Inside Television 529
Publication Date: 11-26-10
By: Hubert O'Hearn
From this to Caledonia - where did we go wrong? |
As much as I love our Canadian Thanksgiving - and I've written about its personal meaning in the past – I also know that the Americans got this one right more than we did. You see, their date is chosen to commemorate an actual event: the famous dinner at Plymouth Rock where colonists and aboriginal people alike shared food and conversation which is so commemorated as the cordial introduction of old world and new, and the meeting of different races as equals. All right, things have gone rather downhill since, but the enterprise was at least begun with the best of intentions which still endure and which absolutely deserve recognition and re-commitment.
Besides which, our origins as Canadians began there too with the permanent settlement of North America. I see no particularly persuasive reason for the granting of custody to the United States of the holiday when that nasty divorce decree was issued in 1776. Finally, Canada didn't get around to setting a date until a 1957 Act of Parliament. Not quite as festive sounding, now is it?
So as our American cousins kick off – literally in the case of college football – six weeks of festivities filled with the warm and loving embrace of friends, family and airport security guards I thought it only fair to thank the United States for a cornucopia of its good works; great and small, serious and silly.
Thank you America for giving us the comedy-based talk show. Little did any of us know that it would turn into one of the last bastions of acerbic investigative journalism. From Jack Paar to Jon Stewart, you have delivered a model for the genre.
Thank you for all the ad men and Mad Men too. Your imaginations have made a thousand times a thousand products sell and so employed a continent. And as fictional drama, your story is the last, best show on TV today.
Thank you for the families: Ricardos, Kramdens, Partridges, Huxtables, even Bunkers too. You understand inter-generational battle and how peace can be declared within it.
Thank you for wearing your heart on your sleeve. For all I will rail from time to time about the right wing commentators and libelous political campaigns, one still can't help but be drawn to the spectacle of passion at work.
Thank you for being a comforting friend to all who have faced human tragedy: tsunamis, Haitian earthquakes, the immediate needs of destroyed lands. You have a caring heart.
America is in the decline. A child born today will look at a map of the world when he enters school with the same view we all did when we looked at similar maps and traced the loines of what used to be the British Empire. Its broadcasters are in the decline too – still floundering in the face of the internet. But the United States has always managed to survive and I suspect it will continue to do so: diminished yet unbowed. Happy Thanksgiving.
Be seeing you.