I recently stumbled upon this video on Vimeo and it seems pretty difficult to find. A very authentic TV show that provides interesting insights about Will & Grace, and its philosophical origin.
Will & Grace used to be one of my favorite TV shows since it sort of matched the relation that I had with a female best friend (although not being gay myself, but my friend group at the time was).
Will & Grace was well-written and very funny. it’s portrayal of gays in New York was over the top and hilarious.
Still it might not fall into my top ten sit-coms.
MAS*H Cheers Fraser TAXI All in the Family
…I place above it.
Perhaps Third Rock From the Sun, Soap, Happy Days,…
Fraser was my favourite…
Still, they will not make them like that, anymore.
Not in this post Woke era.
DEI has all but killed creativity.
Just look at the movies, or music, these days…
Women can’t be innovative, nor can they challenge the status quo, so they can never create anything that pushes the boundaries.
Creativity necessitates thinking out of the box and contradicting what is considered normal.
This is what made Will & Grace funny…now it is the norm.
Its reboot failed because it of this fact.
Quotas mean straight, or gay, white or Jewish, males are out.
Not Jews so much.
Did you notice that the Will & Grace cast has maintained a level of fitness and vitality that aligns closely with their original images, even decades later? It made me wonder whether this consistency is somehow related to the (philosophy of the) show itself, as it applies to the entire cast.
I wonder whether there might be a female philosopher on this forum to comment on this. What would be the substantiation for this idea? Does it apply in general or only when it concerns film and TV?