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The First Five Weeks of Season 3 of The Sopranos

A "Hit" Soon To Follow?

Posted Thursday, March 15, 2001, at 12:17 PM ET

Who are these people?

Dear Glen and Joel,

So OK, we all agree that the fainting spells with panic attacks don't fit with any diagnostic reality. They never have, but hey, they sure are dramatic. Along with the logo "It's Not TV; It's HBO," comes "it's not real therapy; it's a dramatization," so we have to cut the show some slack. It's still the best theatrical representation going of our work. But what I am stumped about is the massive cultural shift from Season 1 to 3 regarding the code of silence. Remember in Season 1, knowledge of a made-man being in psychotherapy was sure-fire grounds for him getting whacked. Indeed, the entire dramatic arch of the first season began with the dire threat posed by Tony in Episode 1, wherein he repeatedly protested to Melfi that it was impossible for him to discuss his personal life. This terror spanned all the way to Episode 13, the season's finale, wherein his prophecy came true. Uncle Junior actually based his entitlement to having Tony clipped on Tony "spilling his beans to a shrink." Notably, Mama Livia gave her tacit support of the hit based on her own narcissistic injury over Tony maligning her to his shrink. So how are we to understand that in this week's episode, not only is the heat off Tony for seeing a shrink, but a Mafia Don of equal years of maturity as Uncle Junior and Mama Livia openly commends Tony's involvement in therapy? Sure, the stigma involving mental health treatment has radically changed in recent years, but this transformation within the outlaw culture of the mob is pretty shocking. Is acceptance of cunnilingus soon to follow? Any thoughts on the legitimacy of this change, or as I questioned before, are we as audience members being set up for a "hit" ourselves?

Phil

A "Hit" Soon To Follow?

Posted Thursday, March 15, 2001, at 12:17 PM ET
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This spring, Slate will ask Dr. Melfi's real-life counterparts to examine developments on The Sopranos. Glen O. Gabbard, M.D., is a professor of psychoanalysis at the Menninger Clinic and co-author of Psychiatry and the Cinema. Philip A. Ringstrom, Ph.D., Psy.D., is an analyst at the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles and a full-time practitioner. Joel Whitebook, a practicing analyst in New York, is on the faculty of the Columbia Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research. Margaret Crastnopol, Ph.D., is on the faculty of the Northwest Center for Psychoanalysis and a practicing psychologist/psychoanalyst in Seattle. Click here to comment on Sunday night's episode.
COMMENTS

Reader Comments From The Fray:



Margaret Crastnopol hit it right on the head: we are being too easy on Melfi (or at least the portrayal of Melfi). Fact is, Tony Soprano is an idiot and she's physically intimidated by him. She's also turned on by him--which is a revolting possibility. Thing is, thousands of women are, in fact, turned on by Tony and his merry band of thugs. Crastnopol's suggestion that the doctor-patient and doctor-doctor power positioning does little to counter stereotypes of weak women being pushed around by angry, stupid men--this is all correct, too. Actually, the whole program is misogynistic and ought not be watched by anyone....yet, I'm strangely attracted to it, bad writing/acting and all. Is it that I'm that desperate for entertainment or is this representative of some deep misogyny within? Doctors, tell me: what drives us (me) to watch this thing, even when I know it's negative TV? There are too many men and women out there watching this and thinking that this is an acceptable way of life. What's wrong with us? A diagnosis, please.

--Phil H.

(To reply, click here.)


To Phil H:

There is nothing wrong with "us." But there is a problem with your formulation of the problem. To enjoy this well-written and well-acted drama, we are not obligated to find that the fictional characters pursue "an acceptable way of life." On the contrary, I would guess that 99.9% of viewers strenuously object to the way Tony puts bread on the Sopranos' table.

We enjoy the bravura plot twists, the odd contrasts, the marvelous characterizations, and the Machiavellian tactics--and the occasionally absurd results of the characters' efforts. The monstrous is combined with the mundane in a striking and amusing way. Consider Tony strangling a mafia traitor as his beloved daughter is interviewed for admission to a genteel New England college.

Millions of people have read and admired Crime and Punishment. Do you suppose they accepted the grotesque reasoning that drove Dostoyevsky's main character? Must we approve of step-patricide to enjoy Hamlet?

Relax and enjoy the series. If you feel the urge to emulate the main characters, call your therapist (or your local sheriff).

--Gary

(To reply, click here.)


On the question of the Mafia don who approved of Tony's therapy: Remember that this was a leader of the Manhattan mob. Probably they are a little more sophisticated than the Jersey crowd. Remember, it was only Junior and Tony's assumption that seeing a shrink was taboo. The New York family was probably way ahead of them.

--Aurora Duane

(To reply, click here.)

(3/15)

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