TV Review: Rollergirls

Do you remember when A&E meant Arts and Entertainment?

It seems that lately the Arts and Entertainment network has decided to leave the Arts behind and focus on the entertainment half of their name. What do I mean by this? Why the explosion of "reality" TV shows that air on this network? A friend of mine who worked on Forty Deuce explained about reality tv, "We take the truth into a dark room, strap it into a dentist chair, and get hard to work on it."

I remember fondly the days when A&E was the channel on which I could watch Pride and Prejudice. My evenings were filled with romantic forays into the English countryside, my wife cuddled close to me, watching very nice people encounter romantic complications. It was wonderful, the warmth of good dialogue and the person you love. What more could one ask for? But now...oh now...how the world has changed. A&E's line-up looks more like a police line-up than a romantic one. How can one cuddle and coo soft words into a loved one's ear when watching Dog the Bounty Hunter? One does not think of Sonnet 116 when watching Inked or Intervention.

What am I supposed to watch with my wife? What show touches upon the deeper truths of human existence? Does A&E have such an offering? Luckily, yes they do. They have provided me with the beauty that is Rollergirls. I am not kidding, this is great TV. Not because of the "sport" or the monolithic theatrical struggles that take place in the "wooden oval". No, there is no Bach fugue playing here, that would be Rollerball not Rollergirls.

What makes Rollergirls entertaining, and even a profound commentary on the "common life", is the conversations and attempts at philosophizing that the competators give. Most of the "girls" are working class, and struggling, individuals who desire in some way to be great. To paraphrase Lunatic, "it gives my life a kind of purpose, no matter how pointless that purpose is." The young women of Rollergirls seek to escape the banality of normal existence and, for one brief moment, to feel adored. I would say "heroic", but I think that might provoke laughter. The funny thing, no matter how vulgar and scripted the contests the Rollergirls participate in, no matter how unatheletic these atheletes are, they truly do seek to be successful and to feel they are accomplishing something.

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  • 1 - Mark

    Feb 17, 2006 at 10:03 am

    "The funny thing, no matter how vulgar and prescripted the contests the Rollergirls participate in, no matter how unatheletic these atheletes are..."

    Wow, someone who has never been to a bout assuming it's all fake--haven't heard that before.

    Go to usrollergirls.com. Go to a bout. Learn something.

  • 2 - Joanie

    Feb 18, 2006 at 3:52 am

    Say hello to Advance.net!

  • 3 - Scott Butki

    Feb 21, 2006 at 6:04 pm

    So it sounds like the show isn't any better than the soundtrack, which I reviewed here.

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