
TV is the New Reading
‘Brothers & Sisters’ –
time to wrap it up We really must be coming to the
end of this soon, right?
This fourth season of “Brothers & Sisters” is working through a cancer
storyline, a second surrogacy attempt, wedding plans, med school, a fledgling
business strategy already beset by corporate espionage and intrigue, a brother
in exile and further airing of the family’s scandals and dirty laundry to
matriarch Nora Walker’s mother.
The corporate espionage is the latest wrinkle in the storyline of Ryan, a
recently discovered teen fathered out of wedlock by prolific family man, the
late William Walker.
Ryan, bouncing around as a spot of chaos, was contacted by Dennis York, a
former business associate of Walker, recently released from five years in
prison on embezzlement charges. Ryan handed over some proprietary information
and York used it to undercut a purchase of cheap wine Walker’s business Ojai
Foods was planning to combine with its own grapes and market under a separate
“economy” label.
Because the universe in which this show operates is very silly, the cheap wine
York swept in and bought from under the best-laid schemes of Walker’s mistress,
Holly Harper, and Nora’s brother, Saul Holden, was the only cheap wine to be
had in the Napa Valley. Also, there was apparently no business advantage to be gained
from having all the equipment standing at the ready to process, bottle and
market the cheap stuff under a new label.
Nope, because York outbid them by a factor of three on red swill in one public
auction, Holly is insisting on chalking this up as a loss, rather than a bullet
dodged and a millstone around the neck of a potential competitor, and she’s
acting as unstable as she ever is.
Seriously, if Patricia Wetting, the actress who plays Holly, fails to show up
for a scene the crew can open a window and hope a giant flapping, squawking
seagull flies in to understudy. She reminded me of nothing so much when she was
screaming at Saul about York -- as if Saul had anything to do with York -- and
when she was screaming at her daughter about that terribly important file
packed full of proprietary information that had gone missing. It turned up on
Holly’s desk -- but not before Ryan, in fact, had a copy made and handed it off
to York.
But this isn’t even the big deal. Kitty has cancer. She has lymphoma, but her
husband, Robert, was distracted by his bid for governor of California and
didn’t notice her being all moody about it. And her brother, Kevin, is neck
deep in Robert’s campaign at the same time Kevin’s husband, Scotty, is trying
to figure out how an adopted baby could possibly fit into their family.
Boundaries
Everyone is so deeply involved in everyone else’s lives and businesses it’s
hard to believe anything ever gets done. There’s no chance for any privacy, and
none of these people have any boundaries. Heck, older brother Tommy isn’t even
on the show anymore but he still gets constant phone updates about everything.
And nothing guarantees a fight faster than putting them together with food.
There’s at least two or three dinner parties a month that invariably get
disrupted by big, overblown squabblefests. And these inevitably lead to
midnight reconciliations over tea and endless wireless minutes burned up
apologizing to each other.
It’s not a healthy situation, but it’s somehow not an entirely unfamiliar one.
I imagine a lot of families are pleased to see Nora’s dinner parties happening
on their televisions rather than in their homes. And it’s fun to watch family
togetherness of a dysfunctional, boundary-free nature where everyone is as
likely to be arguing with everyone else as well as taking each other’s side.
It’s just ... they seem to have done most of what they can legitimately do
with one family. The dizzying whirlwind ups and downs these people have faced
in such a relatively short period of time has something to do with the chaos
that inevitably follows a death in the family and the fact that there are so
many of them -- and also the fact that it’s a television drama. Most of us are
beset with only a few of the major life events these people have encountered
all at once in the past three seasons.
But in the end, they face it all down with their love. It’s a nice positive
glow to end the weekend with, even if it occasionally tends to the farcical.
And that being said -- sometime before Scotty turns up pregnant -- they
should really figure out a way to wrap this whole thing up on a high
note.
“Brothers & Sisters” airs at 10/9c Sundays on ABC.
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©2009 The Minot
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