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Wednesday, 19 December 2012

Hot In Cleveland Season 4 Episode 4 GILFS preview

Valerie Bertinelli, Jane Leeves and Betty White are “Hot in Cleveland” in this new TV Land series produced by “Will and Grace” star Sean Hayes.
It’s a slim premise – a soap star (Malick) whose show has been canceled, a new divorcée (Bertinelli), and a makeup artist (Leeves) set off for Paris from Los Angeles only to be grounded in Cleveland. With bleak prospects waiting for them back home, and noting the attentive looks they get from men in a local bar, they decide to stay a while. The Bertinelli character rents a house, where the caretaker is Elke (Betty White).
So far, this is a very funny show, with marvelous performances. With Malick and Frasier’s Daphne starring, that’s to be expected. White is amazing – 88 and still going strong and still a master of timing. The weak sister for me is Bertinelli, whose comedy seems forced.
As a baby boomer myself, I like seeing shows relating to my age group featuring older actresses, who, like the Malick character, really do find the going rough in Hollywood, particularly if they’re too attractive for character roles. And it is true, particularly in a youth-oriented town like L.A., older women are pretty much invisible to men their own age. It’s probably true anywhere, but particularly there.
When I heard about this show, I figured it would be “cute.” What I was not prepared for was how spot-on it really is. I’ve lived in the L.A. area off and on for over 20 years, and all the L.A. references are painfully HONEST.
Wendie Malick, Jane Leeves, Valerie Bertinelli and Betty White are hysterical!
The story lines are very realistic …L.A. is really a very SADLY over-rated place to live, for many reasons. The sunshine is nice, but even that gets boring after a while. Between the high price of living, the traffic and the shallow people, it’s really an awful place to live for any “average” person. Ironically, this show comes at a time in my life when I have decided to relocate to my home town of Chicago.
I routinely experience just about all of the ones depicted on this show whenever I go back to Chicago. While it is true that there are shallow people everywhere in the world, L.A. seems to be the U.S. capital of “the beautiful people.” Living here is very exclusionary; everything is about money, status, power and looks. If you have those things, you’ll be included; if not, you are SOL, no matter how good or nice a person you are.

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