Taranaki Daily News

Good riddance to Spacey’s House of Cards

- ALYSSA ROSENBERG

House of Cards suggested that Washington institutio­ns were basically simple and easy to manipulate, smoothing away the irritating narrative inconvenie­nces...

There are few shows with the pretension­s to and patina of greatness that I hate more than Netflix’s House of Cards.

And after Anthony Rapp’s allegation that the series star Kevin Spacey propositio­ned him when Rapp was just 14, production on the show has been halted, and Netflix has announced that the season, if finished, will be the show’s last.

My contempt for the show long preceded Rapp’s decision to come forward, and it’s not as if the series’ end has anything to do with the reasons it’s so pernicious. But though I rarely write with this much gleeful spite, my general response to the news of the show’s impending demise is to think ‘‘good riddance’’.

Throughout its run, House of Cards committed the ultimate sin: The series presented itself as a savvy look at the dark heart of national politics, when actually it was a wildly naive conspiracy story that only worked by making Frank Underwood’s (Spacey) opponents too dumb to catch him.

House of Cards suggested that Washington institutio­ns were basically simple and easy to manipulate, smoothing away the irritating narrative inconvenie­nces that are constituen­t politics, congressio­nal caucuses and the workings of the bureaucrac­y.

The series ran down journalism and journalist­s, particular­ly in its egregious portrayal of reporter Zoe Barnes (Kate Mara) as an eager upand-comer willing to sleep her way to the top. And it treated ideology as a rube’s fantasy, rather than as a real and powerful motivation for a lot of what goes on in Washington.

House of Cards, seemingly by design, gleefully embraced some of the worst tendencies in our actual politics, without having wit or insight about them. Frank and his wife, Claire Underwood (Robin Wright, who hopefully will be freed to do something much better after this), racked up the kind of body count that conspiracy theorists actually attribute to Bill and Hillary Clinton.

But the show had nothing to say about why those murders might be necessary to Underwood’s ascendance, or what in the culture of Washington would let them get away with killing people. Instead, House of Cards reveled in the idea that this was just one more dark, edgy element of their will to power.

In a similar way, the show relied for much of its action on the idea that Washington is governed by a series of devious plots, and an extremely adept mastermind can accomplish pretty much whatever he or she desires. But once again, House of Cards had no particular insight as to why Washington power brokers in particular and American voters in general would be so easily duped.

Frank Underwood, like our current president, is basically a man without ideology. But unlike Donald Trump, he is also someone without qualities that speak to any particular strain in the American electorate. He is hyper-controlled, rather than emotionall­y impulsive, calculatin­g rather than triumphant­ly un-politicall­y correct. His instincts are reptilian rather than hot-blooded.

Just as The West Wing promoted a relatively naive vision for how principle could power a presidenti­al administra­tion, House of Cards has promulgate­d a view of politics that is actually dangerousl­y unsuited to help us deal with our present moment. By presenting Washington and the people who run it as grimly competent manipulato­rs working in single-minded pursuit of their own interest, House of Cards encouraged viewers to assume the worst about politician­s and to dramatical­ly underestim­ate their own power to check them.

It argued that we ought to look out for the glossy, perfectly functionin­g criminal machines eating our politics, rather than being sufficient­ly horrified by the shambling ethical disaster that is our actual reality. And House of Cards suggested that the smart thing to do was to fall for all of this nonsense, rather than assessing the complexiti­es and fault lines in our political system as a whole.

I’m not entirely sure what kind of pop-culture argument about politics would be useful in our current, hyper-polarised environmen­t, though a new sitcom The Mayor has some ideas about the virtues and rewards of local engagement that I don’t completely hate.

But I know we’ll be better off without House of Cards.

- Washington Post

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