Tuesday, September 7, 2021

The Chair Review and the Lost Debate

 


What a timely series, “The Chair” (currently on Netflix) provides a breath of fresh air, and a place where truth is led astray in the hallowed grounds of truth seeking; highlighting the paradox of democratic movements which like in the series mostly lack detailed focus on outcomes or specific demands. In the Chair liberal activists demand a teacher be fired for making a Nazi salute without any nuanced perspective.  The series looks at how the media frenzy over the student cell video that captures the act goes out of control without said proper context. As awkward and senseless as it seems to the viewer so to are a staggeringly large group of people in our American society baselessly brainwashed to for example view COVID vaccines or the wearing of masks as an afront to their freedom! The series doesn’t make the correlation with well-meaning liberal activists and ring wing fed so called conservative activists nor does it offer any solutions to disinformation campaigns but at least it’s a theme and a topic that can be examined moving forward. While the teacher accused could seemingly end the false narrative with a simple explanation, he does not, and the first season ends without this needed resolution. Convincing conspiratorial “conservatives” that their opinions on masks and vaccines are erroneous has likewise not been properly addressed.
Sandra Oh leads the English department with an Emmy winning grasp of emotion. She’s a delight but run through too fast during much of the first season; the ‘TV pace’ takes away from the theme’s grand realism and its substantive dialogue. I hope the show’s writer producer Amanda Peet, who ranged so well in Brockmire where she played a struggling alcoholic brilliantly, can make an appearance next season.   
The timing and structured plot tunes worked great although there were a few scenes and or scenarios that sounded unrealistic or seemed out of place. Jay Duplass, who plays the accused teacher, and Holland Taylor, who shines as an overdramatic professor who is treated poorly because she’s a woman, both understand the importance of realism, their performances sought true understanding, conveying as much as possible, if only they were on screen more. What’s the rush lol..
Our society much like the University in the Chair, is now undergoing an urgent emergency in climate change and the stated strange political dilemma mired in large misunderstandings. The anti-mask, disinformation campaigns have become a theme all too often to the point where the phrase, “it’s a medical emergency” means you don’t get to decide whether not to wear a mask or get vaccinated because that’s not at all political. Deniers are right to view the government as clueless and inept in the face of so much in action much like the students in the Chair but, they both got the facts wrong, and their alternate reality is blind to research and science as well as against public health. I’m so looking forward to the next season of the Chair, where a proper perspective can be found. As far as American society, I’m afraid what may be needed is more time, media that more forcefully and virally points out misinformation, and or more consequences for the enablers and right wing or so called “Trumpers” who should not only face litigation but should also face our justice department which as an institution sadly fails us in going after dangerous inciteful speech whose results are clearly sociopathic. Truth is being swept on so many levels under the Chair, perhaps, like in the series someone can sit on it and add clarity to the lost debate. 


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