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Is Netflix’s Insatiable as offensive as people claim?

IS NETFLIX’S INSATIABLE AS OFFENSIVE AS PEOPLE CLAIM?

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When the trailer for the new Netflix series Insatiable arrived last month, it was met with fierce criticism on social media and elsewhere; a Change.org petition calling for it to be pulled from release has over 200,000 signatures as of this writing. The objection was over the show’s premise: A bullied teenager, Patty (Debby Ryan), seeks revenge when she loses weight because she has to have her mouth wired shut.

The cast and producers of Insatiable, including actress Alyssa Milano, have offered rebuttals to the accusation­s of body-shaming. Ryan shared her own struggles with body image on Twitter: “I was drawn to this show’s willingnes­s to go to real places about how difficult and scary it can be to move through the world in a body.” And Cindy Holland, Netflix’s vice-president for original series, defends the show as a satire meant to critique fat-shaming.

Despite the petition, Insatiable was released on Friday. Is it really as offensive as the trailer has led many to believe? Here, Eleanor Stanford and Aisha Harris, TV editors at The New York Times, discuss the first season. Major spoilers follow.

AISHA HARRIS: I was admittedly apprehensi­ve going into the first episode based on the trailer, but once I watched it, I was shocked to realize that an insensitiv­e representa­tion of bullying and obesity might actually be the least of this show’s problems. In the first episode alone the following

things occur: A woman, upset that her daughter does not win a pageant, falsely accuses the pageant coach, Bob Armstrong (Dallas Roberts), of molesting her daughter. Patty, who is 17, decides that she’s going to lose her virginity to Bob and leads on a classmate she has no interest in so he will do her bidding. She also plots to get revenge on the man who broke her jaw — which is why it was wired shut — by sleeping with, then rejecting him.

ELEANOR STANFORD: The whole messy show hinges on this question. The creator Lauren Gussis’ approach seems to have been to throw as many inflated, controvers­ial plot points as possible against the wall to see what sticks. As far as I’m concerned, this is not satire, or at least not successful satire. That false accusation against Bob is a good point of entry: No, he’s not a sexual predator, though he does himself no favours. (A running joke has him spouting clunky double entendres like “I’m a champion of women, especially young women, I wanna touch as many of them as I possibly can.”) And yet, he is still a predator of sorts, lascivious­ly seeing a teenage girl’s new and “improved” body as his ticket to profession­al success.

As he schemes to manipulate her into competing in pageants and she schemes to seduce him, I lost track of what we were supposed to find funny or how any of this satirized fat-shaming.

I totally agree that a show I was expecting to be fatphobic turned out to be problemati­c in seemingly endless new ways. But I guess we should talk about how Insatiable treats Patty’s binge-eating — or fails to treat it in any meaningful way. It reminded me of the criticisms of Netflix’s 13 Reasons Why and its sensationa­lized depiction of teen suicide. Teenagers deserve better.

HARRIS: Oof, yes. That’s a huge part of what elevates this above merely offensive and into the realm of potentiall­y damaging. As a show that appears to be targeted toward the YA set, it’s disturbing to see Patty and Bob bond over their shared eating disorder and encourage each other to essentiall­y use their food cravings as motivation — to win, to seek retaliatio­n, to earn someone’s trust, or some combinatio­n of all three (as seen in that mortifying scene where Patty pressures him to win the crawfish eating competitio­n in order to prove he’s “willing to risk it all” to help her win the pageant).

The problem is that Insatiable doesn’t seem to view Patty and Bob’s eating disorder as a disorder, or something that needs to be addressed directly with the aid of a trained profession­al; instead, it imagines it as a character flaw that leads them to act out as vapid, terrible human beings.

I don’t want to discount Gussis’ experience, because I know Patty’s story of her physical transforma­tion is partly inspired by her own life. But I was so confused by what this show thought about the relationsh­ip between outward appearance and personalit­y. Almost every episode finds Patty declaring, in the voice-over narration, that being thin doesn’t matter after all because she’s still evil inside. Tonally, it seemed to be going for the subversive wit of Mean Girls but instead landed closer to Family Guy — empty, scattersho­t provocatio­n for its own sake.

And what in the world was that scene in which Patty and the random trans woman we never see again commiserat­e over body dysmorphia? STANFORD: Yeah, that character popped up to represent the specific bodyrelate­d trauma frequently experience­d by trans people, wasn’t developed in any way and then disappeare­d never to be seen again. It was indicative of the way the show exploits marginaliz­ed identities in general.

You also raise something I keep coming back to as I think about this show: the tonal whiplash. In a promotiona­l teaser for the show, Gussis says “there are moments of broad comedy and also moments where you cry.” But bouncing from marginaliz­ation played for laughs to tender, emotiondri­ven moments frayed my nerves. There were some well-written moments: a conversati­on about coming out as gay as an adult, a first kiss between two best friends, a wife struggling to find her identity outside of her marriage. But viewers have to wade through too much absurd plot and incoherent moral messaging to find the rare meaningful moments, and I don’t think many will.

Frequently, Patty’s inner monologue sounded like a middle-schooler, not a 17-year-old. (At one point she muses: “Maybe Pastor Mike was right: With God, all things were possible. I could save my soul and win the crown.”) I was frustrated by the implicatio­n that not only did her life not start until she became thin but also that being fat had kept her in a state of perpetual immaturity, of incomplete­ness. Maybe this was how Gussis felt when she was younger, but it translates in this show as a statement of ubiquity. The show’s ongoing obsession with the before and after moments of her weight loss is, I would guess, one of many nods to the makeover rom-coms of the ’80s and ’90s, but c’mon. Haven’t we moved past that tired construct yet? Did you also find the show felt weirdly dated?

HARRIS: Somehow the writers thought they were being clever with the many references to old high school comedies. At one point Christian (James Lastovic), Patty’s bad-boy love interest, and Magnolia (Erinn Westbrook), her pageant rival, decide to team up to make their respective crushes jealous by dating each other, “like in one of those stupid movies from the ’80s.” But cheap meta jokes like this are old hat at this point.

I agree there are some charming and moderately successful moments, but they come way too late, and I wouldn’t call them redeeming, either. I liked Nonnie’s slow progressio­n toward self-discovery about her sexuality in the later episodes, which leads to heartfelt moments about fluidity. Before you get to that, you have her being weird and borderline predatory toward a somehow oblivious Patty — her lifelong best friend — like when she convinces Patty to re-enact an intimate moment she had with someone else, so Nonnie can feel her up.

The tone is equally off in the way it handles subjects as delicate as revenge porn and domestic abuse — which brings me to the last few episodes and Christian, the bad boy. As the show goes on, his obsession with Patty takes on an unhealthy tenor; he refuses to accept that she no longer wants to be with him and stalks her. Yet all any of the characters do, including Patty, is acknowledg­e that he’s being abusive and then shrug it off. This is all without getting into the ending, when Christian kidnaps Magnolia, then tells Patty she has to kill her. I don’t even know what to do with that.

STANFORD: Yeah, I ... cannot. After a couple of relatively improved episodes, that finale went straight off the deep end once again. Having stuffed enough plot for a dozen seasons into one, the show creators then left almost all the storylines unresolved — I assume in hopes of a second season? Well, stranger things have happened. But God help us all.

SCATTERSHO­T PROVOCATIO­N FOR ITS OWN SAKE.

 ?? TINA ROWDEN / NETFLIX ?? Debby Ryan stars as Patty in the Netflix series Insatiable, about a bullied girl who becomes popular after losing weight.
TINA ROWDEN / NETFLIX Debby Ryan stars as Patty in the Netflix series Insatiable, about a bullied girl who becomes popular after losing weight.

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