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Diary of a Weeds virgin – What? The suburbs aren’t perfect?

I understand that it's well-written and well-acted. It has Jeffrey Dean Morgan playing a dead dude (who isn't having gh0st sex with his very alive ex-fiancee!) and Mary-Louise Parker. What more can you ask for? Well, yes. All of that sounds good on paper, but I have one major problem with the show: I find potheads really annoying.

weeds_s1_ep1

(Season 1, Episodes 1-5)

Here’s the thing about Weeds: I’ve had no interest. It was easy enough to avoid it when it premiered, since people weren’t yet taking Showtime’s original programming seriously and I couldn’t even afford Showtime in the first place. As time has gone on and awards have been won, I’ve had more and more friends tell me that I have to watch it. I have Netflix, so I’ve been able to watch it for quite a while; I’ve just chosen not to.

I understand that it’s well-written and well-acted. It has Jeffrey Dean Morgan playing a dead dude (who isn’t having gh0st sex with his very alive ex-fiancee!) and Mary-Louise Parker. What more can you ask for? Well, yes. All of that sounds good on paper, but I have one major problem with the show: I find potheads really annoying.

I don’t think marijuana is bad, evil, or particularly harmful. It’s just a general irritation I have with the entire pot subculture that keeps me away from shows like Weeds. So, how, after being on the air for so long did they finally get me? The answer is two-pronged: Working from home and Netflix Watch Instantly. So I’ve watched the first half of season one, and I’ve collected my general impressions of the series so far:

Despite the fact that there is a lot of pot onscreen at all times, there’s very little screentime devoted to folks getting high. In fact, so far it’s mainly Nancy’s slacker brother-in-law, Andy, whose doing the majority of the smoking … while inappropriately IMing 15-year-old girls.

Weeds isn’t so much about marijuana itself as it is about what an upper-middle class woman will do to keep her station in life. To me, that’s much more appealing than a show that’s simply about selling pot. I find it interesting that when faced with the financial burden of her husband’s death, Nancy would rather sell drugs than get rid of her live-in housekeeper.

While the cast is especially strong, it’s nice to see a show with so many individually interesting characters. They are so well-written that even though Weeds centers around Nancy, I could see almost any character having a different series that centers ar0und him or her. I even find the children interesting, which doesn’t happen too often on a show like this.

I was worried about Elizabeth Perkins’ character, Celia. She was just one-dimensionally awful and bitchy in the pilot that I did not want to see any more of her. However, her reaction to both her husband’s adultery and her breast cancer have shown different and much more entertaining sides to her. In the last episode I watched, she tells Shane that she’s stopped giving a damn what other people think. She’s already crossed the ladies of the PTA by not making her muffins for the bake sale; I’m looking forward to whatever other dastardly deeds she comes up with. Also, her breast cancer seems like a very natural segue into using medical marijuana and finding out Nancy’s secret.

Nancy’s relationship with Conrad is really entertaining. I enjoy their uneasy friendship and tentative flirtation. They aren’t entirely sure what to think of each other, and it makes for a dynamic interaction. It’s not overplayed, it’s just an interesting thingĀ  going on in the background. I’m excited to see where, if anywhere, it leads.

Also, good for Kevin Nealon getting work. Life can be hard for SNL alumni not named Will Ferrell, so it’s nice to see him out there collecting a steady paycheck.

While Weeds exceeded my expectations, it’s not a perfect show. One of my main problems with it is how aggressively edgy the characters are. I know that this show is supposed to show the slightly seedy underbelly of perfect upper-middle class domesticity, but I’m pretty sure that could be accomplished without a school psychologist telling a student that he is “a bitch-ass white boy.” Seriously. No one who works in a school system talks like that to a 10-year-old. I don’t care if they are in California. Nobody on this show treats children as if they are children. If there were a few characters who did this, I could buy it, but every single adult treating every single child like this is not believable to me.

Now that I’m getting ready to watch the last half of the season, I have a few questions going in; mainly I’m hoping to find out more about Nancy’s back story. How did she get started in the pot business? How did she meet Conrad and Heylia? She’s definitely the “cool mom”; was she always that way, or was that something that started to happen after her husband’s death? Speaking of which, why, exactly are they so broke? Did the money really go into their new kitchen, as the PTA ladies said in the pilot?

One last note: That theme song is insane. It’s been stuck in my head for the past few days, but I kind of love it. I’ve read online that a lot of people can’t stand it. What do you think?

Photo Credit: Showtime

9 Responses to “Diary of a Weeds virgin – What? The suburbs aren’t perfect?”

January 9, 2009 at 1:12 PM

It’s really interesting to see how bambi-like we must have all been walking into this show. Get ready for a wild ride!

The theme song is awesome. Look for some cool stuff with it in seasons 2 and 3, and then get ready to hate Showtime for their callousness in season 4.

January 9, 2009 at 4:35 PM

Callousness? The show dynamic changed drastically that the theme song wouldn’t in season 4. Why is that so hard to get? Also, don’t blame Showtime…the creators of the show changed the theme song.

January 14, 2009 at 10:22 AM

I know why they changed it…that doesn’t mean it isn’t a loss. Also, if they had just continued using the song after the show moved from Agrestic, would anyone have revolted?

Ultimately, the onus falls on Showtime. A push from them might have kept the song; maybe from a different angle, but it would have been there if they demanded it. Why would they do that? Because it became very integral, unlike the way they do it now.

January 9, 2009 at 2:04 PM

I don’t recall when exactly in the show (it may have already happened and you missed it) but all of your questions are answered in the show.

And as to your “annoyance” with the pot head culture… perhaps you should just ignore the stereotype of the “typical stoner” and realize that alot more people smoke pot and lead normal productive lives.

January 9, 2009 at 3:12 PM

Hello dear Akbar!

January 9, 2009 at 4:36 PM

hello,

Sorry you have missed me. Im laying low these days and don’t comment much (only when something pushes my buttons)

More than likely I will be involved in BSG stuff once we get it next week.

January 9, 2009 at 10:13 PM

i really love this show i was a virgin of it like a couple weeks ago because of Netflix to Xbox and i heard alot of good stuff about it so i’d thought i’d check it out. The theme song was really annoying like the first two episodes but then i fell in love with it. i think im going to go Dload it now. but i wish they had more than just season 1 and 2 tho cuz i need more.

January 11, 2009 at 11:22 PM

“How did she meet Conrad and Heylia?”

Ummmm….. that would have already been talked about, you must have missed it. And and Conrad were friends and that’s how she got their number. Andy didn’t know it was for pot through. it’s easy to miss, I think it’s in episode 2.

January 11, 2009 at 11:38 PM

That’s what I thought originally, but then Nancy said, “Oh, yeah. I forgot that you know him,” talking about Andy, but that would be a weird thing to say if that’s how she met them in the first place.

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