifiable body parts" on the tropical coastline where its pieces and 48 surviving passengers fell to Earth. Smith gave an especially loud horse laugh to the scene in the opening episode in which a survivor is sucked into a detached but still running jet engine, which exploded on impact into a giant fireball.
The most talked-about of "Lost's" character-revelation flashbacks so far -- that Mr. Locke (Terry O'Quinn), the survival expert who quickly became the castaways' designated hunter, was confined to a wheelchair until the crash restored his ability to walk -- is pure hokum if subjected to the most cursory reality check. Even if smacking into the beach somehow repaired Locke's injury instead of killing him, years of atrophy would have left his legs too weak to carry him without months of physical therapy...cont'd
http://www.newsday.com/entertainment/tv/nyc-unrealtv1204,0,633686.story?coll=nyc-manheadlines-tv