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	<title>Observer &#187; Goodbye, Girls</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Goodbye, Girls</title>
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		<title>Goodbye, Girls</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2007/05/goodbye-igirlsi/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 04 May 2007 12:19:34 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2007/05/goodbye-igirlsi/</link>
			<dc:creator>Hillary Frey</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/050307_gilmore_web.jpg?w=300&h=215" />
<div style="margin: 1ex">
<div>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">Internet-trawling fans of the <em> Gilmore Girls</em> received some bittersweet news yesterday afternoon.  After seven seasons, the beloved mother/daughter beyond-bonding dramedy  will be going off the air in just two short weeks. Even those of us  who anticipated the show&#039;s demise were shocked – <em>two weeks?</em>  We&#039;ve loyally followed the misadventures of Lorelai and her daughter  Rory; decoded their banter; chuckled at the spoofy-quaint village of  Stars Hollow; and, along with Lorelai, fell for the town’s diner-owning  grumpypants, Luke… it feels like an awfully sudden breakup. </font>  </p>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">The sorrow only runs so deep.  It&#039;s like being broken up with by someone who suddenly found religion  – or yoga – and switched personalities; you still love them after  seven years, but you&#039;re also kind of relieved that your new incompatibility  has finally been recognized. To say it plain: this season of <em>Gilmore  Girls </em>has been so abysmal, it’s quite possible that enduring another  year would have brought more pain than saying good bye – however hastily  -- now.</font> </p>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">Don&#039;t blame the show’s current  crappiness on Lauren Graham (Lorelai), Alexis Bledel (Rory), Scott Patterson  (Luke) or any of the other many, many fine cast members on <em>Gilmore  Girls.</em> (I join a chorus of voices that have already called for the  Emmys to recognize Kelly Bishop, who brilliantly plays Lorelai’s difficult,  uber-WASP mother, Emily.) No, the problem isn&#039;t the casting or the acting  -- it’s the writing. Last year, the show’s creator and executive  producer Amy Sherman-Palladino and her writing-producing-partner husband  David Palladino left the show after the two couldn&#039;t come to a contract  agreement with the newly formed CW network (which continued the WB show  after the WB merged with UPN to make the CW). This season, in the hands  of showrunner David Rosenthal, <em>Gilmore</em> <em>Girls</em> has become  a Bizarro version of itself. It <em>looks</em> like <em>Gilmore Girls</em>;  it <em>sounds</em> like <em>Gilmore</em> <em>Girls</em>, but it’s no longer  the <em>Gilmore Girls</em> we’ve known, loved, and most important, respected<em>.</em></font>  </p>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">Is that the sound of chuckling?  It&#039;s true: <em>Gilmore Girls</em> was a show to admire. Sure, it scores  high with the teen girls each week, even as it faces off against <em> American Idol</em> in the 8 p.m. Tuesday spot. But it has been a show for  adults too. The screwball dialogue blows past like the roadside scenery  outside a speeding car — <em>Gilmore Girls</em> shooting scripts were  often twenty pages longer than that of the average hour-long drama —  and if you strain to keep up, you will catch a tangle of references,  forget the tweens at home, well over your head: to Robert Benchley,  drunk again at the Algonquin; to the fate of the Romanovs and the seduction  habits of Titian; to <em>The Great Gatsby</em> and <em>The Odd Couple</em>  and <em>Candide</em>. I mean, Chris Eigeman – whose charms no doubt  worked better on now-30 year old fans of Whit Stillman movies than 14  year olds – had a long-running guest arc as Lorelai&#039;s neurotic, hirsute,  workaholic boyfriend. It was a brilliant choice: what other man could  appeal to literate moms, dads and single people all at once? And opposite  Lauren Graham? A dream. She is just one of those actresses that you  want to be friends with, or date, or both.  </font>  </p>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">We’ve followed Lorelai and  Rory as the former has done her best to teach the latter how to be a  single, capable woman in a world populated by jerks. It’s not girls  v. boys on <em>Gilmore Girls</em>, but there’s no question that all  along this has been a television show devoted almost singularly to female  empowerment. Lorelai Gilmore – who became pregnant with Rory (short  for Lorelai, by the way) as a teenager and fled her socially conservative  and disapproving parents’ home – has been nothing if not the best  role model for women of all ages on television. She worked her way up  from cleaning girl at a country inn to owner of her own country inn;  she always had men around, and was an excellent flirt, but was choosy  about love; she didn&#039;t cook – she was too busy being a mom and having  a job and watching old movies. And she never apologized. Not for getting  pregnant; not for running away; not for over-mothering Rory; and not  for being pretty and smart and young. Ms. Sherman-Palladino made her  a strong character who overflowed with love and enthusiasm. We responded  to her in kind.</font> </p>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">Mr. Rosenthal, however, has  seemed to want to punish the Gilmore girls for having too much fun --  and too much independence – over the last six years. Not a single  character has escaped this season without tragedy or curse. After the  collapse of her relationship with Luke, Lorelai made the very <em>unlike</em>  Lorelai decision to marry Rory’s dad, Christopher (David Sutcliffe),  perhaps the least reliable person she&#039;s ever known. The notion that  Lorelai would be swept away by a romantic gesture (Christopher proposed  in Paris after a shaky and swift post-Luke reunion) is totally ludicrous  – this woman never even had a one night stand up to now. (Well, except  with Christopher.) Luke, who having gotten to know the teen daughter  he&#039;s only recently become aware of, became embroiled in a nasty custody  battle – this is a man who didn&#039;t want a lawyer to help him get divorced  a few seasons back. Rory is graduating from Yale (finally!) but has been  dragged down by her boyfriend Logan (Matt Czuchry) who lost all of his  family-bestowed millions on an internet merger deal gone bad…. And  now, at 23, he&#039;s proposing! Mr. Gilmore, Lorelai&#039;s dad, had a heart  attack; Rory&#039;s best friend Lane had sex once – <em>on her honeymoon</em>  –hated it, and got pregnant with – wait for it – twins! </font>  </p>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">Seriously: when all the joy  has been sucked out of a show that has been <em>known</em> for its joy,  we can only be glad that it&#039;s going off the air. Two episodes don&#039;t  leave much time to tie things up – will Lorelai and Luke reconcile?  Will Rory turn down Logan&#039;s proposal? – but perhaps it’s better  this way. Who knows what other damage Mr. Rosenthal could inflict on  these women and their world if he had more time? </font></p>
</p></div>
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		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/050307_gilmore_web.jpg?w=300&h=215" />
<div style="margin: 1ex">
<div>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">Internet-trawling fans of the <em> Gilmore Girls</em> received some bittersweet news yesterday afternoon.  After seven seasons, the beloved mother/daughter beyond-bonding dramedy  will be going off the air in just two short weeks. Even those of us  who anticipated the show&#039;s demise were shocked – <em>two weeks?</em>  We&#039;ve loyally followed the misadventures of Lorelai and her daughter  Rory; decoded their banter; chuckled at the spoofy-quaint village of  Stars Hollow; and, along with Lorelai, fell for the town’s diner-owning  grumpypants, Luke… it feels like an awfully sudden breakup. </font>  </p>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">The sorrow only runs so deep.  It&#039;s like being broken up with by someone who suddenly found religion  – or yoga – and switched personalities; you still love them after  seven years, but you&#039;re also kind of relieved that your new incompatibility  has finally been recognized. To say it plain: this season of <em>Gilmore  Girls </em>has been so abysmal, it’s quite possible that enduring another  year would have brought more pain than saying good bye – however hastily  -- now.</font> </p>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">Don&#039;t blame the show’s current  crappiness on Lauren Graham (Lorelai), Alexis Bledel (Rory), Scott Patterson  (Luke) or any of the other many, many fine cast members on <em>Gilmore  Girls.</em> (I join a chorus of voices that have already called for the  Emmys to recognize Kelly Bishop, who brilliantly plays Lorelai’s difficult,  uber-WASP mother, Emily.) No, the problem isn&#039;t the casting or the acting  -- it’s the writing. Last year, the show’s creator and executive  producer Amy Sherman-Palladino and her writing-producing-partner husband  David Palladino left the show after the two couldn&#039;t come to a contract  agreement with the newly formed CW network (which continued the WB show  after the WB merged with UPN to make the CW). This season, in the hands  of showrunner David Rosenthal, <em>Gilmore</em> <em>Girls</em> has become  a Bizarro version of itself. It <em>looks</em> like <em>Gilmore Girls</em>;  it <em>sounds</em> like <em>Gilmore</em> <em>Girls</em>, but it’s no longer  the <em>Gilmore Girls</em> we’ve known, loved, and most important, respected<em>.</em></font>  </p>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">Is that the sound of chuckling?  It&#039;s true: <em>Gilmore Girls</em> was a show to admire. Sure, it scores  high with the teen girls each week, even as it faces off against <em> American Idol</em> in the 8 p.m. Tuesday spot. But it has been a show for  adults too. The screwball dialogue blows past like the roadside scenery  outside a speeding car — <em>Gilmore Girls</em> shooting scripts were  often twenty pages longer than that of the average hour-long drama —  and if you strain to keep up, you will catch a tangle of references,  forget the tweens at home, well over your head: to Robert Benchley,  drunk again at the Algonquin; to the fate of the Romanovs and the seduction  habits of Titian; to <em>The Great Gatsby</em> and <em>The Odd Couple</em>  and <em>Candide</em>. I mean, Chris Eigeman – whose charms no doubt  worked better on now-30 year old fans of Whit Stillman movies than 14  year olds – had a long-running guest arc as Lorelai&#039;s neurotic, hirsute,  workaholic boyfriend. It was a brilliant choice: what other man could  appeal to literate moms, dads and single people all at once? And opposite  Lauren Graham? A dream. She is just one of those actresses that you  want to be friends with, or date, or both.  </font>  </p>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">We’ve followed Lorelai and  Rory as the former has done her best to teach the latter how to be a  single, capable woman in a world populated by jerks. It’s not girls  v. boys on <em>Gilmore Girls</em>, but there’s no question that all  along this has been a television show devoted almost singularly to female  empowerment. Lorelai Gilmore – who became pregnant with Rory (short  for Lorelai, by the way) as a teenager and fled her socially conservative  and disapproving parents’ home – has been nothing if not the best  role model for women of all ages on television. She worked her way up  from cleaning girl at a country inn to owner of her own country inn;  she always had men around, and was an excellent flirt, but was choosy  about love; she didn&#039;t cook – she was too busy being a mom and having  a job and watching old movies. And she never apologized. Not for getting  pregnant; not for running away; not for over-mothering Rory; and not  for being pretty and smart and young. Ms. Sherman-Palladino made her  a strong character who overflowed with love and enthusiasm. We responded  to her in kind.</font> </p>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">Mr. Rosenthal, however, has  seemed to want to punish the Gilmore girls for having too much fun --  and too much independence – over the last six years. Not a single  character has escaped this season without tragedy or curse. After the  collapse of her relationship with Luke, Lorelai made the very <em>unlike</em>  Lorelai decision to marry Rory’s dad, Christopher (David Sutcliffe),  perhaps the least reliable person she&#039;s ever known. The notion that  Lorelai would be swept away by a romantic gesture (Christopher proposed  in Paris after a shaky and swift post-Luke reunion) is totally ludicrous  – this woman never even had a one night stand up to now. (Well, except  with Christopher.) Luke, who having gotten to know the teen daughter  he&#039;s only recently become aware of, became embroiled in a nasty custody  battle – this is a man who didn&#039;t want a lawyer to help him get divorced  a few seasons back. Rory is graduating from Yale (finally!) but has been  dragged down by her boyfriend Logan (Matt Czuchry) who lost all of his  family-bestowed millions on an internet merger deal gone bad…. And  now, at 23, he&#039;s proposing! Mr. Gilmore, Lorelai&#039;s dad, had a heart  attack; Rory&#039;s best friend Lane had sex once – <em>on her honeymoon</em>  –hated it, and got pregnant with – wait for it – twins! </font>  </p>
<p><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">Seriously: when all the joy  has been sucked out of a show that has been <em>known</em> for its joy,  we can only be glad that it&#039;s going off the air. Two episodes don&#039;t  leave much time to tie things up – will Lorelai and Luke reconcile?  Will Rory turn down Logan&#039;s proposal? – but perhaps it’s better  this way. Who knows what other damage Mr. Rosenthal could inflict on  these women and their world if he had more time? </font></p>
</p></div>
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