Ugly Betty <\/strong>is also potentially its greatest weakness. Mode\u2019s glamorous setting and outrageous style is a fresh and funny counterpoint to Betty\u2019s struggling family and her working class world in Queens. Her warm, genuine and caring character is wonderfully showcased against the cold, artificial and ultra-competitive world of Mode.<\/p>\nA show\u2019s tone is always a question of balance. Right now it seems that the balance is straying too far off the mark. Too high a premium seems to be placed on outrageous behavior and outlandish situations. When humor is based on situations, the situations have to continually get crazier to keep raising the stakes.<\/p>\n
As the show becomes more flamboyant and more camp the tone threatens to overshadow and overwhelm the show\u2019s sincerity and heart. Humor that is generated by extreme circumstances or bizarre situations doesn\u2019t dig deep. It settles for the easy laugh and, over time, can seem cartoonish.<\/p>\n
It is Betty the audience cares most about. Her appealing warmth, generosity and authenticity are the reasons the audience tunes in week after week. They want to know her better and are eager to see how it will all work out for her.<\/p>\n
The tone and style of the show is only useful if it makes Betty seem more \u201creal\u201d and makes her personal dilemmas feel more urgent. Betty needs to drive the show and not merely react to the outrageous goings-on.<\/p>\n
5. Amp Up Family Conflict<\/h2>\n
The comedy in the show should come from true conflict between the characters.. A huge opportunity is being missed in the Suarez household. Outside of a few brief confrontations, no one has any serious issues with each other. There are great potential battles to be fought in Queens.<\/p>\n
When Betty leaves her working class neighborhood and enters the glamorous world of her professional career, her family is proud of her. But they must also be keenly aware that she is leaving them behind in the most fundamental way. Betty will inevitably be changed by her experiences. Even in the most loving families this change causes feelings of inadequacy, loss, rejection, resentment and jealousy in those left behind.<\/p>\n
Changes in Betty should trigger changes in her family. What happens if Hilda, played by Ana Ortiz, or her son Justin, played by Mark Indelicato, steps up and takes Betty\u2019s place in the family? Betty will feel those same feelings of inadequacy rejection, loss, resentment and jealousy her family is experiencing. Betty\u2019s role in the family was always as a caregiver. What happens when the role passes to someone else\u2014because she isn\u2019t there to fill it? Who is Betty Suarez then?<\/p>\n
It is a mistake to make the Suarez family Betty\u2019s safe haven. It takes endless comedic possibilities off the table. Comedy comes from pain. (\u201cIf it don\u2019t hurt it ain\u2019t funny\u201d). If Betty is beleaguered on all sides it makes her situation much more painful and much funnier. Comedy makes characters more vulnerable. Betty is not at risk enough with her family.<\/p>\n
In general, acceptance comes much too easily in this family. The Suarez family is more tolerant and well adjusted than any family I\u2019ve ever met. The audience\u2019s families are much more difficult and dysfunctional. Comedy comes from conflict.<\/p>\n
Acceptance in real families comes hard and at a very high emotional price. People really have to struggle to accept things, people or situations they don\u2019t understand, didn\u2019t plan for or didn\u2019t want in the first place. The more the Suarez family struggles with acceptance issues between all members of the family the more painful and the funnier the story will be.<\/p>\n
6. Strengthen the Pull of Queens<\/h2>\n
Betty needs a strong love interest in Queens. She needs to meet a man who represents all the things she would miss if she leaves the neighborhood lifestyle behind. This love interest should be an appealing, warm-hearted and a hunky kind of guy. He should also be the kind of guy who would feel tremendously uncomfortable and completely out-of-place in her professional world.<\/p>\n
Arthur, played by Kevin Sussman, had the discomfort factor but he wasn\u2019t a strong enough pull on Betty\u2019s affections. He was geeky, jealous and unfaithful. Choosing her career and losing Arthur was never a heart-breakingly difficult choice for Betty.<\/p>\n
What would happen if Betty met and fell in love with another neighborhood guy, a wonderful salt of the earth kind of man cast in her father\u2019s mold? Losing a guy like that could be a heart-breakingly difficult choice. Such a man could represent a real threat to Betty\u2019s professional aspirations and could provide a strong argument to find less demanding work closer to home.<\/p>\n
Would Betty give up a wonderful loving marriage, children and a comfy Queens home of her own for a career at Mode? Would she try to have both? What happens if there is a crisis with Daniel and a crisis with the man she loved?<\/p>\n
These choices could provide an endless source of conflict and comedy. Right now there are no strong, compelling and believable counter-forces pulling Betty away from Mode and back toward Queens. Betty’s new possible love interest, Henry, played by Christopher Gorham, pulls Betty toward the world of Mode, not away from it.<\/p>\n
7. Make it Specific<\/h2>\n
The show seems to define the Suarez family generically as Latino. Very little is made of the fact that the family is Mexican-American. There are rich comedic possibilities to be mined in fully exploring the foibles and follies of that very particular identity. Why bland their background out?<\/p>\n
Why be generic when you can be specific? What makes Mexican Americans funny as opposed to what makes Cubans, Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, Colombians or Guatemalans funny? Why not exploit the rivalries, prejudices, reputations and stereotypes that exist between diverse Spanish speaking people? Great writing is about specificity. A great comedic opportunity is being missed here. Even better– It is one that is fresh to network television.<\/p>\n
8. Shore Up the Audience<\/h2>\n
Ugly Betty<\/strong> is a wonderful show that can easily reverse any potential downturn. The show can gracefully sidestep the mistakes that rattled Lost<\/strong> and Desperate Housewives<\/strong> second season ratings. What Ugly Betty <\/strong>needs to do is to fully explore the show\u2019s fundamental story questions, keep Betty front and center in any plot twist or story complication, make the tone secondary to the show\u2019s heart and fully mine all the natural conflict on both sides of Betty\u2019s world. Do that and the audience will keep coming back for more next season and beyond.<\/p>\nA very successful long-running Power of Love story was Everybody Loves Raymond<\/strong>. In that show, Ray also moved between two worlds. He was pulled between the world of his childhood family (and his mother\u2019s demands and expectations) and the world of his own adult family (and his wife\u2019s demands and expectations). Raymond was besieged on both sides for almost 10 years. The show was one of the most critically acclaimed sit-coms of its time.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"A Successful and Proven Format The Ugly Betty (Yo soy, Betty la Fea)\u00a0telenovela has translated successfully around the world and the recent American version garnered Golden Globe, People\u2019s Choice, and Writers Guild Awards for best new series as well as a best actress Golden Globe for America Ferrera. 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