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Pamela Adlon in FX's Better Things. |
Fiction can show you a different world. It can take you somewhere you’ve
never been. Once you’ve visited other worlds, like those who ate fairy
fruit, you can never be entirely content with the world that you grew up
in. And discontent is a good thing: people can modify and improve their
worlds, leave them better, leave them different...
2016 has been a long year, an awful year… even (to paraphrase Judith
Viorst) a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad year. As I type this, news
of the sudden passing of Debbie Reynolds has emerged close on the heels of
the woefully premature death of her daughter, Carrie Fisher – adding to the
body count of a year that seemed to be almost gleefully stealing our
brightest lights. But, eager as I am to finally see the back of this year, taking
on the task of reflecting on the past twelve months of television has been
genuinely heartening. It has been an eventful – too eventful – year in the
real world, but for television it has also been a time of innovation, and
further strengthened my belief that TV has never been as good, as smart, as
brave, and as human as it is now. It may feel more like a decade ago, but
it was only last January that Louis C.K. unceremoniously gifted us the
first episode of his stripped-down and ground-breaking
Horace and Pete, and only six months ago that Netflix premiered
Stranger Things, the Duffer Brothers’ unabashed and brilliant homage to the best of the
80s, from Steven Spielberg to John Carpenter to George Lucas and Stephen
King. And then last September, Netflix pulled the curtain back from its
small corner of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and introduced us to
Luke Cage
– a series that, despite some plot weaknesses late in its first season,
jumped with both feet into our difficult times and provided us with some of
the year’s most compelling hours of television. In a year when reality
threatened to overtake our imagination, both in menace and absurdity,
television kept pace – providing escape, insight, and regular and much-needed reminders that the human race has more up its sleeve than the
ever-darkening headlines suggest. A small caveat: what follows is not a
complete ranked list of what television has offered these past 12 months,
but rather a few reflections on where television has taken me in 2016.