James Walton

Watch some liars claim that youth and beauty don’t go together

Plus: the downfall of Bill Cosby

For a British audience the almost personal sense of betrayal that animates this American series about Bill Cosby might not make much sense. Credit: Mario Casilli/mptvimages/Courtesy of SHOWTIME 
issue 11 March 2023

Back in 1990, Grandpa from The Simpsons wrote a letter of protest to TV-makers. ‘I am disgusted with the way old people are depicted on television,’ he told them. ‘We are not all vibrant, fun-loving sex maniacs. Many of us are bitter, resentful individuals who remember the good old days.’

Thirty-three years on, it’s a protest that continues to fall on deaf ears, as we saw once again in the first part of Kathy Burke: Growing Up (Wednesday). The starting point was Kathy’s own 58th birthday, which had clearly come as rather a shock to her – and, given her take-no-nonsense (polite version) spikiness, you might have thought that the programme would dispense with the customary platitudes and wishful thinking in favour of something funnier and more candid. Instead, the result was just an admittedly swearier version of the usual reassuring message that getting old needn’t be an obstacle to anything.

This was the swearier version of the usual reassuring message that getting old needn’t be an obstacle to anything

The programme also confirmed the truth of the suitably elderly gag that there are three stages in life: youth, middle age and ‘you’re looking great’.

Comments

Join the debate for just $5 for 3 months

Be part of the conversation with other Spectator readers by getting your first three months for $5.

Already a subscriber? Log in