Saturday, June 12, 2010

idea(s) for a tv show

the conversation veered from poets to poetry to movies to tv shows, which always rounds back to the state of the world. we in our human activities seem to be a collection of serious fuck-ups, short-sighted and often mean-spirited. s. mentioned that he and his wife are fans of the critically-acclaimed television program mad men which recreates with astonishing vivacity and authenticity life as it was lived in the early 1960s thru the agency of an advertising firm. now, i was born in the late 1960s, the hippie era of free love, drugs, rock&roll and social foment. the world a few years before i arrived on the scene was often radically different.

s. got his daughter to watch an episode or few because his daughter, a young woman of the early 21st century, might've forgotten how historically the role of women in society was often subservient to men, an era like the early 1960s. s.'s daughter was enraged when one of the characters, the wife of one of the ad execs, was seeing a psychiatrist, yet the dr. consulted with her husband rather than the wife herself. such a thing is inconceivable now but the early 1960s was not so very long ago.

the conversation turned to historical alzheimer's. how we often forget that the rights we enjoy today were hard-won because of the thinking and actions of individuals and organizations that fought, sometimes literally by suffering bruises, blood and even death, to gain these rights. i'm speaking generically of course but as hard as some rights, the rights of women to be recognized by law to make their own decisions, the right to vote, the right to their own bodies and reproductive health, etc. etc. these rights so hard-fought and won can also be eroded.

i said what they should do is make a tv show about the wobblies and have us remember that there were people who died for the rights of workers, the right to a fair wage, the right to overtime pay, the right for collective bargaining, the right to an 8-hour work day and 40-hour work week, the enactment of child-labor laws. because we have short memories and we have forgotten, esp. now with the ascendancy of the far-right and their free-market ideas of no government regulation, and now we are witnessing a few of the horrors of a deregulated energy market, that these rights we currently enjoy can be, and in some instances, like collective bargaining [i know there are still unions but we live in a union-busting (began when reagan crushed a strike by air-traffic controllers) era and the popular conception -- not shared by all, of course -- of unions as being corrupt, morally and fiscally] , quickly eroded. i am, again, speaking broadly and i know that some would think that the wobblies politics were odious but they did fight, and sometimes died, for the rights of workers. i would like to see a show about the workers of the world and perhaps we might remember a little of what the world was like before there was such a concept as workers' rights.

4 Comments:

At 7:47 AM, Blogger John B-R said...

I like your idea for a show about unions-as-good-guys. I don't think it can focus on the IWW, tho, as the gains you point to were not their aims, which were much more radical. Whch is not a negative to me but not, apparently the point you want to be making. A thought: a show that focuses on the era of the transition from Gompers t Debs.

Which doesn't mean I wouldn't love a show about the Wobblies. Personally, I believe their tactics were no more odious than were those of their robber baron opponents.

 
At 12:36 PM, Blogger richard lopez said...

indeed, i was using the wobblies as a catch-all organization for workers' rights, but their politics were more radical and scared the shit outta many people, then and today. i think your idea of a show that focuses on the era from gompers to debs would be perhaps more sympathetic for the viewers than a broadcast on a group of radical anarchists. but the wobblies remain a vital step toward achieving workers' rights and tha abolition of child labor. what i find terrifying today is that at least one of the neo-republicans that had a gain in the primaries last tuesday are advocating repealing some of the child-labor laws and dismantling entire regulatory agencies. well, why not makeover the government to an unregulated free market enterprise. at least the roads and freeway systems would become a little less clogged if drivers had to pay say a monthly fee out of pocket for the priveledge of commuting to work.

 
At 4:47 PM, Blogger John B-R said...

Richard, I see what you're getting at but I'd gope you'd want want to make unions sympathetic. At least, I want people to believe in them again. Who else is going to fight the neo-republicans you describe? Not the democrats!

(If you can't tell, I belong to AFT. I'm reasonably active.

The IWW still exists, by the way - you may be a member for all I know. Franklin Rosemont of surrealist fame wrote an interesting book about them ...

 
At 12:04 AM, Blogger richard lopez said...

absolutely i am for the unions, was a teamster when i worked for campbell's soup, and think organized labor has been unfairly given a bad rap these past few decades. i do think people should say fuck you to the NEW NORMAL where those with a job are expected to be grateful to have it and work extra hard and for longer hours for wages that have stagnated since the 1970s. i think organized labor need to pick itself by its sandals and remind people that unchecked capitalism is the arena where everyone who does not sit on the board of directors or has a humungous amount of shares, gets fucked.

 

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