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“Designated Survivor” – A great educational tv political action conspiracy thriller

Summary: The TV show Designated Survivor has all the elements of great TV — good acting and writing, skilled cinematography — and something powerful but rare. It shows us something about ourselves, about modern America.

This is a powerful TV show. Dramatic, with episodes often ending on powerful cliff-hangers. Excellent acting, with Kiefer Sutherland as a Secretary of HUD becoming a President-by-accident (all the important people dying in a terrorist attack. The attack was by a vast shadowy conspiracy.

The key to enjoying the show is to ignore the plots of individual episodes, which often make no sense. None at all. Focus instead on how the writers appeal to many common beliefs about America and the world — so many of which are false. This could be used as an educational film on PBS — both more fun and more educational than most of the shows on PBS. We see in Designated Survivor the standard tropes of American fiction…

Plus we get the usual tactical advice from Hollywood writers. Suicidal advice.

Italia Ricci as White House Chief of Staff Emily Rhodes.

The government is big

Many Americans have little feel for the size of the US government. In Designated Survivor the President gets involved in small issues, that would be handled by managers five or more levels below the President. It is a commonplace perception. In shows such as Blue Bloods and NCIS, the leaders of large government agencies get involved in individual cases and the personal details of its employees’ lives, as if the many levels of their hierarchies did not exist.

Unfortunately, this is sometimes so, even in real life. Conservatives often speak of Benghazi as if it had to be run by President Obama — from his master control room in the White House basement, with giant screens showing every detail of events.

When the government’s performance does not meet our expectations — such as FEMA failing to provide first responder aid to New Orleans after Katrina hit in 2005 (that’s the job of local agencies, not FEMA) — many people blamed President Bush for his personal failure to rescue New Orleans.

The government is powerful

In Designated Survivor the President has remarkably little power. People can defy him with impunity. He has few levers to punish, persuade, or reward people. In the real America the president has a vast array of tools, appropriate to the guy running a multi-trillion dollar organization.

In a typical scene in Designated Survivor, for example,  the governor of Michigan uses the police to persecute Muslims. He ignores the President, who can do nothing to stop him. They discuss sending in the military as if that was a nuclear option. In fact, Presidents have ordered that several times since WWII to override upstart governors.

Centripetal forces have always been strong in America, and powerful Presidential responses are a tradition. During the Nullification Crisis of 1832-37, President Jackson gave a clear policy statement to the rebels of South Carolina.

“Please give my compliments to my friends in your State and say to them, that if a single drop of blood shall be shed there in opposition to the laws of the United States, I will hang the first man I can lay my hand on engaged in such treasonable conduct, upon the first tree I can reach.”

In Designated Survivor the Republic is under attack from a powerful secret conspiracy whose first strike destroyed the senior levels of all three branches. So the President assigns a single FBI agent to the investigation, who recruits a Scooby Do gang to help — consisting of a computer expert and a disgraced FBI agent. Perhaps the NSA, FBI, and the dozens of other Federal law enforcement agencies were busy.

This makes sense to fearful Americans who see themselves at risk in a dangerous world, defended by an incompetent government — the story told to us daily by click-hungry journalists and rabble-rousing politicians. It is an entirely false picture of the nation, but too deeply entrenched in people’s minds for remedy.

Spoiler (to anyone who has not watch US network TV for 20 years)

The white hats are mostly women and people of color, led by (ratings!) a strong white male lead. The bad guys are right wing extremists, mostly white and mostly male.  Led by a white male from the military and corporate realms. Anyone who did not correctly predict this — seeing through the feints in the first few episodes — needs some self-examination.

Available at Amazon.

Conclusions

We are trapped by our own memes, in a house of mirrors that we created. Entertainment media write powerful stories that appeal to our fears and beliefs (however bogus) that magnify them. Activists and politicians, left and right, hype these fears, using the media to magnify their voices. Our fears raw and intense, become fodder for the entertainment media to play upon them again.

Along the way we lose sight of reality, clutching just our fears and political biases. This is mirrored in our fiction, which becomes ungrounded. Star Wars (the original one) is space opera — but Designated Survivor makes it look like Shakespeare’s Henry V.

The result are weak Americans, easily manipulated, incapable of self-organization, unable to stand together against the dangers, foreign and domestic, that threaten America. More than a turn to Left or Right, we need a reality-based community. People committed to truth, however harsh or disturbing. It is the first step to a better America. For more about this and other steps see Reforming America: steps to new politics. The process can begin with you.

For More Information

You can buy or rent copies of Designated Survivor’s episodes.

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