The satire dark comedy “Weeds”,
directed by Brian Dannelly, premiered in 2005 when only nine states had passed
the law legalizing medical marijuana use. At that time, according to A.V. CLUB,
Americans who thought marijuana should remain illegal outnumbered those in
support of legalization by a two-to-one margin. When “Weeds” ended its eight
season in 2012, the number of states where medical marijuana use was legal was
18 and Washington and Colorado became the first states to legalize marijuana
for recreational use. This essay will summarize the first season of the television show "Weeds", will explore the portrait of criminals in media nowadays, will explain the director’s perspective on crime, justice and
society in the television show “Weeds” and will give some examples of the corruption.
First of all, “Weeds”, deals with recently widowed Nancy. Nancy’s husband dies
and she begins dealing marijuana to her rich neighbors and friends to support
her upper middle class lifestyle. In Weeds’ first season, Nancy dives into the
world of marijuana business, which proves to be an especially seedy industry.
She’s got some beginner’s luck. Her business is already thriving in the pilot,
“You Can’t Miss The Bear”. Later on she decides she wants to expand her
business and starts baking and selling marijuana brownies. As her business is
taking off she hires Sanjay to sell the weed in the Valley State College.
Everything gets messy when Alejandro goes after her because she is selling in
his territory. Nancy solves the problem having sex with him on top of his car.
To finish season one, Nancy forms a group and starts growing weed as well,
while dating Peter, who happens to be a DEA agent.
As Surette says, in most of the cases the resulting portrait of criminals found
in today’s media has almost no correspondence with official statistics of
persons arrested for crimes. The media tends to construct and present a
crime-and-justice world that is the opposite of the real world. The typical
criminal portrayed in the media is mature, white, and of high social status.
“Weeds” is a great example of the portrayal of criminals in media since the
protagonist of the television show is a mature white upper-class woman who is
illegally selling marijuana and therefore committing a crime. Criminals are men
most of the times and female offenders are primarily shown linked to male
offenders and as white, violent and deserving of punishment and driven by
greed, revenge and love. One thing that is new is that Nancy isn’t linked to
male offenders and she isn’t driven by revenge or greed. She has her own
marijuana business because she wants to keep up with her lifestyle and she
isn’t linked to a male offender, she gets the marijuana from another woman,
which happens to be an African-American woman.
As said before, some crimes like property crimes are underrepresented and
violent crimes are overrepresented. Murder, robbery, kidnapping and aggravated
assault made up 90 percent of all prime time television crimes, with murder
accounting for nearly one-fourth, according to Surette. Director Brian Dannelly
stepped out of the comfort zone and came up with a television show that isn’t
just another crime related show with murder and violence, but a subtle show
representing a facet of society that is actually there and we don’t want to see
most of the times.
Director Brian Dannelly represents society as full of lies, fake people and as
“only the strong survives” type of society. Nancy lies to her sons and friends
about her business, both women and men act fake towards each other and
everybody is waiting for somebody to mess up so they can get profit out of it.
Dannelly also perceive women as human beings with persuasion powers. Some women
use their intellect; others use their feminine wiles. Men say women can always
get what they want either if it is by being smart or by using their “secret
feminine techniques”. Dannelly represented that part of our society by showing
how Nancy makes her way into the risky business and gets all her clients by
using her feminine wiles.
The show also does a good job representing the “hegemonic masculinity”. Nancy
posses no threat to the male dealers and that is the reason her business keeps
being strong. Hegemonic masculinity happens nowadays all the time, women are
considered passive for the world of drug dealing. Since women are seen as
vulnerable, other male drug dealers often take advantage of them.
The director represents the legal system as a joke. When Nancy tries to expand
her business she goes to a lawyer to ask her some questions about the sentences
she could be facing for growing and distributing weed. Although the lawyer
doesn’t specifically say she knows Nancy is a drug dealer she suggests she
knows and even then doesn’t do anything about it, but offer her services.
Towards the end of the season Nancy
starts dating Peter who turns out to be a DEA agent. During season one, Peter
apparently doesn’t know about Nancy being a drug dealer but in season 2, he
finds out, and what Nancy does is marry him as a part of a deal to legally
protect herself from Peter testifying. It shows how the director tries to
portray a DEA agent as a corrupt agent as a part of the structure of this kind
of TV shows where there is always a corrupt agent that goes against the law.
The director chose to portray this kind of crime as funny. As something
humorous and comical where there is no punishment for the crime. In fact there
are barely any scenes where Nancy is actually in trouble with the police due to
her business. He also chose to make the show as something more complicated than
someone just selling weed. Dannelly, wanted to offer a more elaborated and
complicated discussion about this kind of crime and he does it by making Nancy
a widowed mother of two who is just trying to survive.
“Weeds” aired for eight seasons, had surprisingly high ratings and was really
acclaimed by American society. As The Artifice says, there are shows that have
the ability to grasp the attention of its audience right from the start, to get
them hooked or simply addicted. “Weeds” had a really varied audience because at
the end, it’s still a comedy. From teenagers relating to Nancy’s sons to
parents relating to the struggles Nancy goes through, everybody can be the
target audience. Not necessarily relating to the whole selling weed part but to
the struggles all the characters go through.
Once again both television shows deal with
issues that the American society is facing nowadays: rebellious teenagers, teen
drama, widows trying to keep a float their family, weed, cheating husbands and
I could go on and on. Nowadays stories have a rigidly adhered-to structure and
all beats fall in the same place. All characters do the things they are expected
to do even if it involves committing a crime.