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Post a Comment On: I Am A Child Of Television

"CBS’s 2012-13 Season"

3 Comments -

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Blogger Linda said...

Heh! When they advertised they were doing an American version of Sherlock I said, "I bet Watson is a woman." Bingo! Of course this isn't a new concept; They Might Be Giants and The Return of the World's Greatest Detective both used the idea. And wasn't there a children's book takeoff on Holmes where the main boy character's "Watson" was a girl?

6:54 AM

Blogger Brent McKee said...

It's a typical American "fix" of something that's not broken. It's the networks way of avoiding charges of a homoerotic relationship from ignorant people who have never read the Holmes stories and see two unrelated men living together and automatically assume they're Gay. Not only does CBS avoid the "homoerotic" charge but they get the "unresolved sexual tension" card to play.

Once I get done with the my Upfront posts (I've still got The CW, a day to day comparison, and a trailer clip post to do) and recover from my exhaustion in doing this, I'm thinking of bringing together all of the comments I've gotten for the Upfronts (except the spam comment for The Hopper PVR that I got for the ABC post) and answer them in a post.

1:33 PM

Blogger Todd Mason said...

Well, of course, today in the Real US and environs, increasingly we see extended-period same-gender roommates...and, increasingly among the young, less worry about homosexuality. (Hell, I live platonically with a woman who owns the house.)

Even going back to the '60s, Keith Robertson's YA novels about Henry Reed and Midge Glass employed a male-female Holmes/Watson dynamic (and essentially a platonic one), even though Reed and Glass were more evenly matched (as has also been the post-Doyle tendency...at very least, the latter-day Watson tends to be the one to pull the Holmes's iron out of some fires he's too unconventional/unconcerned to care about).

1:27 PM

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