5 - Friday, October 24, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 5 - Friday, October 24, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom FOCUS "I golta make a call." Thrills over facts in 'Kill the Messenger' ABC "Ive been drinking." The trouble with Olivia and Fitz The confusing polites of ABC's hot * drama, 'Scandal' By CHLOE GILKE Daily TV/New Media Editor "Scandal" is the most confusing show on television. I'm not talking about the constant plot twists, the characters' ever-changing moral standing (White hat's off! White hat's back on!) or even about whatever's going on in the inscrutable mind of Mellie Grant. The most confusing thing about '"Scandal" is how one little musical motif makes me accept (hell, even actively love) an abusive and dangerous relationship. As soon as those first notes of "The Light" by The Album Leaf play, all bets are off for me. I can go from a discerning and classy critic lady to a full-blown Fitz and Olivia shipper in the blink of a teary eye. Something about the minimalist, somber piano and the romantic melody perfectly captures a love that isn't meant to be, the notes *somehow communicating the love between a man who's emotionally unavailable and the woman who didn't mean to fall for him. Every time it plays, the tune brings with it the memory of all the other times it's been played, the cadence of their entire relationship since that time on the campaign bus. It's powerful stuff, the kind that makes you stop thinking about the toxic codependency that serves as the foundation of their love and just revel in the beauty of "one minute" of a 'gorgeous song and a pairing that appears just as gorgeous. But the thing is, Olitz isn't gorgeous. While the first and second seasons built Fitz and Olivia up as some idyllic dream couple, the more recent seasons have been all about breaking the illusion that Olitz is meant to be. Fitz is no longer the sensitive, misguided man we met in the first episode. He's a scotch-guzzling, snarling, volatile man who grabs and pushes and insults the women in his life. While the Fitz of the past maintained some idealism (before he knew his presidency was built on a lie and a rigged election), that innocence is long gone ever since he, you know, smothered an elderly Supreme Court justice to death with a pillow. I do appreciate a good anti- hero, so this moral ambiguity alone isn't a problem. But what is troubling is that Fitz lets this violence bleed into his relationship with Olivia. Fitz makes romantic promises - he vows to move to Vermont and leave Mellie and start a beautiful, low-profile life with Olivia as soon as his term is over - but his kind gestures stop as soon as "The Light" turns off. He's got an ugly sense of possession for Olivia, and hires a professional spy to keep tabs on her while he pouts and pours himself another scotch. He tries to break up every relationship between Olivia and another man, with no concern for whether she's happy or consents to dragged back home by her concerned lover. In the latest episode, "Like Father, Like Daughter," Olitz finally reunites after months apart while she was in hiding with Jake. Their meeting goes exactly how one would expect from Fitz and Olivia. He starts by saying, "I'm the most powerful man in the world," a reminder to Liv (and the audience) that he's a president not to be fucked with. To boot, all the doors in the room are closed, and he's circling around Olivia like a hungry piranha. He eventually goes up to her and grabs her by the ass, pushing his body against hers with zero regard for consent. After a summer's vacation from Olitz, I almost forgot that an integral part of their relationship is based on non- consensual physical contact, but this scene is a great reminder of what we're in for. He augments the implication of physical abuse by saying "Don't ever leave me again," suggesting to Olivia that her purpose is only to serve his wants and needs and to ignore her own personal safety. To say the least, it's not a romantic moment. I feel physically sick watching the scene, but then "Scandal" goes ahead and fucks everything up and turns me into a shameful, Olitz-loving puddle of tears. Yup, "The Light" again. In a sequence that's otherwise chilling in its portrayal of emotional manipulation and dysfunction, one musical piece transforms the whole thing into pure romance. One minute he's unbuttoning her jacket while she looks on helplessly, and the next their bodies are close, the passion no longer one-sided. Olivia is the one true love of Fitz's life, and he's not exaggerating when he says that he'd die if she ever went away from him again. She's the one thing that's keeping him sane in his insane and tragic life. The song brings with it the memory of the "one minute" scene from season one's "The Trail," in which Fitz requests a single untainted minute in which he could enjoy Olivia's company before he had to go back to the White House. In these sixty seconds, he could pretend he wasn't the President and Olivia's apartment was theirs, he could put his arms around her and lean in and dream of a life where they could actually be together. "Scandal" plays a cruel and confusing trick on fans now. "The Light" still plays during every Fitz and Olivia scene, but the nature of their relationship isn't as pure and idyllic as it was for that "one minute." Somehow, their relationship has transitioned to the point where Fitz can grab Liv by the shoulders and push her toward a wall, and "The Light" still soars as a cue for us to see this as another stolen, perfect Olitz moment. It's especially problematic, because as much as I despise Fitz's entitlement and rudeness and abuse, I'm put right into Olivia's shoes, and for one minute he becomes Prince Charming again. Romanticizing abuse is particularly disturbing, but even more so when the audience is duped into their relationship just as much as the victim is. But let me just sit down, listen to "The Light" and stop thinking about all this. Just for one minute. By KARSTEN SMOLINSKI Daily Arts Writer The title "Kill the Messenger" should strike audiences as an inadequate description of the problem facing investigative journalist Gary Webb. Kill the More than just a messenger, Messenger Webb Rave and uncovered and Quality 16 wrote a story Focus about the CIA's protection of known drug traffickers who supplied money for the Nicaraguan Contras. Also, neither the CIA nor the American media killed Webb - they just ruined his life. Jeremy Renner ("The Hurt Locker") delivers a solid performance as Webb, who is reportingfortheSanJoseMercury News when a source leads him to Danilo Bland6n, the Nicaraguan "Santa Claus" of cocaine. Bland6n leads Webb to a Nicaraguan prison where the journalist bribes his way in to see Norwin Meneses, amajor drugtraffickerwho attests to receiving CIA protection in exchange for his contributions to the Contras. Webb concludes that when Congress blocked the direct funding of the Nicaraguan rebels in the 1980s, part of the Reagan administration's secret plan to fund the group included using profits from Nicaraguan cocaine sold in major American cities such as Los Angeles. However, when Webb ignores CIA pressure and publishes his findings with the provocative title "Dark Alliances," many major newspapers seek to discredit him. Webb fails to find a CIA staffer who will talk, one source disappears and another rescinds his statements. Webb and his family grow apart. San Jose Mercury News publishes an apology for the story and Webb has to quit his job after they reassign him to the Cupertino desk, a 150-mile commute meant to keep him out of trouble. The only problem with the film is that the government conspiracy detailed in the first half of the plot description proves more interesting than the media conspiracy in the second. While the price Webb paid for his investigative journalism serves as an integral part of the story, it fails to match up to the, scandal of a vocally anti-drug administration that knowingly allowed the sale of cocaine in the United States. Simply put, the film loses momentum instead of gainingit. While the many scenes of Webb with his wife and children build sympathy for the character, they aren't poignant enough to push 'CIA cocaine scandal' from the viewer's mind. "Kill the Messenger" even throws in a 'basedonatruestory'scenewhere Ray Liotta ("The Place Beyond the Pines") plays an ex-CIA spook who breaks into Webb's apartment to confirm the story off the record. Unfortunately, it just feels forced. While Webb certainly deserves the redemption "Kill the Messenger" provides him, I don't think he deserves the 'based on a true story' character flaws meant to make the film more entertaining. He exposed a true CIAscandal, confirmed in 1998by released CIA documents, and the larger newspapers flogged him for it. Sadly, it may be a little late for redemption: in 2004, Gary Webb was found with two bullet wounds in his head. The coroner's office ruleditasuicide.Despiteexcellent reporting, Webb had never found anotherjob atadailynewspaper. . NBC Bubble wrap is the new black. 'About' an OK show B OUR TWEETS CARE SO GOOD :t Y 4 THEY MAKE * BIRDS JEALOUS! .@MICHIGANDAILY By MATTHEWBARNAUSKAS For The Daily There is a general necessity in many comedies to use the status quo. It's what characters live in and try to restore when mishaps occur, and usually About when the episode ends A Boy the characters Tuesdays, more or less 9:30p.m. return to this NBC default and reset for the next episode. In its Season Two premiere "About a Vasectomy," the Jason Katims ("Friday Night Lights")-created comedy "About a Boy" explores this common exercise of the sitcom and what happens when a character wants to return to the status quo when others have moved on. Opening a few months after where season one left off, "About a Boy" finds protagonist Will Freeman (David Walton, "New Girl") living in New York with his girlfriend Sam (Adrianne Palicki, "Friday Night Lights"). Will still struggles to adjust to life in the city. Director Adam Davidson ("Community") shows his troubles in an opening montage as Will spends his day trying to find the perfect asiago bagel. However, Will's current situation of spending his days doing whatever he wants is interrupted as his only source of income (royalties from a song written 10 years ago) is taken away. To work out this situation, Will goes on a brief visit to his San Francisco home and reunites with his neighbor, Fiona (Minnie Driver, "Good Will Hunting") and her son Marcus (Benjamin Stockham, "1600 Penn"). Will attempts to jump right back into routine, giving Marcus a conventional (albeit older) male friend who lets him do things his mother wouldn't let him. However, the pair seem to have accepted a reality without Will while Will tries to go back to his previous position by extending his visit. Will's need to return to the default is projected onto the two as Will looks for problems to solve and Fiona compares him to an "arsonistfirefighter." Will's discomfort with moving on with his life is a universal issue that people face. Applying that problem to a sitcom - where the return to the norm is almost always embraced - is effective, but there are times when "About a Boy" sells itself short. At points Will is rectified: Marcus's new friends, who he's replaced Will with, are just jerks taking advantage of the well-meaning social outcast and. Fiona still suffers from over attachment to her son. Marcus's awkwardness and Fiona's over-mothering are common plot points from "About a Boy" 's first season. Although it's enjoyable to see Will help out the two again it would have been far more provocative to see more evidence that the mother and son had moved on and Will was in denial. The destruction of the status quo is effectively explored in the short subplot Will shares with his friend Andy (Al Madrigal, "Gary Unmarried"). In the first season, Will convinced Andy to not receive the episode's title. vasectomy. Andy, after taking his friend's advice, has now accidentally impregnated his wife Laurie (Annie Mumolo, "This is 40") with another child without her knowing he did not have the vasectomy.Andy tried tomaintain his old reality but now is faced with a new one. Meanwhile, Will and Andy's struggle to break the news to an unsuspecting Laurie plays likea comedic time bomb. The uncertainty about Will's. income and future areintimidating for the character, and Walton does a strong job of portraying* the character's frustrations in his current situation. Will is a character stuck at a crossroads, and the way "About a Boy" steers him in its second season may lead to an exploration not often seen in the sitcomgenre. t I 4