{"id":53400,"date":"2023-09-13T10:00:04","date_gmt":"2023-09-13T15:00:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/?p=53400"},"modified":"2026-01-16T20:16:30","modified_gmt":"2026-01-17T02:16:30","slug":"succession-prestige-tvs-fascism-problem","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/succession-prestige-tvs-fascism-problem\/","title":{"rendered":"\u201cSuccession\u201d &#038; Prestige TV\u2019s Fascism Problem"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>A TV news network throws in with a far-right presidential candidate and declares him the next president. The network is ATN, a fictionalized Fox News from HBO\u2019s <em>Succession<\/em> that makes its money off Republican causes and has supported the candidate, Jeryd Mencken, throughout the election. At a crucial juncture, ATN calls Wisconsin for Mencken, knowing his partisans have set fire to ballots that promised to tilt the state Democratic. <em>Succession<\/em> concludes without revealing the official outcome of what will be a contested national election, but the stakes couldn\u2019t be higher. When characters refer to Mencken as a fascist, they do so with little of the sarcasm that typifies the drama\u2019s justifiably celebrated dialogue. All at once, we are no longer laughing.<\/p>\n<p>But the fact that we\u2019re not expresses more than a sudden topic-appropriate solemnity. <em>Succession<\/em> struggles tonally in its final episodes. It whipsaws unevenly\u2014alternately sentimental and ruthlessly clear-eyed\u2014between familial and national politics. It\u2019s as if, in staging Mencken\u2019s ascent, the drama runs up against the political limits of its otherwise adroit combination of social satire and personal tragedy, and perhaps against the political limits of prestige TV.<\/p>\n<p>Over the last two-plus decades, many of our most celebrated dramas and comedies have turned with more sympathy than we might have expected to reactionary politics. In part, that reflects prestige TV\u2019s oft-noted commitment to unsavory antiheroes. But prestige TV has fed its presumptively liberal audiences a steady diet of illiberal fare, and <em>Succession<\/em> forces us to ask why\u2014and what that TV can and cannot manage when turning to such subjects.<\/p>\n<p>I do not think fascism is too serious a subject to be made into filmed entertainment. And while <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/tv-and-radio\/2023\/may\/27\/jesse-armstrong-on-the-roots-of-succession-bum-rush-trump-presidency\">Jesse Armstrong has publicly worried<\/a> about his willingness to profit from the white nationalism his drama draws upon, my own view is, that\u2019s between him and his conscience. Certainly nothing that follows should be understood to question his motives or commitments. And I do not claim to perceive in <em>Succession<\/em> any programmatic sympathy for fascism. Rather, I claim that <em>Succession<\/em> and prestige TV generally portray reactionary politics in idiosyncratically personal and ultimately humanizing registers as a function of their commitment to treating families that way. <em>Succession<\/em> seems designed for highly educated urbanites who look up at the Roys\u2019 skyscraping affluence from many floors below. It is schadenfreude for dutiful professional elites who might long for feudal power but who walk a more self-consciously responsible and meritocratic path. But Shiv, Roman, and Kendall are audience surrogates nevertheless, never so much as in the comforting stories they tell themselves about their ability to love Logan Roy\u2014the patriarch of the family business, Waystar Royco, which owns ATN\u2014while maintaining a healthy distance from the ugliness that he sponsors.<\/p>\n<p>Prestige TV viewers tell themselves a version of that story. We thrill to these antiheroes, but they do not define us. Indeed, we might believe, to quote Lionel Trilling\u2019s <em>The Liberal Imagination<\/em>, that these programs express liberalism\u2019s healthy dependence on culture that does not \u201cconfirm us in the social and political ideals which we hold.\u201d<sup id=\"ref-1\"><a href=\"#fn-1\" class=\"legacy-ref\">1<\/a><\/sup> Liberalism can only outwardly endorse reason and virtue, Trilling thought; as a consequence, the midcentury middle class found the darker emotions it needed in reactionary writers like Yeats, Eliot, and Lawrence.<\/p>\n<p>But it\u2019s reasonable to ask some 75 years later if we are not well past Trilling\u2019s dynamic\u2014if indeed it ever obtained. The darker emotions he thought essential to a healthy liberalism are no longer safely contained, if ever they were, in the cheap modernist paperbacks with which a white middle class complemented its participation in a rationalized Keynesian-Fordist state. Over the last 25 years, upmarket television has turned with increasing frequency to the aggrieved populism that now defines the American right. In so doing, it has baffled risibly hoary distinctions between high and low. But it still clings to midcentury aesthetic ideals and social pieties, as if it could save us all by dint of the well-wrought complexity and compassion with which it treats nuclear families above all.<\/p>\n<p>Families can seem to demand that treatment because they are all we have. \u201cWho is society?\u201d Margaret Thatcher famously asked in 1987. \u201cThere is no such thing! There are individual men and women and there are families.\u201d Prestige TV tends to confirm that neoliberal dogma. Thus Logan insists: \u201cMost things don\u2019t exist. The Ford Motor Company hardly exists. It\u2019s just a time-saving expression for a collection of financial interests. But this exists, because\u2014Family. It\u2019s a family. We are a family.\u201d The sentiment does not exactly comfort: however real, the Roy family eats its own on an almost mythical scale. But it\u2019s the only meal in town, notwithstanding the riches in question. And across prestige TV as a whole, family has become unavoidable and damaging in equal measure. It is the individual\u2019s last best hope, the only remaining collective. Yet it does not sustain; it actively destroys.<\/p>\n<p>In capturing that tension with often startling compassion, <em>Succession<\/em> might be said to display a cruelly optimistic attachment to the heteronormative family, which has been a key site of capitalist oppression for centuries. Indeed, prestige TV generally has been fairly criticized for romancing the gendered division of labor with which that family has traditionally reproduced itself, above all, by treating its toxic male antiheroes with complexity and humanity. But <em>Succession<\/em> also advances a much more specific class project that turns on the legal and political status of the family business. And its treatment of family businesses is the most immediately practical source of prestige TV\u2019s uncomfortable political complicities.<\/p>\n\n    <div class=\"wp-block-group pattern related-reading has-oat-background-color has-background has-global-padding is-layout-constrained wp-block-group-is-layout-constrained\" style=\"padding-top:var(--wp--preset--spacing--40);padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--40);padding-bottom:var(--wp--preset--spacing--40);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--40)\">\n\n        <div class=\"block-heading\">Related readings<\/div>\n\n        <div class=\"wp-block-columns wp-block-post gap-tight is-layout-flex wp-block-columns-is-layout-flex\">\n\n            <div class=\"wp-block-column is-layout-flow wp-block-column-is-layout-flow\">\n                <figure class=\"wp-block-post-featured-image\">\n                  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/wrongworld\/\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1000\" height=\"600\" src=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/12\/ww2-scaled-e1605815431955-1000x600.jpg\" class=\"attachment-feature_img_crop size-feature_img_crop wp-post-image\" alt=\"\" \/><\/a>                <\/figure>\n            <\/div>\n\n            <div class=\"wp-block-column is-layout-flow wp-block-column-is-layout-flow\">\n\n                <div class=\"taxonomy-category wp-block-post-terms\">\n                    <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/category\/reviews\/\" rel=\"tag\">Reviews<\/a>\n                <\/div>\n\n                <h5 class=\"h6 wp-block-post-title\">\n                    <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/wrongworld\/\" target=\"_self\">Wrongworld<\/a>\n                <\/h5>\n\n                    <div class=\"pb-author-block\">\n                  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/author\/genevieve-yue\/\" class=\"pb-author-img-link\">\n            <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"300\" height=\"300\" src=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/11\/Genevieve-train-e1605813374706-300x300.jpg\" class=\"pb-author-avatar wp-post-image\" alt=\"\" \/>          <\/a>\n                <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/author\/genevieve-yue\/\" class=\"pb-author-name\">\n          Genevieve Yue        <\/a>\n      <\/div>\n    \n            <\/div>\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n  \n<p class=\"nonindented\"><em>The Sopranos<\/em>,<em> Weeds<\/em>,<em> Breaking Bad<\/em>,<em> Sons of Anarchy<\/em>,<em> The Americans<\/em>, <em>Ozark<\/em>, <em>Big Love<\/em>,<em> Six Feet Under<\/em>: all of these series and many more\u2014as I argue in <a href=\"https:\/\/press.uchicago.edu\/ucp\/books\/book\/chicago\/S\/bo191449867.html\"><em>Second Lives: Black-Market Melodramas and the Reinvention of Television<\/em><\/a><em>\u2014<\/em>depict the daily struggles of families that are also business units. These family businesses, more often than not, operate in black markets and informal economies<em>.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Their ostensibly liberal sympathies notwithstanding, these dramas align with the American right in what <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dissentmagazine.org\/article\/family-capitalism-and-the-small-business-insurrection\">Melinda Cooper calls<\/a> \u201can insurrection of one form of capitalism against another: the private, unincorporated, and family-based versus the corporate, publicly traded, and shareholder-owned.\u201d Trump\u2019s populism pitted small businesses against corporate capitalism and the decadent coastal elites it allegedly serves. But his \u201cideal entrepreneurial form was not simply the small business, but the small <em>family<\/em> business,\u201d explains Cooper, \u201cwhose natural labor hierarchies and personalized property relations stood in contrast to the suspect anonymity of the corporation.\u201d The right\u2019s commitment to the family business has been consequential. Republicans used it to push through a tax law favorable to S corporations. And, crucially, the benefits of that tax law were not limited to small families: today, hedge funds, private equity firms, and real estate partnerships file as pass-through entities to take advantage of tax rates well lower than those that apply to the default-structure C corporations. Vast sums of money have changed hands, and political aisles, as a result. The right\u2019s commitment to the family business has been just as consequential ideologically. That commitment makes it possible, Cooper writes, to reimagine \u201cthe blue-collar producer\u201d as \u201can aspirational small business owner rather than a wage worker\u2014a slippage that helps explain the American right\u2019s strangely capacious understanding of the working class today.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>That elision is hardly confined to the American right: ever since <em>The Sopranos<\/em>, prestige TV has naturalized the labor hierarchies and property relations of family businesses while embracing ostensibly blue-collar entrepreneurs who struggle against an invasive and frequently hostile state. As David Chase put it, <em>The Sopranos<\/em> had no \u201cauthority figures\u201d who were \u201clooking out for us,\u201d no well-intentioned \u201cdoctors. Judges. Lawyers. Cops.\u201d<sup id=\"ref-2\"><a href=\"#fn-2\" class=\"legacy-ref\">2<\/a><\/sup> <em>The Sopranos<\/em> acknowledges no authority except paternal authority. It is absolutely right to debate whether, ultimately, that drama or its heirs celebrated or exposed toxic masculinity. Even so, prestige TV consistently collapses a man\u2019s patriarchal authority over his family with the contractual authority that employers enjoy over their employees. Whether in <em>The Sopranos<\/em> and <em>Breaking Bad<\/em> or <em>Yellowstone<\/em> and <em>Succession<\/em>, there is no meaningful difference between these forms of authority.<\/p>\n<p>Most prestige TV has represented familial and business paternalism as essentially the same, in other words, while setting that doubled authority against state-sanctioned institutions and a mandarin liberal establishment. Prestige TV\u2019s red-blooded fathers are almost always blue collar in spirit, no matter how rich, precisely and only because they are counterpunching, scrappy entrepreneurs at war with federal agencies and struggling desperately to maintain their family\u2019s threatened autonomy. But they are capitalists at all, still more fundamentally, because and just like they are fathers.<\/p>\n<p>A familiar two-step results: if a family business makes it possible to understand family life as \u201cjust business,\u201d and a bruising one at that, then those same businesses subtly transform our understanding of capitalist enterprise. Family businesses rewrite the exploitations of the wage relation into the gendered expropriations of family life. And in addition to naturalizing waged exploitation, that revision enjoins a quiescent posture: we might well justifiably hate our bosses, but we should strive to do so with the compassion, generosity, and heightened sense of personal culpability with which, ideally, we hate our fathers.<br \/>\n<\/p>\n<figure class=\"wp-block-pullquote\">\n<blockquote>\n<p>Antiheroes are not \u201cfair and balanced\u201d in the way that news networks ideally are. Their function is less to solicit judgment than to win acceptance. TV watching is intimacy deepened over time.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<\/figure>\n<p><br \/>\nNote, for example, the melancholy fondness the drama betrays for Logan Roy, both in his son Kendall\u2019s eulogy and at a private screening of home videos soon after his death. What interests me is less the fondness per se than what it suggests about the premium that prestige TV places on core familial emotions, which it strives to depict with empathy and nuance. This is an art form that accords family bonds a sacrosanct centrality and aspires to a judicious complexity when treating those bonds. Even as <em>Succession<\/em> exposes Logan\u2019s sadistic narcissism\u2014and the political affinities that follow from it\u2014the show cannot but lionize his hardscrabble origins and the outsize imprint he left upon the world. Above all, it cannot but ask us to mourn him, as if he were a family member we hated and yet also loved.<\/p>\n<p><em>Succession<\/em> is at pains to insist Logan is irreplaceable. He dies just before the election, and his kids, in over their scheming, unserious heads, debate how to call Wisconsin. Roman wants ATN to announce for Mencken, while Shiv and Kendall express different degrees of reservation. Collectively, they are responsible, and the drama does not sugarcoat that fact.<\/p>\n<p>But if <em>Succession<\/em> does not exonerate them, it does not exactly condemn them either. After all, none of the kids actively embraces Mencken\u2019s ideas. Right-wing politics are for them a business, or so they think. In truth, they are each in their way driven by the contingency of pathological family dynamics. \u201cHurt people hurt people,\u201d is how <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2023\/05\/26\/arts\/television\/succession-finale.html\">one reviewer aptly summarized <\/a>the drama\u2019s not entirely satisfying takeaway, as it leaves us, no longer laughing, on the doorstep of fascism.<\/p>\n<p>That might be uncharitable. And <em>Succession<\/em> might be said self-consciously to ask, rather than preemptively conclude, how fully we can or should separate the Roys from the politics they endorse\u2014in their collective actions rather than in their hearts. But the drama is at its most contradictory when answering that question. On the one hand, it enjoins us to understand and feel, say, for the irredeemably broken siblings. But on the other, it reveals (in a not-entirely critical way) the unthought, practical class affinities that collectively bind the otherwise well-intentioned to reactionary causes that they would outwardly disown.<\/p>\n<p>Indeed, we might find ourselves at drama\u2019s end unable to escape a suspicion that the Roys\u2019 flirtation with fascism cannot be so easily explained away\u2014and that, in watching this program, we have been flirting with fascism ourselves.<\/p>\n<h4>A Brief History of Prestige TV Republicans<\/h4>\n<p class=\"nonindented\">One way to show how <em>Succession<\/em> exemplifies prestige TV\u2019s problems as a whole is to note just how many prestige protagonists throw in with jackbooted thugs. On <em>Breaking Bad<\/em>, <em>The Plot Against America<\/em>, <em>Westworld<\/em>,<em> Peaky Blinders<\/em>, and <em>The Man in the High Castle<\/em>, for example, leads work with Nazis and neo-Nazis, furthering their aims even when seeming to hate them.<sup id=\"ref-3\"><a href=\"#fn-3\" class=\"legacy-ref\">3<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>But self-declared Nazis are not essential in prestige TV\u2019s romance with the right. In the last season of <em>The Sopranos<\/em>, A.J. explains to Tony that he hopes upon returning from Afghanistan to fly helicopters for Donald Trump. The offhand remark has since seemed prescient, for although <em>The Sopranos<\/em> appeared at the end of the Clinton administration and later struck many as a fittingly dark expression of George W. Bush\u2019s 9\/11 presidency, still later it seemed to anticipate Trump\u2019s. Even as pundits called out Trump\u2019s mafioso behavior, critics noted he and Soprano were each an \u201cunsettled white man raging against the erosion of his power,\u201d as <a href=\"https:\/\/www.vanityfair.com\/hollywood\/2016\/06\/donald-trump-tony-soprano\">Brett Martin put it<\/a> in a <em>Vanity Fair<\/em> article titled \u201cHow Tony Soprano Paved the Way for Donald Trump.\u201d And as the Trump presidency drew to a close, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.politico.com\/news\/magazine\/2021\/01\/16\/donald-trump-post-presidency-television-459771\">Joanna Weiss noted<\/a> in <em>Politico<\/em>, \u201cThese past five years\u201d were like \u201ca prestige cable drama, the kind built around a powerful antihero\u201d \u201csimmering with rage.\u201d Viewers binged Trump as they had these dramas: his \u201cfiercest hate-watchers and biggest fans followed his moves and tweets the way addicted viewers do: incapable of looking away, driven to rehash and recount every sordid moment.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIncapable of looking away\u201d: that is axial to prestige viewership, and I\u2019ll return to it. First, I\u2019d note just how sustained prestige TV\u2019s flirtation with Trump country has been. On <em>Mad Men<\/em>, Don Draper votes for Richard Nixon over John F. Kennedy. That may have meaningfully registered on which side of the aisle prestige antiheroes would tend to line up. But it nevertheless gestured to a version of the Republican Party that, by the drama\u2019s 2007 airing, no longer really mattered. <em>Big Love<\/em>\u2019s odyssey through Mormon fundamentalism and Bill Henrickson\u2019s decision to run for Utah State Senate as a Republican get us closer. So too do dramas that turn sympathetically to hinterland incorrigibles, whom urban progressives might otherwise disdain. <em>Sons of Anarchy<\/em> explores rural California biker gangs. <em>Justified<\/em> takes viewers to Kentucky coal country. <em>Ozark<\/em> is even more revealing: this allegory of Bill and Hillary Clinton deposits two Chicago liberals in Arkansas, where they become embroiled in a right-wing conspiracy to install voting machines that will disenfranchise Democratic constituencies.<sup id=\"ref-4\"><a href=\"#fn-4\" class=\"legacy-ref\">4<\/a><\/sup> They resist that plot and learn to rely on local ne\u2019er-do-wells, but in doing so they stand revealed in their own murderous self-interest. Then there are <em>Breaking Bad<\/em> and <em>Better Call Saul<\/em>, master classes in the suppurating resentments that secretly bind entitled professional elites to white nationalists. Walter White and Saul Goodman don\u2019t think in openly political terms, but they are prototypical Trump voters. Fueled by a brash and anarchic populism, they are convinced they have been wronged by establishment actors. In White\u2019s case, that aggrieved posture assumes unavoidable racial overtones; Walter\u2019s entitlement, the drama implies, is inseparable from his whiteness. In both cases, the protagonists proudly reject the moral pieties and aesthetic sensibilities of an ostensibly dominant social order from which they feel they have been unjustly excluded.<\/p>\n<p><em>Succession<\/em> traces that populism back to its media wellsprings: Murdoch\u2019s global empire, and Fox News specifically, which has shaped Anglo-American reaction as no other news outlet ever has. One tendency in responding to the drama has been to overstress the alienating effects of the Roys\u2019 wealth, arguing that we can\u2019t possibly identify with the family because of its obscene fortune. Indeed, it\u2019s tempting to say their wealth makes bitter populists of us all; longing for riches and access we know we will never enjoy, we watch as conspiracy theorists only dimly discerning History\u2019s real engine. But in fact, it matters fundamentally that Logan, like White and Goodman, thinks himself a blue-collar counterpuncher, striking back at pretentious establishment values from below. The drama\u2019s appeal\u2014and prestige TV\u2019s appeal generally\u2014derives in no small part from the audience access that posture allows.<\/p>\n<p>The same might be said of the corporate family melodrama to which <em>Succession<\/em> is most indebted: <em>Dallas<\/em>. J. R. modeled a new class order as it emerged from the wholesale financialization of Anglo-American capitalism in the 1980s. And if J. R. expressed long-standing cultural and regional antipathies between South and North, oil and Wall Street money, he also expressed the neoliberal ascendence of quantity over quality, in which elite caste status came to depend more on how much money one had than on the refinement one displayed spending it.<\/p>\n<p>These two features were of course related: Reagan\u2019s election signaled the arrival of a Republican Party steeped in the legacy of Barry Goldwater and increasingly hostile to cultured elites. In the 1980s, as David Harvey notes, a new ownership class detached itself from the traditional markers of inherited wealth\u2014taste, cultivation, breeding\u2014and, above all, anything that signified English gentility.<sup id=\"ref-5\"><a href=\"#fn-5\" class=\"legacy-ref\">5<\/a><\/sup> Serialized in 1976 from an Arthur Hailey novel, <em>The Moneychangers<\/em> dramatized succession struggles within a national bank. But today that melodrama feels strikingly different from the corporate family melodramas that would emerge soon after: in 1976, it was still possible to pit the admirably liberal everyman banker (Kirk Douglas) against the repugnantly conservative and effetely Anglophilic one (Christopher Plummer). By the 1980s, that conservative archetype was on the way out as a pop culture signifier of right-wing politics.<\/p>\n<p>Rupert Murdoch was a key tribune of the emergent class order. His tabloid sensibility made it easy for plebes to identify with aristocrats, who were revealed in turn to be every bit as base (and fun) as the workers they blithely hired and fired. The balance tilted back to Ernest Hemingway, who is reported to have quipped, in response to F. Scott Fitzgerald\u2019s claim that the rich are different from you and me, \u201cYes, they have more money.\u201d If this wasn\u2019t an entirely new position (when had the rich <em>not<\/em> been scheming yahoos, just like us?) it was, on programs like <em>Dallas<\/em>, embraced with a novel glee.<\/p>\n<p>Indeed, the triumph of wealth quantity over wealth quality\u2014and the implied moral equivalence of rich and poor\u2014brings with it an exonerating origin story: corporate family melodramas often suggest that if the rich are evil, they were made so by capitalism. As Ellen Seiter noted decades ago, J. R. and Blake Carrington \u201chave only learned how to hurt others out of an instinct for survival. The abundance of villainy on <em>Dallas<\/em> and <em>Dynasty<\/em> suggests that they have made the only possible adjustment to the dog-eat-dog world of oil barons, they are merely doing what they have to in order to maintain their power.\u201d<sup id=\"ref-6\"><a href=\"#fn-6\" class=\"legacy-ref\">6<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>As the preceding might suggest, I am sympathetic, albeit in limited ways, to Robert Samuels\u2019s claim that liberals watch prestige TV as \u201cobsessional narcissists [who] seek to maintain a positive self-image by repressing their transgressive anti-social fantasies and projecting their ambivalent desires into the safe realm of fantasy and popular culture.\u201d But I disagree with his reductive aesthetic distinctions and class analysis\u2014if it can be called that. For Samuels, prestige TV creates \u201ca strict opposition between the elites and the masses\u201d that \u201conly intensifies the sense of upper-middle class liberal snobbery\u201d that drives these programs.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, as Samuels himself intermittently recognizes, prestige TV consistently romances and allies itself to a proudly brash, down-market antiestablishment populism. And rather than simply attribute that populism to \u201cthe masses,\u201d as Samuels does, prestige TV delights in finding such values in a resurgent right.<\/p>\n<p>That is why the Murdochs and Fox News lurk so meaningfully behind <em>Succession<\/em>\u2019s Roys. But Samuels seems not to understand how the Roys signify politically. He thinks that Logan, \u201cthe father and the owner of the corporation, presents the dying, old conservative order.\u201d And he thinks, more specifically, that Waystar Royco stands in for that order, because it is a family-controlled enterprise: \u201cSince he runs a family-owned business, [Logan] portrays mostly an older model of capitalism as his children seek to drag him into a new age of digital capital and shareholder finance.\u201d<sup id=\"ref-7\"><a href=\"#fn-7\" class=\"legacy-ref\">7<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>That is categorically incorrect: Waystar Royco does not signify an older capitalism because it is a family business. Instead\u2014like much of prestige TV generally\u2014<em>Succession<\/em> engages a thriving conservatism precisely <em>because <\/em>it is centered on a family business.<\/p>\n<h4>The Inability to Look Away<\/h4>\n<p class=\"nonindented\">David Chase and Vince Gilligan professed surprise that fans seemed actually to like the murderous male leads around which their dramas turned. That surprise risked disingenuity; <em>The Sopranos<\/em> and <em>Breaking Bad<\/em> succeed in part because of the precision with which their creators calibrated what attracted and repelled in Soprano and White respectively. Prestige antiheroes depend on that balance. It was reasonable to worry, as Chase and Gilligan did, that their monsters attracted more than they repelled; they were built, so to speak, to induce paralyzing ambivalence\u2014an inability to look away.<\/p>\n<p>But antiheroes are not \u201cfair and balanced\u201d in the way that news networks ideally are. Their function is less to solicit judgment than to win acceptance. TV watching is intimacy deepened over time. And on the whole, familiarity breeds not contempt but resigned embrace\u2014the sort of acceptance, that is, which we often extend to our families.<\/p>\n<p>Melodramas like <em>Succession<\/em> recast ostensibly historical traumas as timeless familial ones. The oedipal agon between fathers and sons. The sublimated sexual energies of fathers and daughters. In this spirit, the drama\u2019s title might be said to invoke two conflicting senses of the word <em>succession<\/em>. The first designates a leadership change. Who will follow Logan as head of Waystar Royco? Who will follow the Raisin as president? Thus does the drama activate recognizably political registers. But the second sense might simply mean the sequence of one damn thing after another, the emphasis falling not on who succeeds whom, for example, but on the fact of timeless repetition.<\/p>\n<p>That repetition is not always familial. Season 1 wraps up with a wedding, and Kendall seeming to drown. Season 3 wraps up with a wedding, and Kendall seeming to drown. The last season wraps with a corporate wedding, and Kendall contemplating water. These repetitions conspire with the familial inevitability in which the drama unabashedly trades. The Roy children are drawn like moths to their daddy\u2019s flame, wanting but failing to win his love and approval, replicating the same bruising family dynamics over and over. As children always have, over and over again. Nothing is learned and nothing is changed. But who can blame them? Logan was their dad.<\/p>\n<div class=\"wp-block-footnotes legacy-footnotes\"><ol><li id=\"fn-1\">Lionel Trilling, <em>The Liberal Imagination<\/em> (New York Review of Books, 2008), p. 301. <a href=\"#ref-1\" aria-label=\"Back to content\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn-2\">Quoted in <em>Quality TV: Contemporary American Television and Beyond<\/em>, edited by Janet McCabe and Kim Akass (I. B. Tauris, 2007), p. 214. <a href=\"#ref-2\" aria-label=\"Back to content\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn-3\">See also Meghan O\u2019Keefe, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/decider.com\/2020\/03\/24\/hunters-plot-against-america-alt-history-nazi-problem\/\">There Are Too Many Alt-History Nazi Stories on TV Right Now<\/a>.\u201d <a href=\"#ref-3\" aria-label=\"Back to content\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn-4\">Ryan Zickgraf, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/jacobin.com\/2022\/05\/ozark-arkansas-bill-hillary-clinton-scandals-drugs\">Was Ozark Actually About the Clintons?<\/a>\u201d, <em>Jacobin<\/em>, May 17, 2022. <a href=\"#ref-4\" aria-label=\"Back to content\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn-5\">David Harvey, <em>A Brief History of Neoliberalism <\/em>(Oxford University Press, 2005), p. 31. <a href=\"#ref-5\" aria-label=\"Back to content\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn-6\">Ellen Seiter, \u201cMen, Sex and Money in Recent Family Melodramas,\u201d <em>Journal of the University Film and Video Association<\/em>, vol. 35, no. 1 (Winter 1983), p. 25. <a href=\"#ref-6\" aria-label=\"Back to content\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn-7\">Robert Samuels, <em>Political Pathologies from The Sopranos to Succession: Prestige TV and the Contradictions of the \u201cLiberal\u201d Class<\/em> (Routledge, 2023), pp. 3, 5, 105. <a href=\"#ref-7\" aria-label=\"Back to content\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><\/ol><\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Prestige TV, which has a presumptively liberal audience, churns out a steady diet of illiberal fare. Shows like \u201cSuccession\u201d force the viewer to ask why. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":31,"featured_media":53413,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[2497],"tags":[616,92,650,1561,2294,1875],"pbpartner":[],"section":[1139],"pbseries":[],"class_list":["post-53400","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-reviews","tag-business","tag-family","tag-fascism","tag-hbo","tag-prestige-tv","tag-tv","section-tv"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>\u201cSuccession\u201d &amp; Prestige TV\u2019s Fascism Problem - Public Books<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Prestige TV, which has a presumptively liberal audience, churns out a steady diet of illiberal fare. 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