Because of a really busy schedule this week, there will be no RELEVANT Podcast. Don’t worry, though, next week we’ll be back in full force with a performance by Jars of Clay.

Matt and the team are continually adding new products to the RELEVANT Store, and we’re updating the inventory with handpicked CDs, DVDs, books, art and apparel. If you haven’t checked it out, be sure to head over to RELEVANTstore.com and see the latest additions as well as a back catalogue of RELEVANT and Radiant magazines.

[-] Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama made headlines this weekend after he said that Republicans no longer have a tight handle on religion in political discourse. He told an evangelical church on Sunday that he is seeing a "breaking down of the sharp divisions that existed maybe during the '90s." You can go here to see the story and read the huge debate it's caused on CNN.com's message board ...

[-] In an effort to attract businesspeople and brand itself into a high-end fast-food chain, McDonald's has announced that restaurants across the U.K. will become Wi-Fi hubs. The company said that it will soon be the largest provider of free wireless Internet access in the nation. Currently, about 8,000 McDonald's in the United States offer wireless, but on this side of the pond, it's not free ...

[-] Goonies 2?! Corey Feldman and Sean Astin (two of the stars of the original '80s classic) have confirmed that a sequel to The Goonies is on its way. This time, the film will be animated and may even feature the children of the original gang going on their own adventure ...

[-] Here's an interesting article about how researchers are "attempting to pin down what happens in the brain when people experience mystical awakenings during prayer and meditation or during spontaneous utterances inspired by religious fervor." Through the use of MRIs and brain scans, scientists are looking at activity in the brain when faithful people pray and worship God ...

[-] The new comedy from Ben Stiller broke hearts at this weekend's box office, failing to get the No. 1 spot. The Heartbreak Kid took in a modest 14 million dollars, behind The Rock's The Game Plan, which remained at the top spot ...

[-] Economists are split on whether to embrace a new claim by some environmentalists that say the emerging renewable-energy industry will create millions of new jobs. Although some doubt the likelihood of seeing a "green job" boom, many believe that new technologies and eco-innovations will spark a huge jobs market ..

 


So it’s the time of year when critics like myself typically try really hard to predict the “next big thing” in television. The past few years I’ve received pilots over the summer from all the major networks, and have written “fall TV previews” for RELEVANT. But this fall, the thing I am most passionate about is not a new 2007 show, but one that premiered last fall, and is (thankfully) beginning a second season. (It debuted on Friday night, but you can watch the first episode of the second season on the show’s website.)


Spotlight: Films on Temporality

Great Love in Primetime

Statement: Requiem for Holy Moments

Spotlight: Primetime Is Back

 

The show is, of course, Friday Night Lights. And after watching it every week last season and just recently watching it again on DVD, I can honestly say it is the best television series I’ve ever seen.

For those of you who have seen it, you know how wonderful it is. For those who haven’t, listen up: Do you ever love something so much that it pains you when other people don’t see it or can’t experience it? Then for my sake and (trust me) yours, please watch this show.

It’s not enough to say that Lights is “about more than just football.” It’d be more accurate to say that this is a show about everything. Well, not terrorists or conspiracies or superheroes or islands … but real life. Yes. Set in the dusty Texas town of Dillon, where strip malls and Dodge dealerships and Applebee’s define the landscape just as much as golden horizons and aging oil pumps, Lights is a microcosm not just of small towns, but of all the problems and joys and heartbreaks that come with this American life.

It’s a show that finds high drama in the mundane experiences of a typical high school (cliques, rivalries, dating, sex, homework, cheating, etc.), as well as the everyday challenges of marriage and family. The heart of the show is the family of Coach Taylor (Kyle Chandler): his wonderful wife, Tammy (Connie Britton), and prissy-but-sweet teenage daughter, Julie (Aimee Teegarden). Not only is this trio the most affable, adorable “TV family” out there, but they are also probably the most representative as well. So rare is it to see a stable, loving, comfortable family dynamic portrayed in the media. But the Taylors make “good family” look incredibly appealing. The scenes between husband and wife are especially good. There’s no more nuanced, personal, empathetic, flat-out great acting happening anywhere else on television.

The rest of the cast is amazing as well, pretty much down to the last extra (and the show just won an Emmy for its casting director … much deserved). But just as wonderful is the show’s intimate photography, exquisite editing, realistic set design (all real locations), melancholy musical soundtrack and so on. It’s really hard to find anything wrong with Lights (and as a critic, that’s endlessly frustrating but also a sort of holy grail). Every now and then a network show comes along that redefines the medium’s artistic horizons and proves that cinema has no monopoly on forward-thinking style in the world of moving images. Lights is such a show. It’s not just feel-good and life-affirming; it’s a pivotal show in the history of television.

Beyond the technical aspects, perhaps the chief appeal of Lights is that it is not condescending to middle America, even while it relishes in pointing out its quirks and contradictions. For those of us who hail from (and adore) the sprawling rural midsection of this country, it’s rare to see a portrayal that gets it so right. Part of Lights' success is the show’s unflinching and empathetic incorporation of evangelical Christianity, which is portrayed in almost every episode (whether in a Sunday service, or church potluck, or Christian metal band concert). Faith is simply a given in the show, and while its characters are not perfect, Lights is clear in its insistence upon virtue, morality and shared values. What is right versus what is easy is the central schema of the show, and yet it is never didactic or moralizing. Rather, it is refreshing. Very refreshing.

As good and acclaimed as Lights is, the show has been in constant jeopardy of cancellation since it began last fall. Only because of incessant critical praise and a passionately loyal (albeit small) fan base was it renewed for a much-deserved second season. This fall, I’m making it my mission to insist that everyone I know, and anyone who even remotely respects my opinion, gives this show a shot. I’m only asking for you to watch a couple episodes, or at least Tivo them and watch them later.

Watch this show because it is more than just a funny diversion (The Office) or heart-pounding serial (24). It is these things, but it is more than that. It's a show full of truth that needs our support. And it's a piece of art: a swooning love letter to youth and family and the blazing furor of imperfect Americana.

Note: To see more about Friday Night Lights, you can visit the author's blog, where he's assembled a list of quotes from more critics and writers.

Author: Brett McCracken 

Brett is a grad student at UCLA's Film School and has recently started a blog at stillsearching.wordpress.com.

Honesty Becomes Him - An interview with Cameron Conant It takes so much more courage for us to want to be completely ourselves, not someone else.

Calling at Cana - It is those closest to us who know us well enough to questions the assumptions we make about our lives.

The Fight to Be Young - I continue to walk the tight rope: clinging to my morality while resisting the urge to interpret my youthful inclinations as sin.

The Ride - I find myself riding hard, my muscles resisting the wind at each pedal.

Dailies: King of California - Suddenly you realize the jokes aren't making you laugh and the action scenes bring yawns.

Dailies: Resident Evil: Extinction - The real problem with Extinction is not its wooden acting or a lack of plot.

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