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Julia Moulden

Julia Moulden

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Is Good TV an Oxymoron?

Posted: 04/ 9/11 05:21 PM ET

I want to reclaim the television, to take it back from the pedants, the posers and the perverts. Much of what appears on the box these days is junk food for the mind and body. And it's not just clogging our arteries; it's killing our souls -- and our culture.

TV is ripe for change.

I want to see good television. Programs I would happily sit and watch with family and friends. TV that would make me feel better about myself -- and our world.

I want to see shows like "Roads Less Traveled," in which host Natalie Kantor sets out to discover unconventional lifestyles around the world and the people who live them. "I'm leaving my old life behind," she says, "in the hopes of answering for myself the question we pose in this series, 'What is absolutely essential to live a happy, healthy and fulfilling life?'"

The series features eco-warriors, such as urban farmers and others whose every action and decision is weighed for its impact on the environment. People like David Masters, who gave up a lucrative career in finance to live in a yurt and launch an adventure tour company and a school for sustainable living.

And digital nomads, people who've found ways to work digitally from anywhere. Like Maneesh Sethi, who travels the world while running a business from his laptop. "Everything he owns fits into one knapsack," Jan Keck, the show's cinematographer and co-director (and unofficial series butt-kicker), told me.

Kantor, who is also the creator, producer and director of the series, says this is just the beginning, that her team hopes to draw this growing international community together, and that she realizes that the best way to do that is online. I asked Kantor and Keck how they find people to feature. "Every time we tell people about 'Roads Less Traveled,' they have a story about someone they know who's doing something amazing. So, the stories are finding us."

Connect with "Roads Less Traveled" through their site and on Facebook -- and if you feel inspired, you might like to pitch in. They're raising funds to complete the pilot episode through the fabulous IndieGoGo, a site that helps people fund their ideas.

Looking for other examples of thinking outside the box on the box?

"HIGHRISE/Out My Window"

So much of the great content is appearing online instead of on TV, like this brilliant series from the National Film Board of Canada. "HIGHRISE/Out My Window" just won an International Digital Emmy Award. Directed by filmmaker and digital media creator Katerina Cizek and produced by Gerry Flahive, "Out My Window" combines interactive 360-degree photography, video, text and music in 49 vignettes, chronicling life inside the most common urban structure of our age: the high-rise apartment block in 13 cities around the world.

"Orgasm Inc."

Here's one that's being released theatrically, and which I sure would like to see on TV. Liz Canner takes a job editing erotic videos for a drug trial for a pharmaceutical company. Her employer is developing what they hope will be the first Viagra-like drug for women. Liz gains permission to film the company for her own documentary. Initially, she plans to create a movie about science and pleasure, but she soon begins to suspect that her employer, along with a cadre of other medical companies, might be trying to take advantage of women (and potentially endanger their health) in pursuit of billion-dollar profits. "Orgasm Inc." is powerful -- and hilarious.

"Love Hate Love"

We meet three families who faced the unthinkable and choose love. Their lives are torn apart by three separate acts of terrorism: the attacks on the World Trade Center, the London bus bombing and the Sari Club bombing in Bali. In "Love Hate Love," we're with them as they struggle to pick up the pieces, build legacies of loved ones lost, and make sure love triumphs over hatred. Sean Penn is executive producer, and Dana Nachman and Don Hardy direct. We need to see this kind of thing, which leads to social action, on TV!

"Chasing the Royals"

Obsessed with all things royal as the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton nears? A new documentary takes an uncompromising look at the love-hate relationship between the media and the monarchy. "Chasing the Royals: The Media and the Monarchy" aired on CBC Television's Doc Zone in March. "Chasing the Royals," which was written, directed, edited and produced by Gemini Award-wining filmmaker and journalist John Curtin, chronicles the frenzied, comical and often nasty relationship between the royals and the "rat pack" chasing them.

Let's talk TV. Have you found good (or "good") TV? And do you want to see more? What kinds of programs would make you feel great about our world -- and yourself? Please share what's out there!

The "Ripe" countdown has begun! My new book will be launched next Saturday. Watch for the first column about "Ripe: Rich, Rewarding Work After 50" -- a 12-week course on discovering passion, purpose and possibility at midlife.

 

Follow Julia Moulden on Twitter: www.twitter.com/juliamoulden

 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John Genryu
Zen Buddhist priest/IT Consultant
04:29 PM on 05/06/2011
Get rid of the incessant commercials. There is simply no need for them to be so frequent and for so long. Other countries don't do this and it makes their TV so much more watchable.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
manface
prefers beer parties to tea parties
05:29 PM on 05/01/2011
As a sci-fi fan, I find great shows often, only to have them cancelled after I become emotionally invested, I am giving up on network tv
01:40 PM on 04/10/2011
I agree whole-heartedly with the premise of your article, but I am surprised to see that most of the examples you chose of good television are reality shows. I have never watched any of the shows you list, so I may end up agreeing with you - I'll check them out. However, scripted television has come a long way in recent years. The Walking Dead is one recent example of a really amazing drama. And How I Met Your Mother is a sitcom with real heart that make people think with its only little built-in mystery (who is the mother)? There is much to choose from out there -- lots of junk but many gems as well.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steelsil
Alan Grayson for President!
08:47 PM on 04/09/2011
If you get PBS, MSNBC, and Comedy Central, you get good television.
sampson2
Gardener
09:50 PM on 04/09/2011
You're right but 3 good channels out of a total of hundreds still leaves "good TV" as an oxymoron.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Julia Moulden
Author, speaker, columnist
06:52 AM on 04/10/2011
LOL! You're quick.
01:11 PM on 04/26/2011
And I wouldn't give you a penny for Comedy central I think most of their stuff is crap, but PBS, Discovery AMC and even USA network have some decent fare, some even very high quality. Also SyFy, if you like it
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Julia Moulden
Author, speaker, columnist
06:53 AM on 04/10/2011
I hear you. It's not that there's NOTHING out there. But why is so much of it bad? And why isn't there more good? Everyone I know wants it... Who, exactly, is watching the dreck? And if they knew about better fare, wouldn't they want it??
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BlackJAC
It's better to be a black king than a white knight
05:54 PM on 04/09/2011
Can any of your ideas be sustained for the minimum standard order of 13 episodes?  Further, can you wring at least 65 episodes out of those ideas?
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Julia Moulden
Author, speaker, columnist
06:52 AM on 04/10/2011
Hmm, this is a good question. I'll bet that you could make any of these into an entire season-long series. Why do series have to go on for years? Maybe we need to crack some new models where you can introduce fresh ideas each week within a container of sorts, an umbrella idea. Tell me more, BlackJAC!
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BlackJAC
It's better to be a black king than a white knight
01:15 PM on 04/10/2011
Anthology series have been done before.  Nobody really goes for them now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lthrnck68
Reading IS
04:13 PM on 04/09/2011
Maybe there are a few shows that would fall under the catagory of good TV. However, none of them are reality shows.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Julia Moulden
Author, speaker, columnist
06:48 AM on 04/10/2011
Oh, that's interesting. Would it be possible to do a reality show that IS good? Hmm, food for thought! Thanks, lthrnck68...
01:07 PM on 04/26/2011
I disagree. "Deadliest Catch" on Discovery is an excellent show.
02:02 PM on 04/09/2011
Thank god someone's finally talking about the rubbish on North American TV. I don't watch it, because it's so boring, and stupid and I don't like being SHOUTED at.

I hope the TV execs are reading this. Perhaps they forgot about folks like us who would appreciate watching shows on TV that stimulate thought, and as Julia said, "make us feel better about ourselves -- and our world."

Did you know that the Republicans are trying to cut the funding to PBS, which provides the only decent TV as far as I'm concerned? My spouse and I are thinking of canceling our cable TV and putting the money we saved into a travel fund.

Paris here we come...
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Julia Moulden
Author, speaker, columnist
04:09 PM on 04/09/2011
Oooh, I love that idea! Paris in the springtime! Thanks, dearrosie. We need to vote with our wallets, eh? Good TV is possible. Just gotta keep saying it, asking for it and (like the people in this post) making it!
sampson2
Gardener
09:52 PM on 04/09/2011
Great idea!! And you will learn a lot and enjoy it more from your travels. BON VOYAGE!
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
01:16 PM on 04/09/2011
"Is Good TV an Oxymoron?"

For the most part, yes.

I got rid of my TV when raising my niece; she was so absorbed in it that I had to literally get it out of the house to get her to stop. ...And the TV never came back. And in the mean time, my life has grown tremendously - my accomplishments, experiences, etc, etc, etc, have all blossomed. There is NO WAY I will let myself become a TV adict again - darned near all of it is mind-numbing.

Good on you, Julia, if you can help bring something of value to the wasteland that is modern broadcast television (including cable / satellite).
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Julia Moulden
Author, speaker, columnist
01:54 PM on 04/09/2011
Thanks, RTIII -- you know, the more we bang the drum about this, the more likely we are to get people's attention. I deep sixed my TV years ago, too. Let's make it good (again)!!
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
03:02 PM on 04/09/2011
(I'd settle for merely "better" - not that I'm watching anyway. ...We need to _educate_ our people. -heavy-sigh- )
12:34 PM on 04/09/2011
I don't know what some TV executives are thinking. To many of them, "cheap" is a synonym for "good". A show like "Jersey Shore" is far easier to produce than "Law & Order", but the latter program was, I argue, of a higher quality than the former. The "Shore" denizens, a/k/a Snooki & Co., give us ad-hoc seminars of sorts in boorish behavior, how to get drunk for fun(not for profit), and the proper way to start a barfight. The "Real Housewives" of (fill in the blank)live the life of Riley(most of the time, except for the ones who have gone broke)if they don't catfight constantly. Even talk shows are cheaper--not necessarily better--than soap operas, but that's what we get, whether network, cable or syndicated. This is not to say all of them are bad. I only had to view a couple of minutes of CBS' "The Talk" before I discovered this is not how I wanted to spend an hour(watching a blatant ripoff of ABC's "The View"). When I was very young(younger than commercial TV, which came into being in 1946; I was born in 1951), the medium was still largely experimental, and directors, producers and people like the late, great Ernie Kovacs, discovered the range of possibilities. I think it was a far better time than what we have now.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Julia Moulden
Author, speaker, columnist
01:52 PM on 04/09/2011
I am SOOOOO with you. And I predict a come-back for good TV. Hollywood (etc.) is beginning to get that there's an audience for something other than trash. Thanks for this, JeffPoster!
08:42 PM on 04/29/2011
Just to let you know, I have been watching TV since I was 18 months old(that was in about 1953), when my crib was in line with the door to the living room, where the set was located. My mother once told me she thought I learned how to communicate effectively with people by watching early favorites like John Daly, Art Linkletter, Garry Moore, Bud Collyer, Dave Garroway, and the like. I'm glad I'm not alone in my view of the medium. Thank you, Ms. Moulden.