The Hills

Laguna biatch

How a real-life mean girl has become TV's most improbable teen role model.

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Laguna biatch

Last month, Kristin Cavalleri, the star of MTV’s pseudo reality show “Laguna Beach,” scored a visit to “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” an Us Weekly fashion spread and, most significantly, the cover of Seventeen magazine. (She’s even rumored to be dating pop star Aaron Carter.) Reality show stars have made great strides (Elizabeth Hasselbeck) and suffered dramatic falls (Richard Hatch), yet few have broken out into this level of glossy, real-life fame. Kristin is sort of plainly California pretty with perfectly layered blond hair, clear skin, good makeup and a penchant for making adorably expressive faces, as well as obnoxious ones. She’s curvy and short in the way high school boys prefer, and unsurprisingly, they worship her.

But Kristin’s also a self-proclaimed bitch with a truly awful SoCal accent, the girl who snarls at classmates in geometry and probably throws a decent punch, the kind the girls fear will steal their boyfriends and the boys describe as a “really cool chick.” And, of course, Kristin plays herself on TV, and so sensitive MTV viewers will note that it’s her real-life catty-girl persona that, for some reason, is being rewarded these days. Kristin is a rich, triumphant mean girl, the stuff ’80s soap operas were made of. But, ultimately, she isn’t pleasurable in the classic Alexis Carrington way because, well, this scary queen bee actually exists.

All of which makes her popularity slightly odd. In many ways, it’s amazing any vaguely likable character emerged from the palatial estates and plastic chins of Laguna Beach. Dubbed “The Real O.C.,” this show is a blander narcotic than even “The Real World.” Cameras follow around a crop of attractive American high-schoolers as they drive Range Rovers, tan their bums and shop for ugly sunglasses. Of course, it’s all spellbinding in that it forces you to confront serious questions about yourself: Why am I watching this? Will Character X ever complete a full sentence? Was I like this when I was 17? How lucky am I to be in the sinkhole of adulthood?

Which might be why Kristin’s such a star. At a time when we’re ever more attentive to the intricate miseries of teenagers, Kristin seems strangely aware that all of this, all of this high school stuff, is total bullshit. Considering how one of the requirements of adolescence is to assume that nothing will ever get better — the concept of perspective is as confusing as constructing attractive outfits for gym class — this quality makes her quite different from your run-of-the-mill teen.

When the show was being conceived, it was Lauren Conrad — charismatic, blond and button-nose cute with an ability to flash sad, sweet eyes on cue — who was meant to be the focus of the show. But the louder, springier Kristin stole every scene out from under Lauren’s espadrilles. A love triangle formed with dark-haired, fine-boned Stephen as the prize. A beach bonfire showdown was in the making, and one’s loyalties naturally fell to Lauren. She was so much nicer, and when she spoke, it didn’t make your ears hurt.

Slowly, though, Kristin began to exhibit bizarrely rational and admirable behaviors. Prime example: When the hard-won Stephen asked her what they’d do once he went off to college, Kristin, not missing a beat, replied with that arrogant shrug of hers: “We’ll break up.” Usually, a boyfriend departing for the planet of coed bathrooms is a traumatic, all-consuming event. But for Kristin, a fun-filled year of high school was far too precious to throw away for teary late-night phone calls and pointless bouts of jealousy-filled rage. Kristin clearly relished her role as the hard-partying heartbreaker (who, out of her friends, also seems to do the best in school). She also probably knew that it would make for better TV.

Lauren continued to let Stephen mess with her head; Kristin moved on. While the other normal girls on the show fell for typically caddish surfer boys, and fought with each other at fashion show fundraisers, Kristin continued to roll her eyes at them and cackle, I just wanna, like, have funnnnnn. You know? a mantra that seemed radical amid her friends’ hand-wringing. When she chastised her friend Jessica for still speaking to her cheating ex-boyfriend, it was with the sort of fury that can only be unleashed in the privacy of an upscale boutique dressing room: STOP CALLING HIM, JESS-I-CAAA. I’M SERIOUS. ENOUGH. When their mutual friend Alex noted that Jessica was the type of girl who would do anything for a guy, Kristin replied across the pedicure station with decades-old wisdom, And that’s sooo not gu-uuuud. It wasn’t that she became a more palatable character but rather that she seemed to possess knowledge that her peers did not, namely that: Ten years from now I will probably forget this piddling crap ever happened, and yet if I make a fool of myself, it will be on tape forever. It became fun to watch her savvy: She wasn’t just one-up on the boys, she was one-up on the cameras.

In fact, Kristin’s something of a snotty little sage, as if she’d graduated high school long ago, climbed in a time machine, and returned with a vengeance for another shot at teendom. Few parents would want a teen with Kristin’s soul, not to mention her dialect, and who knows whether Kristin will turn out to be a coldhearted, calculating woman someday. But teens could do worse than to adopt her sense of perspective. For anxiety-riddled tween-somethings everywhere, she’s a reminder that high school is the last breath of childhood, the twilight years of irresponsibility, and the tingly last days of brainless fun.

Suzy Hansen, a former editor at Salon, is an editor at the New York Observer.

I Like to Watch

You think it's easy being a critic? Why, yes -- apparently you do! And you weigh in with some strong pronouncements of your own.

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Critical mass
Critics are people who know everything. You probably didn’t know this, since you’re not a critic. Critics have read everything, seen everything, been everywhere and done everything. This is what qualifies them to tell you what you will or won’t enjoy. Critics’ opinions are immutable — they never second-guess themselves — and all verdicts are final. Like doctors, critics’ diagnoses should only be questioned by other critics. Mere mortals, such as artists, are never qualified to dispute or even discuss a critic’s opinion.

Artists only know their own hearts. Critics pretend to respect this, but really it just makes them laugh until coffee sprays out of their noses. Critics know which hearts are pure and which are probably only acting pure because it makes them look “artsy.” Artists long to express their innermost thoughts and feelings, their deepest secrets, their hidden wells of sadness and desire. Critics know which of these thoughts and feelings are worth expressing, they recognize which “deepest secrets” might form a compelling narrative arc, and they can tell if a hidden well of sadness is one that Gwyneth Paltrow could capture on-screen. Artists seek the most pressing truths of human existence. Critics seek cheese danishes.

Artists share themselves with the world. Critics tell us whether or not the artists should’ve bothered. Artists bleed the stone. Critics throw stones, and use the proceeds to buy glass houses, and then purchase elaborate alarm systems calibrated to detect any lurking stone-throwers. Once they feel safe and secure, critics hole up for hours, eating salty snacks and reading about themselves on Romenesko.

Now that we’ve made that perfectly clear…

Past my threshold

Dear ILTW,

You mentioned that no one had written to you about “Threshold.” Well, maybe, just maybe, it isn’t as good as you think? I tried to like it, I really did. I watched three episodes before giving up. I loved most of the characters, and it had potential. Carla Gugino is beautiful and does a great job, but is overwhelmed by the melodrama. It is nice to see Brent Spiner trying to break out of his mold, and Peter Dinklage is a revelation. In fact, Dinklage is the main reason I wanted to like this show. The fact that it treated him as a regular character, and not some kind of freak, is wonderful. Especially since he is such a great actor.

One problem is the melodrama. Everything is so heavy-handed, every smidgen of drama so overplayed that it’s tiring. Charles Dutton is so overcooked, it’s scary. Every clichéd warning, every thudding line just drives home the melodrama. The biggest problem, though, is the logic. There is none. The episode [with the guy who was accused of killing his family as a teenager] was a great example. Dinklage spends the episode in the crazy guy’s cell, looking at pictures he drew of a house, with a series of words [underneath it]. Dinklage then somehow determines that these words are numbers, with no outside reference material, and somehow determines what number each word represents. This in itself is remarkable, but then we learn they are latitude and longitude coordinates, so specific and precise, that we can zoom in our satellite imagery directly onto the house. However, the man who encoded these coordinates was 13 (?) when he was arrested for killing his family, and this was 20 (?) years ago. So how did he know the exact coordinates of the house in 1985 while he was 13? Makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. The mood was good, but this is just one example of the incredibly poor writing and logic behind the show. The third episode was the last for me.

Scott Martin, Seattle, Wash.

Dear Scott,

You’re right. “Threshold” is turning into a serious disappointment. I’ve been championing this show since the deliriously creepy first episode, cheering Carla Gugino on, hoping for some horrors on par with the pilot, but lately I’ve been having second thoughts.

The things you mentioned about Dinklage and the crazy guy — that stuff doesn’t bother me. Those guys are geniuses, see? We’re not supposed to understand how they can sit around and add up numbers for a few seconds, and then come up with a solution that propels the plot forward magically. If we could understand it, we’d be far, far less impressed — and then we might start to notice how curiously short that one genius is.

I can suspend my disbelief until the cows come home. Sadly, the cows came home a week ago, with that unsavory little DJ girl who became infected by the alien signal. The agents were trying to figure out how the girl got her hands on the alien transmission, only to find, on her answering machine, a message from her brother seconds before his death. He called her to say something like, “Hey, sis, you’re not going to believe what I’m looking at right now, it’s this crazy thing in the sky and… Argh! Oww! Arrrrgh!”

Come on, guy. Then, the DJ girl sat there and replayed her brother’s painful death on her machine, over and over and over again, until she was infected. Then she recorded it onto her iPod (I knew iPods were the devil’s handiwork, I just thought it had more to do with the little spongy black things that pop off the earphones and get lost forever, or the fragile, irreplaceable, not-covered-by-warranty screen that breaks when you look at it the wrong way). Then she played it to all those ne’er-do-well ravers, and we were actually supposed to care that it hurt their little raver ears!

I also didn’t approve of Carla getting all righteous about trying to save the DJ girl from turning into an alien. Screw her! First of all, she’s a teenager. Yuck! Second, trying to save her puts millions of lives at risk. Wouldn’t you think that the head of the worst-case scenario department would be more than willing to make this very necessary human (half-alien!) sacrifice? Oh, Carla, Jack Bauer’s on the phone. He wants you to get some friggin’ balls already.

Why do female characters always have to be so damn compassionate? I’m tired of compassionate women on TV. I want some dispassionate, heartless women for a change. I want some women who don’t waste precious time struggling with the human toll of every stupid decision. Even Mac the Knife on “Commander in Chief” is wussing around about dissident journalists and tortured terrorists and such. Oh, Mrs. President? Jack Bauer’s on the phone. He wants you to man up and let those bastards have it.

So, I’ve changed my mind. “Threshold” started out strong, but if Carla doesn’t start having those creepy nightmares again, I’m going to have to jump ship. Plus, have you watched “Lost” lately? It’s really getting good this season — less invisible beasts and magic, more real and pressing danger. Hell, even “Invasion” almost holds my interest, what with all the blank stares and the running water and the faint promise of Mommy sprouting demon claws and eating her teenage daughter alive.

So, you’re right, Scott. “Threshold” is slipping. Let’s make it official with a zingy pull quote for the marketing department over at ABC: While “Threshold” pushes past the threshold of believability, “Invasion” invades our imaginations and “Lost” has finally found its stride! Three thumbs up!

ILTW

Life’s a beach

ILTW,

“Laguna Beach” has made all other teen dramas unwatchable. There has never been a show with teenage dialogue this authentic. Laguna Beach exposes all other teenage shows for what they are: the pompous exploits of some wordy blowhard.

There was an amazing scene this year when Jessica confronted Jason about their relationship. She asked them why they were together and if he liked her. He had no answer. He just kept avoiding eye contact and saying I don’t know and trying to smile his way out of the awkwardness. I’ve never seen that on a scripted teen drama. Teenage kids are stupid and don’t know how to express themselves. They barely know what word to use from minute to minute. After watching this, I can’t go back to scripted television and watch a teenager who has a snappy comeback to every problem or a soliloquy for every emotion and not cringe. It’s pathetic.

The show is unique in that I cannot think of another reality show that documented current friends in their normal setting. “The Real World” threw strangers together in an IKEA-ed out house. “Big Brother,” “Survivor,” “The Apprentice” are all game shows. “Orange County Choppers” has an objective. The kids on “Laguna Beach” would be doing what they’re doing anyway (of course, the cameras do change things).

You mentioned the scene where Kristen hooked up with Jessica’s crush. There was another terrific scene following that when they were at lunch together and Jessica was talking about how much she liked that guy. The “oh shit I hooked up with that guy please don’t ask me about it” look on Kristen’s face was priceless. You’ll never find something that real on any scripted show and on a lot of other reality shows.

I know the people on “Laguna Beach” are shallow and rich and spoiled. But the show is about form, not content. It’s groundbreaking television.

Tim Masterson, Brooklyn, N.Y.

Dear Tim,

You’re absolutely right. I laughed so hard when I watched that scene with Jessica and Jason, I cried. It was better than all the stuff that’s better than “Cats.” It reminded me of the feeling I used to have when I was a teenager (yuck!), trying to pry a few meaningful words out of some guy I was dating. It was like trying to have a conversation with your pet hamster. I remember when my first boyfriend broke up with me. We walked around and I cried and cried and then tried to find out why he was dumping me, but all he could say was, “I don’t know.” Now I know that “I don’t know” means “That tall, blond girl I’m friends with has finally agreed to sleep with me. Hurray! Wish me luck!”

You’re also right about the wordy blowhards, and how they trick us into thinking that teenagers are anything but awkward, hormone-addled morons. Teenagers are gross, but we’re lured into believing that they’re glamorous and special and that they’re just as clever and lovable as crusty, dumpy old folks like us. Wrong!

“Laguna Beach” is groundbreaking television, and since you aren’t a critic and haven’t published these thoughts anywhere already, I’m just going to pretend I thought of it first. All I have to do is wheel out some big, sweeping statements, and everyone will forget you even exist, Tim Masterson of Brooklyn, N.Y. Watch this: Look past its pretty sugar-coating, and “Laguna Beach” offers a stunning snapshot of the strange machinations of the adolescent mind. A timeless classic that’s sure to be treasured for generations to come.

Those crazy kids over at MTV are going to love me for this one!

ILTW

A class act

Dear ILTW,

I stopped following “Arrested Development” early on when they accidentally burned up $750,000 in cash at the banana stand. Back next week for more wacky adventures! Working-class shows like “The Simpsons,” “Malcolm,” “Honeymooners,” etc., etc., etc., succeed because they show that despite (or perhaps because of) being toward the bottom of the class system, a family can retain its dignity. “Arrested Development” is a bitter reminder told over and over that with money you never have to say you’re sorry, never have to rely on others for validation, never have to worry about being homeless, never suffer the indignity of class. No wonder critics fawn over it while the rest of America won’t watch.

Doug, Venice, Calif.

Dear Doug,

I think “Arrested Development” teaches us all a very important lesson: When you have so much money that you never have to say you are sorry, never have to rely on others for validation, never have to worry about being homeless, and never suffer the indignity of class, you usually evolve into a whiny, dysfunctional loser who can’t stop auditioning for the Blue Man Group.

I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but the Bluths haven’t exactly retained their dignity. They’re groveling, they’re shameless, they’re lazy and they’re self-involved. In short, they’re absolutely pathetic. They think they know everything, but really they don’t know a damn thing.

In that light, though, I can see your point about why critics fawn over it while the rest of America won’t watch. I’ll have to craft this into a think piece for the New Yorker, a little treatise on the myopia of today’s public intellectual — you know, something refined yet weighty, buoyed by deft metaphors and agile prose. “Arrested Development” will just be a gateway to richer, more complex terrain, of course, but I’ll toss in a good line about how the show reflects the Updikian barbarity of family, and the P.R. department at Fox will probably emboss it onto some promotional items (silver coasters? paperweights?) and my name will be right there, next to my brilliant quote! I should probably e-mail them to make sure they spell my last name correctly …

ILTW

Pop Quiz!

How much have you learned about critics today? Take this quiz and find out! >

1. Critics know…

a) the exact moment when an artist’s career is over
b) the particular flaws of any human being’s earnest attempt at expressing him or herself
c) what stinks about that half-written screenplay in your desk
d) everything — including what you’re thinking right now
e) the exact size and shape of their own navels.

2. Critics never…

a) get it all wrong
b) second-guess themselves
c) change their minds
d) meet a doughnut they don’t like
e) have an unself-conscious, spontaneous moment
f) feel without judging
g) win.

3. Can your feelings about a particular TV show, movie or song really be judged as wrong or incorrect?

a) Yes, of course. Art can be objectively judged and given a numeric value to reflect its quality.
b) Maybe. It depends on how wrong or incorrect you are.
c) Did someone put the doughnuts away already? I wasn’t done with them yet.

4. Why do people become critics?

a) Because they know everything, and they feel an obligation to share their immense stores of knowledge with the world.
b) Because it was that or write the greatest American novel of the 21st century, and really, aren’t there enough classic works of literature out there already? Besides, being a novelist is so cliché, it’s so 1955.
c) After an early childhood of bottling up their emotions, nascent critics learn to compartmentalize their feelings and to express those feelings with elaborate, winding, complicated treatises, in which all genuine emotion is abstracted and confused and projected onto exterior forces. Eventually, all traces of real emotion and feeling evaporate and all that’s left is a complicated web of messy thoughts. Voilà! A critic is born!
d) For the free cheese and crackers.
e) So they can air their negative feelings about teenagers.
f) So they can use the word “flaccid” a lot.

5. Which of these things has the most in common with a critic?

a) a hammer
b) a package of lunch meat
c) a discarded sock
d) a little old book of idioms
e) the silt at the bottom of a glass of tea
f) David Hasselhoff
g) hot dog water.

Answer Key: 1.d, 2.d, 3. b, 4. e, 5. g

Next week: I have no idea!

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Heather Havrilesky is Salon's TV critic and author of the rabbit blog. Her memoir, "Disaster Preparedness," published in 2010.

I Like to Watch

TV warns us of the dangers of drunk dialing, sleeping in a lacy slip, and electing a ruby-red-lipped president. Plus: Why the challenged kids of "Laguna Beach" are people, too.

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I Like to Watch

Curiously strong
There’s too much to watch, damn it! Despite reports that indicate otherwise, this fall TV season is one of the strongest in years. Not only can you count on the return of such solid shows as “Arrested Development,” “Veronica Mars,” “Lost,” “House” and “Grey’s Anatomy,” but there are also consistent reality staples like “America’s Next Top Model,” “Survivor” and “The Amazing Race” to count on. And that’s before you even get into the really solid new shows like “Everybody Hates Chris,” “My Name Is Earl,” “Threshold” and “Commander in Chief,” not to mention enjoyably crappy shows like “The Surreal Life” and “My Fair Brady.”

But with this much TV to watch, how will any of us ever find a minute to open our mail or run a comb through our hair, let alone harangue our children, berate our significant others, and betray the confidences of our dearest friends? By offering us so many choices on the small screen, TV executives seem determined to take up every last minute of our free time until we’re hollow shells of our former selves, with nothing to say about anything but how much we enjoy the opening credits to Martha Stewart’s “Apprentice.”

Here’s a tip, chickens: On those days you think you’ve got it really bad, just do what I do and tune in to MTV’s “Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County.” When you see the endless challenges that those poor kids are up against, day after day, you’ll realize just how easy your life is by comparison.

Friends, for reals!
But before we get into the details of the show, let’s stop and congratulate MTV for bringing such groundbreaking programming to the screen. No other network has taken such a genuine interest in these very special kids, not only by raising public awareness of their plight but also by investing in their social environments and creating fun, safe activities and opportunities for them to meet other kids like themselves.

The hard work MTV has put into this project is clearly already paying off. Not only do the kids of “Laguna Beach” not seem to be embarrassed about their obvious cognitive challenges, but they seem downright proud of the very limitations that might make other kids feel self-conscious. Whatever self-esteem-boosting games MTV has these kids involved in, they should keep up the good work.

But what really warms my heart is how these struggling teens have adapted to the point where they can play elaborate games of make-believe with each other. In their fascinating little microcosm, they’ve even developed intricate rules and codes that are impossible for the rest of us to grasp. Like last week, when Jessica, fresh off a perceived “romance” with Jason, turned her sights on Jeff and said, in her cute way, that she was “way into him,” which apparently was some kind of a code for Kristen to make out with him immediately. The self-serious way they pretend at “true love” is so affecting, especially when they get all mixed up and confused and can’t remember which guy is going out with which girl from week to week.

It’s especially heartwarming when they try, using their limited language skills, to confront each other! I loved the adorable way Alex stumbled on her words when she was trying to call Jessica a slut right to her face for fooling around with her “boyfriend” Jason, even though Jason was actually Jessica’s “boyfriend” just weeks earlier!

These kids truly are remarkable, and MTV has seized on a fantastic opportunity to simultaneously educate the public and to offer these poor kids a chance, albeit brief, to feel just like normal teenagers. I can’t wait for “the prom”!

Kiddo gloves
Of course, while MTV makes an honest effort to effect real change and to shed a new light on the possibilities for these so-called developmentally challenged teens, other networks go too far in their attempts to pander to our most open-minded and liberal urges.

Take ABC’s “Commander in Chief.” Naturally, they don’t really expect us to believe that a woman will ever even come close to being president. I mean, come on. A woman? President? Ha! This country would sooner elect a very clever monkey or a talented parrot or an adorable little doggie as president. ABC may think that it’s doing us a big favor by bringing such a fantasy to the small screen, but really, they’re just manipulating and tormenting us, like tossing back four or five icy cold beers in front of your alcoholic friend who’s only on Step 2.

And even if, through some crazy twist of fate like the one depicted on the show (Geena Davis’ character is the independent vice president to a Republican president who dies), a woman were president, all anyone would talk about would be her great big juicy red lips anyway. After the polls showed that most people didn’t approve of her red lips, the lady president would start wearing more muted shades, and eventually she would have to spend all her time baking cookies so as not to make the thin-lipped cookie-bakers out there feel insecure.

Plus, if Mrs. President were calm yet firm, striding around the White House issuing orders — like Geena Davis does on “Commander in Chief” — without forever second-guessing herself, news would leak out that she was arrogant and bossy and difficult. And if she dared to ask her advisors for guidance on anything, word would get out that she was wishy-washy and flinchy and too weak on foreign policy — you know, just like President Carter, except without the nards.

In fact, without the reassurance of external genitalia, the American people would inevitably voice their concerns about the safety and stability and continuing dominance of America on the global stage. Reporters would start to speculate that the economy might falter with the entire nation facing such a crisis of confidence — and then the economy would falter, and everyone would finally have a chance to blame a woman for everything from rising gas prices to the failure of Social Security. Sure, most of us kind of blame Angelina Jolie for this stuff already, but blaming a president with huge lips would be even better.

Now, sure, it’s easy to forget these inevitabilities when you’re watching those inspired scenes where Geena Davis says, in her garbled yet affecting way, that, since she’s about as electable as a plate of refried beans, she’s going to toss politics out the window and do whatever’s right for the American people. Mmm. Imagine! But obviously, even that would never work, since without politics you’d never have the finesse to get key power players in the House and Senate on your side. We’ve watched “The West Wing,” we know how this stuff works. But that doesn’t stop the swelling strings and the big brown eyes of Mrs. President from making us hope beyond hope that maybe, someday…

See? See how you get pulled into the fantasy? Damn you, ABC!

Thankfully, there are also lots of scary scenes where the majority leader, played by a glowering, demonic Donald Sutherland, refers to the president of the United States as “the girl.” Hell, it even bothered me when Davis’ husband tucked her into bed and called her “kiddo.” “Kiddo?” I wanted her to say, incredulously. “I’m the goddamn leader of the free world, you wuss! I know you feel all flaccid and nard-less from having to pick out china patterns, but save the condescending tone for the White House staff, will ya?”

Look, even though “Commander in Chief” really belongs on the Sci-Fi channel, I have to admit that I love it. And even though the ratings nerds are quick to point out that the show’s incredible numbers consist mostly of women over 50 (see also the Least Desirable Demographic in the Universe), the ratings nerds can kiss my ass. If the world weren’t so completely ruled by the Demographically Desirable, Paris Hilton would be just another aimless, wayward whore and Mary Kate and Ashley could trot their assless frames all over New York without anyone but a couple of pedophiles taking notice.

Mothers against drunk dialing
If developmentally challenged teenagers didn’t control the airwaves, then no one would care about “celebreality” shows like “My Fair Brady,” either. Then again, it’s unclear why even dimwitted teens would watch this show.

OK, I can tell by that look on your face that you have no idea what I’m talking about. VH1′s “My Fair Brady” (repeats constantly, check listings) is a show about — are you sitting down? — Adrianne Curry, the first winner of “America’s Next Top Model,” and Chris Knight, the 40-something actor who played Peter Brady on “The Brady Bunch” when he was a little kid. Adrianne, 22, met Chris, 47, on “The Surreal Life,” the show that throws a bunch of D-list celebrities, preferably with major personality disorders, into a house together to see if someone will get killed. Instead of murdering each other, Adrianne and Chris fell in love, and for committing this crime against nature they’ve been rewarded with their very own show.

Let’s review: Adrianne is a model who mostly seems to pose for obscure soft porn rags, the lesser lights of the Maxim universe. Chris is a child actor, all grown up. I’m not sure if he has a job. Does he? There’s no reason we should be interested in these two.

And yet … Adrianne was pretty damn entertaining on ANTM, and after “The Surreal Life,” and now “My Fair Brady,” it’s becoming clear that her talent as a reality star far outshines all of her other talents, including the very marketable talent she has for greasing up her body and then bending over in front of a camera. Like all successful reality stars, she does an incredible job of alternately playing to the camera and dragging out her most honest emotions with seemingly no self-consciousness or worries about the fact that the camera is rolling.

On last week’s show, for example, Adrianne goes out and gets drunk with her girlfriend, then comes home and calls Chris, who’s out of town. The first thing he says is “I miss the hell out of you,” but she quickly and breathtakingly swerves into dangerous territory, urging him, with a slur, to commit to her once and for all: “I miss you too, and you know what, though? I know what I deserve in my life. I deserve to be given as much as I’m willing to give and as much as I have to give, and I’m giving you my soul and my heart and I have for a while, and I feel like you’ve just clammed up on me completely.”

For all of “My Fair Brady’s” flaws, you really have to applaud VH1 for bringing to light the very real dangers of drunk dialing. Every year, millions of blossoming relationships are snuffed out by drunk dialers, and maybe VH1′s shocking footage will be a wake-up call to those young people who have yet to learn this very important lesson: Don’t dial drunk, kids. Take it from me, a former drunk dialer: Slurring incoherently about commitment is the fast track to loneliness.

Feeling alienated?
Or, don’t listen to me. Stay in a drunken fantasy world where all it takes to get your guy to commit is for you to imbibe half a dozen tequila shots and then mumble a few stern words over the phone. Go ahead. Loll about in your little dream world, where men are highly suggestible when it comes to marriage and women are highly electable when it comes to the presidency. While you’re at it, go ahead and imagine that our best hope against a worst-case scenario, from terrorism to an alien invasion, is Carla Gugino, a little doll-eyed federal expert who’s lonely enough that she obviously spent the better part of her youth drunk-dialing every Tom, Dick and Harry in sight.

Still, just as Gugino was excellent as the ill-fated “Karen Sisco,” she’s sharp and engaging as the lead character on CBS’s “Threshold” (Fridays at 9 p.m. on CBS), the best by far of the “Lost”-alike fear-mongering shows so popular this fall. The show’s ratings are pretty good but could be better, and naturally I blame you, chickens. Have you been doing your duty and watching? Then why hasn’t anyone written to me about this show yet, huh? Huh? Haven’t I harangued you enough to program this one into your stupid TiVos? Why are you looking at my lips? Damn it, are you even listening to what I’m saying?

Like Davis playing president to a White House filled with resentful back-slapping old boys, Gugino’s Dr. Molly Anne Caffrey is up against so many forces beyond her control, she and that little doggie of hers probably have to do deep breathing exercises every night just to get a few solid hours of shut-eye. And even when they do sleep, the threat of dreaming about that demonic ice garden probably keeps them so tied in knots that they can hardly be expected to save the world.

And yet, we expect that and more from them, maybe because Gugino, like Davis, is very believable as someone who has no trouble thinking and acting under intense pressure. This is what I love about both shows, actually: They feature women leads who aren’t necessarily portrayed as being all that tough or brazen or over-the-top, but who gracefully and diplomatically move through extremely difficult circumstances without stumbling or missing a beat or showing too much swagger or relying on their feminine wiles, “Charlie’s Angels”-style. Both are feminine, but the writers neither play up their doubts nor treat them as bulletproof, larger-than-life heroines.

I really do think we’ve entered a new era of character development on TV, one clearly influenced by Bochco’s ambivalent cops and Sorkin’s ambivalent leaders and Crichton’s ambivalent doctors, in which characters can thwart our expectations of them without being one-trick ponies. Instead of choosing between courageous or fearful, good or evil, we get lots of shades of gray, fearful moments followed by moments of courage, self-assured decisions followed by a brief glimpse of regret.

Granted, they throw old Carla into a silky slip a little more often than is necessary, but for the most part, her character is handling the pressures of the job admirably. “Threshold” works because those pressures are so beyond the pale: they know they’re dealing with an alien force but have no idea how to even begin to tackle it, or what it wants, or where it ends and they begin (Hello, metaphor for terrorism!). “You’re one of us,” the creepy guy infected by the aliens keeps saying to Caffrey, but she has no idea what he means, beyond the fact that her nightmares mean something, or might suggest that she’s been infected, too. Unlike “Lost,” “Threshold” offers some new information about what’s going on during each episode, so that the mystery feels like it’s unfolding at a reasonably satisfying pace. And even though that underground computer on “Lost” might just end up being some kind of a world-ending device and not just the outdated experiment in obedience that Charlie thinks it is, the stakes on “Threshold” couldn’t be higher if you threw in a sick child riding an atom bomb aimed at the White House. Plus, above and beyond every other plot point, the show sets its sights on creepy. Where “24″ focuses on creating suspense, “Threshold’s” specialty is creepiness, and it does creepy better than any other show on TV.

Unless, of course, you’re the kind of person who’s more creeped out by a female president than anything else, in which case “Commander in Chief” is your own private worst-case scenario. P.S., suck me.

In summary
Awareness-raising, that’s what this TV season is all about! Whether it’s MTV showing us the trials and tribulations of challenged teens or CBS demonstrating just how helpless and alone we’ll feel if a worst-case scenario were to occur, the fall season wants us to be more aware of the desperately shitty circumstances of modern existence. Even ABC’s hopeful lady-president show is just a thinly veiled excuse to demonstrate exactly how backward-ass and sexist and sad even our finest governing bodies remain — and that’s not to mention what the first gentleman’s insistence on calling the president “kiddo” says about the infantilized rituals that infect the institution of marriage. Yes, all of the things that we hold dear are threatened, from our government to our marriages to our precious nards to our very ability to remain safe and dry and, most important, rich. Instead of staying blissfully ignorant like we did back in the ’80s, thanks to today’s televised entertainments, we can all be painfully aware of how tenuous and fragile our hold on happiness is — or how fragile it would be, if we were even happy, which of course we aren’t. Hurray!

Next week: Will that 6-year-old kid on “The Amazing Race” let her whole family down, and then, filled with guilt and anguish, turn to a life of drugs and crime? Let’s just hope there’s a VH1 show about it if she does.

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Heather Havrilesky is Salon's TV critic and author of the rabbit blog. Her memoir, "Disaster Preparedness," published in 2010.

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