While Brazil Telenovelas Shrink Families, Jdramas Seek to Expand Them?

These were nothing more than just storilines to me, until I began watching Seinaru Kaibutsutachi, aka. The Holy Monsters. I was struck by the fact that — at least in its first episode — the wealthy family is portrayed by being surrounded by children via their business in the educational system.

A series that has just began airing last month, Seinaru Kaibutsutachi seems like a telenovelaesque game of desire and money, where after a deadly miscarriage Keiko (Ai Kato) loses her uterus. Thus not being able to give life, she asks her sister Yuka (Miki Nakatani) to be a surrogate — which apparently is illegal in Japan. The more you know. (See, you learn something new each day with TV.)

Now, I’m aware that despite the first episode debuting at a healthy 10% rating, the subsequent showings have declined progressively hitting a low 5% on its fourth episode — which makes me really sad for Miki Nakatani because she’s freaking amazing in anything she does.

But the fact remains, is Japanese television trying to tell Japanese women something about having families?

What about other shows in other countries?

Do you think entertainment can influence people’s thinking, *le gasp* You mean PROPAGANDA on the idiot box??? Say it ain’t so~

amy

YAM Magazine editor, photographer, blogger, translator and part-time web designer. Film junkie, music junkie… and lately series (a.k.a. TV) junkie.

9 Responses

  1. Camiele says:

    Of course, television influences society. At least I know here in America, from the commercials to the “reality” television, everything is obviously designated for certain demagraphics of the population. From an early age, even, girls are taught that they’re going to need to take care of children, cook (commercials with baby dolls, Barbies, and makshift kitchens), and do the shopping while the men are going to fix things, get jobs, and provide for the family, and even go to war (Tonka trucks, tools, Nerf guns — sniper rifles to close range weapons).

    As much as we like to preach about progress, a more conservative society sells products like crazy. So we have the commercials and the idiot television shows that everyone is so entranced by. Makes me SICK! HaHa.

    But, it seems like that’s what modern society wants — to go back to the 50s (or whatever equivalent decade/era in another country).

    • amy says:

      @Camiele, I always felt so weird that I never was the kind of girl that liked to play with dolls or wear pink. I used to hate pink, like… with a passion. And I used to give mohawks to the barbies I got as presents, though there weren’t many… my family used to give me loads of fruity balls (you know, the ones that smell like grapes, and stuff) because we had a thorny jujube tree, so I was always in need of fruity balls or footballs.

      One thing is true… telenovelas can fuck you up. Down here, the most common theme in telenovelas are the ones about the girl from the poor family that ends up as a maid in a rich people’s home, and ends up falling in love with the patron or the patron’s son, who also ends up miraculously falling in love with her because the rich women are bitches. LOL

      Social-climb through marriage is something a lot of people grow up dreaming of, I guess. Especially to telenovela viewers.

      • Camiele says:

        @amy, Yeah. It’s a bit disgusting. I never wanted kids nor did I ever want to get married. I don’t know if it was some sort of subconscious rebellion or not, but it never really was something that was very high on my to-do list.

        I was always the perverted kid that had her dolls become… very intimate >.>. Yeah, my parents should’ve known that marriage and kids wasn’t my thing… Ken never came with Barbie, just sayin… HaHa.

        • amy says:

          @Camiele, my cousins and I always used to play “la casita” but we never thought of it as making a family, we build our “houses” with our toys’ chests and bedsheets and we had like a business and jobs hahahaha.

  2. Mirella says:

    TV is trying to tell them that if you can afford them, have as many kids as possible please… WE NEED TEH BABIEZ!!!11!1

    • amy says:

      @Mirella, as long as it’s not “have babies and be rich (or die trying?)” it’s fine. The best way is to prohibit having sex and having babies, lets see how many of them do xD just, you know, for the thrill of it. XD

  3. Camiele says:

    @amy, HaHa. That’s adorable. Yeah, I was all about building forts and pretending I was a secretary. Don’t ask me why that’s something I wanted to do as a kid, I just loved the sound of typewriters and being busy… HaHa. It was never about kids and marriage with me. Give me a job any damn day of the week… HaHA.

  1. February 16, 2012

    […] While Brazil Telenovelas Shrink Families, Jdramas Seek to Expand Them? […]

  2. August 30, 2014

    […] and shotgun weddings, but I still believe they are trying to make people have more babies [1]. I SWEAR. Though having Asahi and Azusa accepting to have their kid (eventually) after many […]

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