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On The Tube

The modern-day Brady Bunch

5/29/2013

On the Tube 053013‘The Fosters’ offers an alternative vision of a TV family

Social conservatives will not be happy with ABC Family’s new series “The Fosters” (Monday, 8 p.m.), which lays down a challenge to the “Ozzie and Harriet” paradigm. The rest of us will appreciate it as a reflection of modern-day reality, featuring characters familiar from our own lives.

Lena (Sherri Saum) and Stef (Teri Polo) are a loving lesbian couple raising two adopted Latino children and a son from Stef’s previous heterosexual marriage. Callie (Maia Mitchell), a foster child, comes into the picture with a chip on her shoulder, threatening family harmony. Stef has her doubts about taking in yet another kid: “We’re definitely not the Brady Bunch,” she mutters.

They aren’t — but then again, they sort of are. Like the Bradys, they are a wholesome family who love each other despite the conflicts inherent in their blended arrangement. I’m delighted to see a series aimed at young viewers that puts a positive spin on same-sex marriage and kids who don’t fit the conventional mold, including a cross-dressing boy.

With “The Fosters,” ABC Family proves worthy of its name.

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‘The Brokaw Files’

Thursday, 9 p.m. (Military Channel)

“The Brokaw Files” reminds us that Tom Brokaw didn’t just luck into the job of iconic network news anchor; he earned it with 40 years of insightful, compassionate reporting. He revisits memorable stories from his NBC News documentaries, adding contemporary context. Over the next few weeks we’ll reacquaint ourselves with air traffic controllers after 9/11, World War II soldiers adjusting to postwar life and recent presidents in the midst of their terms.

Brokaw’s modesty shines through in these reports, putting the focus on his subjects rather than himself. Even when he rides along in a fighter jet during the Afghanistan war, he’s not showing off; he’s trying to make viewers appreciate the pilot’s skill and courage.

You find yourself praying that Brokaw and the pilot make it back safely. Both of them are too valuable to lose.

 

‘Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic’

Friday, 8 p.m. (Showtime)

This excellent documentary takes its title from a comment by one of Richard Pryor’s collaborators. In reference to the comedian’s crazy life, David Banks says, “Don’t try to find no logic here. To understand Richard, first you have to omit logic, and then you come close.”

Banks’ method works pretty well. When you omit logic, you have an easier time making sense of Pryor’s path from troubled childhood to superstardom to self-destruction. Along the way, he broke barriers by confronting sensitive racial issues in his foul-mouthed, truth-telling style.

“He understood how to excavate the human soul onstage in front of 600 people,” a colleague says.

Just as Pryor reached the pinnacle of show business — a rare feat for an African American in the 1970s — he toppled via drugs and demented behavior. In the most notorious incident, he set himself on fire while freebasing cocaine. That set the stage for his decline throughout the 1980s and ’90s all the way to his death in 2005.

The documentary is generously stocked with clips from Pryor in his prime. You don’t have to omit the logic to understand why those still matter. CV

Dean Robbins is a syndicated TV columnist from Madison, Wis. He graduated from Grinnell College and went on to become an award-winning journalist, but he’s been a committed couch potato long before he figured out a way to get paid for watching TV. See more of his work at www.thedailypage.com.

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