Housewives Our Fantasy Designers Of Urban Renewal

Sun Herald

Sunday July 30, 2006

DAVID DALE

IT doesn't stay a mystery for long, once you think about it: why Desperate Housewives is a bigger hit in Australia than in any other country.

More than 2 million of us will switch on tomorrow night's season finale of the US "melodramedy". Although they've been doing less well this year than last year, the Despos are regularly watched by one in every nine Australians, compared with one in every 13 Americans. What's the special appeal?

The answer, I think, is that we recognise ourselves in them. That's not to say we're in the habit of murdering our neighbours, sleeping with our gardeners and burning down the mansion across the road. But consider these details: Australia is the most suburbanised nation on Earth. Two thirds of us live in capital cities. Three quarters of the homes in those cities have three or more bedrooms, but half of those homes contain only one or two occupants.

So Australians embrace the Despos because we aspire to Wisteria Lane as our spiritual home. Like Bree, Susan, and Gabrielle, we live in houses way too big for our needs in comfortable suburbs that cocoon us from reality. We feel safe in the village, meeting our friends for coffee and gossip, because it's a self-contained environment, where the issues of the outside world never impinge and all crimes and crises are generated and resolved within the extended family. Or that's what we hope.

The last American entertainment embraced so wholeheartedly by Australians was Friends, back in the late 1990s. Our response to that was also a demonstration of a changing self-perception. Friends came along at a time when Australians had just dumped the myth about a nation of sun-bronzed, billy-boiling bush battlers and realised we were actually a nation of obsessive urban coffee drinkers.

So of course we were going to identify with six caffeine-addicted 20-somethings seeking love and success in the big city.

I think the particular quality that drew Australians to Friends was loyalty. Here was a bunch of independent people distanced from their families, at odds with authority, trying to cope in a new environment, with only each other to rely on. Isn't that a description of how the first white settlers on this continent would have seen themselves? The only encouraging thought the convicts had going for them was mateship, which is just another name for blind loyalty. Channel Nine should have renamed the series "Mates".

We've found that core value again in Wisteria Lane. The Despos may battle and bitch and sulk and scheme, but they're there for each other most of the time. At least 2 million Australians enjoy the idea that in our safe little universe, we'd be like that too.

© 2006 Sun Herald

Back to News Index | Back to Home

News Archive

2011

2009

2008

2007

2006