The BarrometerA Barrometer rating of 4

Third-episode verdict: Cooper Barrett’s Guide To Surviving Life (US: Fox)

In the US: Sundays, 8.30/7.30c, Fox

So I’ve developed a new test. Don’t worry, Barrometer, you’re not out of a job, since this is more of an adjunct to your mighty TV-measuring powers, rather than a replacement.

And it’s very simple. You just ask yourself one question: would this programme become considerably better if you replaced the lead character with a woman?

Obviously, this doesn’t work if your lead character is already a woman, but if he isn’t, it’s quite handy. Because you’d be surprised how much less tired, less clîchéd, more original and more interesting even the dullest of TV shows becomes if you just invigorate their format with a gender switch.

And equally importantly, when you have imagined what a show would be like with a female lead, you can then see more clearly what the problems are (if any) with the current format.

To the credit of Cooper Barrett’s Guide To Surviving Life, it does at least try to do this itself. Based around the eponymous Cooper Barrett (Jack Cutmore-Scott), a 20-something slacker who doesn’t know what to do with his life, and his two male flatmates, it’s effectively a ‘what not to do’ for the viewer – less a guide to doing the right thing but a demonstration of what happens if you do the wrong thing, with each episode being a demonstration of a different wrong thing: at the beginning, we have a flashforward to the middle of the crrrrrraaaaazzzzzyyyyyyy wrong thing and at the end, we have Cutmore-Scott breaking the fourth wall to tell us the life lesson only those competing for a Darwin Award hadn’t already learned.

Despite basing its entire first episode on The Hangover, what sets it apart from practically a galaxy full of previous Men Behaving Badly style shows and movies about idiotic boy-men and their crrrrrraaaaazzzzzyyyyyyy adventures in not growing up is that there’s a female member of the gang (Meaghan Rath). And not just one who stands there, tapping her foot, wondering impatiently when the others are going to grow up and become marriage-worthy material, but one who’s equally irresponsible and involved in the hijinks.

Yet the show’s problem is still the same – it’s Cooper Barrett’s guide to surviving life, not Meaghan Rath’s. Even when the show is theoretically about her problems, as in the third episode when she has to go to a wedding in Mexico, it’s still about Barrett’s issues with being a plus one, rather than truly being from Rath’s point of view.

But if you imagine the show with all the adventures revolving around Rath, you immediately have a much better show, not least because you realise just how dully pedestrian both the situations and Cutmore-Scott are. On the latter note, if you are going to have a show about a ‘wildly charismatic’ Ferris Bueller/Parker Lewis-style character, you probably need to have both an actor who fits the bill and writing that convinces you of his wild charisma. 

Which isn’t to say that Cooper Barrett’s Guide To Surviving Life has no good writers: there’s obvious intelligence going on in some of the lines and situations, such as the ‘hangover cure’ in the show’s format-rebooting second episode (see what they did there? Meta, huh?) and the 24 homage in the third episode. But if you’re saddled with a tedious, conventional format that’s been seen countless times before, that offers nothing new and that doesn’t have a cast to lift the ordinary into the extraordinary, intelligence isn’t going to count for much.

On the plus side, Rath should go onto better things after this and Justin Bartha, who never got to do much in The Hangover beyond sit around and wait for the rest of the gang to turn up, does prove that he had unused acting and comedic chops. But following Cooper Barrett’s Guide To Surviving Life is only ever going to waste a good portion of your time, so is best avoided.

Barrometer rating: 4
Would this show be better with a female lead? Yes
TMINE’s prediction: Cancelled by the end of the first season

Australian and New Zealand TV

Review: The Family Law 1×1 (Australia: SBS2)


In Australia: Thursdays, 8.30pm, SBS2
In the UK: Not yet acquired

Most people’s idea of ‘an Australian’ is probably someone who looks a bit like this.

Crocodile Dundee

However, this is not 100% accurate. It’s probably not even 10% accurate. This man does not represent all Australians.

In particular, roughly 12% of the Australian population are of Asian descent. This is something you might not realise from the plethora of Australian actors now jobbing in the US and the UK, unless you watch The Librarians or you spotted the ubiquitous Dichen Lachman in something sci-fi and noticed her accent wobbled a bit.

Dichen Lachman

You might not even have noticed this if you watch Australian TV shows, since although ABC has been making strides in featuring Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in shows such as Redfern Now, The Gods of Wheat Street, Black Comedy, and 8MMM Aboriginal Radio, Asian-Australians have shown up only infrequently in the likes of Maximum Choppage, which even then was on ABC2, not ABC1.

Instead, to provide any significant Asian-Australian TV presence, it’s been up to the diversity-tastic Special Broadcasting Service (SBS), which has a remit to “provide multilingual and multicultural radio and television services that inform, educate and entertain all Australians and, in doing so, reflect Australia’s multicultural society”. Now, normally, these have been somewhat worthy affairs, usually documentaries, but The Family Law is a scripted comedy adapted from gay, Asian-Australian writer Benjamin Law’s memoir. And it is actually genuinely funny.

The Family Law is set in the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, and features Trystan Go as ‘Benjamin Law’, a 14-year-old version of Law, albeit one who’s a teenager in 2016. It tells the tale of one long summer, during which his dysfunctional and huge Chinese-Australian family have to deal with all manner of issues, both at home and at school.

In common with the US’s Fresh Off The Boat, Go has his own ‘tiger mum’ (Fiona Choi) who also has to deal with the social pressure of other tiger mums, as well as her sexually active teenage children. But unlike many an American sitcom, Go is a camp nerd and the show sides with him, rather than mocking him, in his big struggle – winning the school talent competition against his ‘hateful’ Japanese-Australian neighbour, in which he wants to play a woodwind trio with a deaf and an aviophobic clarinet player. Why is his neighbour hateful? Because his family were named ‘young Australians of the year’ and set up a school for AIDS orphans.

That tells you a lot about this version Law. And how willing the show’s creator is to pastiche himself.

The show is often bittersweet, with the first episode ending on a sad note, and some of the humour comes from Choi’s social exclusion, the Law family not being as rich as some of the other Chinese-Australian families. But it is often very funny, has copious Cantonese and Japanese language scenes, and has a warm heart: the only racism is from Choi, whom Go says in voiceover is odd, not because she’s Chinese but because she’s just odd; equally, Go’s flamboyance isn’t mocked or even mentioned by anyone, and is simply accepted.

There’s a tendency with ‘diverse shows’ that they get made because they’re diverse rather than because they’re good. Fortunately, The Family Law is both.

Nordic TV

Review: Occupied (Okkupert) 1×1 (Norway: TV2; UK: Sky Arts)

In Norway: TV2. Aired from October 2015
In the UK: Wednesdays, 9pm, Sky Arts

What is science-fiction? It’s a harder question than you might think. As soon as you think you know what it is – it’s set in outer space, it involves some non-existent technology or science, it involves aliens – you can think of some counter-example, such as The Man In The High Castle that doesn’t fit your rules. Often, it boils down to a definition like that of pornography: you know it when you see it.

Even then, there are disagreements. Think back to 1987 and you’ll remember the BBC’s Star Cops. Set in the then far-off year of 2027, it simply tried to imagine what life would be like in that year, particularly when it comes to investigating crime. No aliens, yet clearly science-fiction, with its imagined new technologies (computer viruses! Personal digital assistants!), moon bases and space stations.

Star Cops, for all its ambitions at future reality, suffered from the fact that like most future-set science-fiction, it was an extrapolation of the then present. Like 2010, The Terminator and other 80s sci-fi shows, it assumed that the USSR and an aggressive Russia would be intact in the future and antagonistic to the West. My, how we laughed at their naivety when the Berlin Wall fell, and even Terminator 2 had to revise the franchise’s predicted 1997 to take account of the fact the “Russians are our friends now”.

My, how we laugh at our naivety now. Who predicted the rise of Valdimir Putin and the return of an antagonistic Russia? Who foresaw the return of Russian jets probing Norway‘s airspace? Apparently, Chris Boucher did in Star Cops. Sorry for laughing at you in the 90s, Chris.

All of which takes us to Occupied (Okkupert), a thriller based on an idea by noted Scandi author Jo Nesbø that could be described as science-fiction or political thriller, depending where you sit in the whole ‘what is science fiction?’ debate. Set in the ‘near future’, it predicts the US achieving energy self-sufficiency and withdrawing from NATO, leaving the EU and other nations in the West to try to get by on dwindling oil reserves, largely produced by Norway.

Then in the wake of a climate change-induced hurricane that devastates Norway, along comes a new Norwegian prime minister (Henrik Mestad) with a strong green agenda. He shuts down oil production and instead offers the world nuclear-generated electricity powered by Norway’s Thorium reserves. Except the EU and other neighbouring countries aren’t too impressed by the instant move to green power – how exactly do you run existing petrol-powered cars on nuclear energy? – and in a somewhat radical move, team up with the Russians to force Norway to start up oil production.

The Russians kidnap Mestad, make it clear what’s going to happen next, and before you know it, Russia’s doing a ‘US in Vietnam’ and sending in teams of ‘advisors’ (with Mil Mi-24 helicopter gunships) to help Norway crank up oil production again. Yes, Russia has invaded Norway – although Mestad tries to convince everyone that it’s all very peaceful – and there’s seemingly nothing anyone can or will do about repelling the former superpower.

Or is there? Because Norway has its own Jack Bauer – security service guard Hans Martin Djupvik (Eldar Skar) – and he’s going to do his upmost to deal with the Russians, in his own way.

Here’s the original Norwegian trailer for the show or you can watch the unembeddable English-language one over on Sky Arts.

Continue reading “Review: Occupied (Okkupert) 1×1 (Norway: TV2; UK: Sky Arts)”

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