asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)
asakiyume ([personal profile] asakiyume) wrote2016-10-16 02:13 pm

What's missing from Season One of Orange Is the New Black

So I've finally started to watch this show. Some stuff I nod at vigorously--I've seen things like it during my volunteering, or my students have told me stories that support it. Other stuff, not so sure.

But the thing that really struck me, the thing the show totally misses, is CHILDREN. I've worked with about a hundred people closely over the past four years, and I'd estimate that 90 to 95 percent of them had kids. It was *very* rare for someone not to have kids. And while some of my students have just one or two kids, many of them have four or more. Thinking about kids, worrying about how they're doing, the threat of termination of parental rights, guilt over how they've been as parents--these things are just huge for my students. Getting to talk with their kids is huge. And that's totally absent from season one of Orange Is the New Black. Preppy thirty-something Piper Chapman, the main character, doesn't have kids. Her former lover, the urbane drug trafficker, doesn't have kids. But neither do 99 percent of the secondary characters. The lipstick-wearing, wedding-planning woman (Internet tells me the character's name is Lorna) doesn't have kids. Streetkid Tricia, the heroin addict, doesn't have kids. Wild-haired Nicky doesn't have kids. Suzanne "Crazy Eyes" doesn't have kids. Taystee doesn't have kids. In a very unfair case of getting stereotyping both coming and going, Tiffany-the-meth-head Born-Again type not only doesn't have kids, she's had lots of abortions. Even the older women, like Captain Kate Janeway Red, the kitchen worker, or Yoga Jones, or Miss Claudette, are childless.

I think it's a big mistake. What incarceration does to families and children is huge, both on the inside and on the out. But that plotting decision seems in line with American entertainment preferences generally. For some reason the viewing public isn't interested in thinking about children unless that's the main focus of the story. So you can have child-focused shows ... or anything else.


[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2016-10-16 09:01 pm (UTC)(link)
And yet, the women in jail just overwhelmingly **are** mothers, and if the show is aiming to explore that and inform people (at least in part--obviously providing entertainment is a prime goal too), then not representing it is really inaccurate. Just the way they want to sensitize viewers to the issues of transgender people in prison, for example, they could do the same with parenthood.

A lot of women go to jail/prison for drug-related crimes, and the kinds of decisions you make and situations you find yourself in when you get involved with drugs tend to also result in babies... and conversely, if you happen to have a baby young, you're in a high-risk category for getting involved with thing like drugs (not saying this based on any actual statistics; just instinct... I'm willing to admit I could be wrong here.)
sovay: (Sovay: David Owen)

[personal profile] sovay 2016-10-16 10:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Just the way they want to sensitize viewers to the issues of transgender people in prison, for example, they could do the same with parenthood.

If pre-Code films can do it, Netflix, so can you!

[identity profile] rachelmanija.livejournal.com 2016-10-17 07:36 am (UTC)(link)
I don't disagree with your point, I'm just guessing about why the show may have made that choice. When I was writing TV, female characters were judged way more than male characters and the network would often bounce scripts back for a rewrite because a female character had done something that would have been completely acceptable in a male character.

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2016-10-17 10:56 am (UTC)(link)
It definitely does sound like it could be a factor.