Shameless: The Realness of Life

Shameless is a show that doesn’t lie about how life really is.  It shows that life isn’t full of rainbows and sunshine, but rather that it is harsh and truly unforgiving. Shameless shows the consequences for the actions and choices that we make. It is a show that shows the struggles of growing up having to fight for everything you have when you don’t have parents to fight for you. It gives people who live like this something to relate to and to cope with. By watching this show I have been able to cope with the realities of my own life and realized that I am not alone in having a really messed up home life.

While all of the episodes show perfect examples of how life isn’t pretty, one in particular has always stuck out to me. In Season 6, Episode 8 there is an episode entitled “Be a Good Boy, and Come for Grandma”. In this episode, Carl begins to realize that he doesn’t want to be living the life he is. He has been running with a gang, selling illegal weapons and he wants out. It isn’t that simple though. He begins to realize that it isn’t as simple as not showing up.

This is Carl after he tells one of the boys that he is taking a break. The man whips him with a gun and tells him that it ain’t that simple. He is told he needs to be at the next pick up or else. He goes to his father, Frank, for advice. Before Carl even gets a word in, Frank asks for money. Carl doesn’t have any because he hasn’t been making his rounds. Frank seems furious about this, he tells him he must continue doing the work because someone needs to live up to the Gallagher name. Carl still wants to quit, regardless of what his father says.

This is from the scene where Sean goes with Carl to try and get him out of that life. After Sean tells him that Carl will be working for him, gives up his clothes and his car, Carl’s clothes, too, they let them go. They walk all the way home with nothing, but boxers on.

This is just one of the many examples of how this show doesn’t just make everything work out perfectly, but rather messy and full of struggle. They don’t just have the gang agree to letting him leave or somehow make it so it all goes away simply with no consequences.

This show represents how life is not without hardships and regret.

The episode after this one shows how Lip’s drinking doesn’t just end with good memories, but rather a night in the hospital. Before the hospital, he is bar-tending a party where he himself never stops drinking and he mixes up girls names. He doesn’t even know how he got to the hospital.

This is a show that never stops showing hardships and perils. If there was an episode where it had all of the characters happy and just going about there day, it would shock and baffle all of it’s viewers.

The dialogue is also one that helps viewers connect with the show. They never bother to care what they say, if they swear, or even offend anyone. They always say it like it is, they are real about everything.

This isn’t a show I would recommend for young kids, they shouldn’t know what life is like so young. This is a show that is for older teens and young adults that aren’t really sure what life is like. This is a great example of the life you can end up with when you make bad decisions, like Frank the father did when he had all these kids and didn’t take care of them and made them take care of themselves and each other.

Picture Links:

SHAMELESS BLACKFACE

https://www.wattpad.com/445133642-shameless-imagines-gif-series-carl-gallagher

 

Representation of Reality in Shameless

Shameless (U.S.)  is a television dramedy that airs on Showtime or on demand through streaming services such as Netflix or Hulu. This is the ratings for season six found on TV Series Finale .

 

Air date Episode 18-49 demo % demo change Viewers (mil) % mil change
Sun 1/10/2016 06-01 0.63 -21.25%† 1.439 -18.70%†
Sun 1/17/2016 06-02 0.66 4.76% 1.642 14.11%
Sun 1/24/2016 06-03 0.75 13.64% 1.697 3.35%
Sun 1/31/2016 06-04 0.68 -9.33% 1.704 0.41%
Sun 2/7/2016 06-05 0.47 -30.88% 1.157 -32.10%
Sun 2/14/2016 06-06 0.60 27.66% 1.590 37.42%
Sun 2/21/2016 06-07 0.72 20.00% 1.658 4.28%
Sun 3/6/2016 06-08 0.62 -13.89% 1.499 -9.59%
Sun 3/13/2016 06-09 0.68 9.68% 1.682 12.21%
Sun 3/20/2016 06-10 0.63 -7.35% 1.601 -4.82%
Sun 3/27/2016 06-11 0.56 -11.11% 1.452 -9.31%
Sun 4/3/2016 06-12 0.66 17.86% 1.633 12.47%
-100.00% -100.00%
Season averages 0.64 -10.09% 1.563 -1.09%

Shameless target audience would be about 16-35 year-old’s, this is because that there is mature content, maybe too mature for younger than 16, yet there is still a good story line for an older generation to get into. The main characters are the people you would consider to be from the wrong side of the tracks, meaning that they were of a very low income. The characters in the show who have a higher income tend to only be in the show for a short period of time to show the differences in social classes

The episode of the season that I chose to use as the primary source for this post was Episode 7 called “Pimp’s Paradise”. This was the fourth most watched episode of the series, but I felt that it was a very powerful episode.

I think that race is very well represented in this season, but even more in this episode. Over the beginning of the season when Carl came back from Juvie he began to act very strange, wearing dreads and acting like he was hood. He was even called out by a girl he was trying to get with for acting in some way that he wasn’t.

He begins to realize in this episode that it was wrong for him to get involved with the people who made him want to act so strange. I think another interesting thing in this episode that pertained to race was to do with the Gallaghers cousin and reading a book report in school that was pro-Nazi. He was sent home from school because it was found offensive. However, Frank worked his magic and got the school to okay it, since it wasn’t actually wrong, just super insensitive.

This is Carl in his new persona

 

The representation of class in this episode is somewhat different then the rest. As said before the main characters, meaning the Gallagher, are a very low income family, and often in each episode they are clawing there way through the day financially. In this episode, the Gallaghers actually now own the house they live in. Something that isn’t very usual for them financially, but how the money was procured was clearly illegally, because it was given to Fiona by Carl, so they still manage to keep that low-income, wrong side of the tracks vibe.

This is what Carl has decided he wants to do with the house he believes to be his because it was his money.

Gender was addressed in this episode by Frank and his new/old honey Queenie. Queenie was a lover from Frank’s past and she comes in to take over care of her daughter’s son, also Frank’s daughter’s son. While she has to wait for papers to be processed she begins to get very involved with Frank, while also pressuring him to state his “man of house” position. They both believe that he should be able to control his kids, even though he doesn’t even take care of them. He isn’t even there most of the time and because he is a man who produced all these children, that gives him the right to tell them all what to do.

This is Queenie and Frank after they loudly have intercourse with a house full of kids.

I think this episode also did really well in representing sexuality. We have the character of Ian who is invited to a wedding by his boyfriend, but what he doesn’t realize is his boyfriend just wants to shove his homosexuality in his very religious family’s face. This I find interesting because they then begin to make a spectacle of themselves which I always thought is exactly what they didn’t want, a giant spectacle made over them.

Picture Links:

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt5090596/

http://recapguide.com/recap/15/Shameless-US/season-6/episode-7/