Thursday, October 14, 2010

Brittany, Brittany, Brittany....

If you are a Glee fan (AKA GLEEK), chances are, you saw the last episode "Duets", aired this past week. As usual, it was hilarious.  My friends and I howled and hooted at our weekly Gleek party as has become our custom.  You may or may not have heard about the part of the episode where Britney and Santana, two of the "Cheerios" (cheerleaders on Glee) are lying on Britney's bed and Santana is kissing her neck; slated by some as "Rated X".  Where I would hardly call it "Rated X", there were some parts of the whole show that made me kind of sad and quite pensive.  My main bone of contention is the whole attitude of the Britney character about other people.  It seems as if her goal is to "do" every one in the school including girls and every boy in the school.  It made me sad how empty that way of thinking is.  Not a care of how the other person may feel or how that after "doing" everyone, she obviously is not satisfied.  She seemed so lost and it was sad to think of how many other girls are doing the same, except for possibly, another reason; looking for love.  The complete disregard for the love of self in the act of "putting out" is troubling since there are surely young girls out there who might look up to her and follow in her footsteps. Not knowing that self sacrifice is a gift in and of itself that is the essence of true love; the place where you find that the love you put out and give to others is one of the best ways to receive it.

It was really great to see Artie throw a proverbial Slushie in Britney's face when he confronted her about how cavalier she was about taking his virginity away and how he knew that she was using him for his voice (Oddly enough, ratted out by her "best friend" Santana, who used Britney for a warm body while her own boyfriend was in jail)
 It is that part of the show, where there is little care for the sanctity of life is one part I do not care for at all. That is the part of the show that echoes where a lot of society seems to be carrying on these days; doing whatever feels good at the time, and not giving enough credence to the sanctity of life, of other people, and what is best for all.  I can site many, many cases as examples, but I will spare you of it all. Just turn on the news and you will see plenty of it.

My hope is that they develop the character to truly realize that she is sacred and worth loving; that she is special and the gift of herself not to be given away like some cheap prize, but to honored as a precious jewel of this world.

Loudly yours,
Alicia

2 comments:

  1. Sadly Alicia, there are way too many kids out there watching that show who have no one like yourself to influence them, they have not heard what you just shared ( It made me sad how empty that way of thinking is. Not a care of how the other person may feel or how that after "doing" everyone, she obviously is not satisfied. She seemed so lost and it was sad to think of how many other girls are doing the same, except for possibly, another reason; looking for love. The complete disregard for the love of self in the act of "putting out" is troubling since there are surely young girls out there who might look up to her and follow in her footsteps) and there lies the problem with this show. The world (although not all of it) thinks this show is hilarious, great and wittty, but it lacks any moral guidance, and kids who are out there, w/o any guidance are the ones who will eventually suffer from it. Not a fan! Love you not the show!

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  2. Love you, too! I really love the musical side of it and focus more on the talent, but I could not stay quiet about it. :0)

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