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Even more random episode pairage




At a very straightforward level Doublemeat Palace is about getting a job in a big corporation. Power Play is the culmination of a season long arc about going to work for the Man. Buffy applies to the McPalace to get money and be seen as a responsible parent figure for Dawn. Angel signs up with W&H to buy a new life for his son. On her first day Buffy optimistically opines that Manny can “bite her”. Angel gives the troops a rousing speech about how they can make a difference. Soon both are overwhelmed by the pervading sense of hopelessness engendered by their very different corporate environments.

The Scoobies turn up at the DMP, take advantage of the resources (Xander gets a free burger) and leave. Andrew, acting as Giles et al.’s representative, arrives at W&H, takes advantage of their resources and leaves (with Dana). Buffy gets a sign, a disembodied finger, that she believes is a clue to the true nature of the Palace. Angel, or so we learn in Power Play, receives a vision from a briefly embodied Cordelia that forms the basis for a plan of attack.

So far, so superficially similar. But the interesting part is really in the differences. Because in Power Play we learn that all the evil in the world is controlled by a secret cabal of demons and that by joining with the Man you can uncover his covert identity. While in Doublemeat Palace the great corporate conspiracy turns out to be vegetables and the all-consuming source of paralyzing evil turns out to be the customer. To be us.

Date: 2005-03-23 05:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aycheb.livejournal.com
Late is still good.

It’s interesting how much more complaining there was about Buffy McJobbing than Xander. Well I think there was, I wasn’t really online during S4. The joy of data free conclusions.

Still is it worse for Buffy to get a crap job because she’s the hero? Because it looks more like she might be stuck in it? Or because she’s clearly middle class and Xander isn’t? (I don’t really have a good handle on the American class system.) Do the complaints about the episode reveal a degree of subliminal contempt for people who don’t make it out of fast food employment?

And here we have yet another example of how Jane E is a great woman of our times. Because, although Manny and the lifers are caricatures, she ends the episode presenting Buffy’s new boss as an eminently well-adjusted person who is sanely proud of having risen through the ranks. A working class hero on prime time TV.

Date: 2005-03-23 10:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mediumdave.livejournal.com
...Buffy’s new boss as an eminently well-adjusted person...

And of course, Buffy's new boss is a woman. It's anti-male bias, waaaaaah!

(Sorry, I have Warren Farrell moments now and then.) Anyway, I agree that there was much more complaining about Buffy taking a lousy job.

(Work calls!)

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hazelk

May 2012

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