Proposal: Follow up Jersey Shore with a reality show on Massholes

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Slate thinks it's a good idea.

SPOILER ALERT - lots of potentially offensive stereotypes here:

http://www.slate.com/id/2242202/

How Can MTV Follow Up Jersey Shore? Massholes.
By Jessica Grose
Posted Thursday, Jan. 21, 2010, at 12:24 PM ET

The final episode of the reality show Jersey Shore, which followed eight self-proclaimed young "Guidos" for a summer, airs tonight. The show has been a massive success, scoring record-breaking ratings for MTV and generating a frenzied stream of tweets, blog posts, and YouTube videos. Surely MTV will want to repeat the cultural phenomenon, and yet the particular magic of the Jersey Shore is impossible to recreate. MTV cannot bring this cast back for a second season; they've already been spoiled by their fame. Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi is doing the weather for a local New York TV station in between appearances at bars with names like Tequila Ranch. She will never again do another back handspring at the club out of natural exuberance?she will be doing it because she knows the viewing audience wants her to. And if the network attempts to bring another group of Guidos to a seedy house in Seaside, N.J., they will surely be sad imitations of the originals. The Situation is sui generis.

MTV needs a new tribe to study. Lucky for them, there's a group of feisty young people just a few hundred miles north on the Atlantic coast. They're called Massholes. Though there is some disagreement about what, exactly, constitutes a Masshole, there are several characteristics present in all definitions. A Masshole is a resident of Massachusetts?though sometimes Rhode Island, New Hampshire, or Maine?who possesses a nearly carnal love for the Red Sox, Patriots, Celtics, and Bruins; operates motor vehicles in an aggressive fashion; drinks Sam Adams; and overuses the adjective wicked.

Massholes can be found summering in many sandy New England locales, including Revere Beach (outside Boston), Narragansett Beach (in Rhode Island), and Weirs Beach (on New Hampshire's Lake Winnipesaukee). But for our purposes, the proposed series will be based in West Dennis, Mass., an old Masshole stomping ground on Cape Cod. (On the B.S. Report podcast last month, ESPN's Bill Simmons suggested a Jersey Shore spin-off set on the North Shore of Boston. But why set the show on the Commonwealth's second most famous cape?)

An undying love for Jonathan Papelbon and a knack for navigating rotaries may not seem like enough to unite a group of people, but it's important to remember that the concept of "Guido," as put forth by Jersey Shore, is not much more elaborate. Though it originated as a derogatory term for Italians, Guido, as defined by the show, is not just about ethnic identity?Jenny "Jwoww" Farley appears to be part Irish. It's more about a particular lifestyle that involves a lot of tanning, clubbing, and hair product. As Snooki explained to talk show hostess Wendi Williams, "Guidos and Guidettes are good-looking people that like to make a scene, like to be center of attention, and like to take care of themselves. ? It's kind of a compliment."

Like Guidos, Massholes have reclaimed a term that was coined as a derisive epithet. And like Guidos, they're already a beloved pop-cultural punching bag?think "Mad Men with Massholes" and the recurring SNL "Boston Teens" sketch. The term is deeply entrenched in the lexicon. Angry Democrats have blamed the election of Scott Brown on Massholes who only voted for him because he was supported by Red Sox hero Curt Schilling.

It's true that Massholes are a more diverse subculture than Guidos, but that would only make a series about them more compelling. There are two main Masshole strands: Kennedy-lite types, often from the North Shore or Boston's wealthy Metro West area, who go to small New England liberal arts colleges (Bowdoin, Colby, Dartmouth) and wear lots of khaki; and more blue-collar types, often from South Boston or one of the commonwealth's harder-knock-cities (Everett, New Bedford), who share a hairdo: a weathered Sox cap in the warmer months, a fleece-lined Pats hat in the winter. These two sorts of Massholes will probably not get along particularly well. The latter will find the former condescending, just like in that scene in Good Will Hunting in which Matt Damon's character gets in a fight with that snotty dude at the Harvard bar. Except in Massholes, the warring factions will mend their ways by the end of the each episode, hard feelings salved by a quick trip to the nearest beach bar, where they will find common cause, chanting "Yankees suck" as they watch the latest from the Fens on NESN.

And what will the individual castmates look like? What will their slightly incomprehensible nicknames be? Massholes are not just an economically and educationally diverse bunch. They're also more ethnically varied than Guidos: There are Jews, Irishmen, WASPs, Italians, and Portuguese who will happily cut you off on the Bourne Bridge and then give you the finger. (Again, this simmering diversity only promises greater, crazier entertainment.) Below are some broad sketches for a few Masshole hopefuls, based on the bios for the Jersey Shore cast-mates on MTV's Web site. Slate readers should add their own cast member nominees in "The Fray," as this list is surely incomplete.

Robert "Fitzy" Fitzpatrick, 24, Boston
Fitzy says he hates drama, but it always seems to follow him wherever he goes. This amateur hockey player (most recently, he's been holding down a spot on the checking line of the AHL's Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins) just wants to have fun this summer. But if love intervenes, Fitzy might have to choose between his love of hockey and his love of one special Massholina. Likes: his Boston Whaler, his beat-up Hartford Whalers hat. Dislikes: A-Rod.

Sarah "Animal" Conti, 21, Worcester, Mass.
Sarah never goes anywhere without her No. 12 Tom Brady Jersey or her trademark hairdo: a slicked-back ponytail with lots of bobby pins. Her girls back home nicknamed her "Animal," because when her hair is down, she looks like the eponymous muppet. Also because she drinks like a bear. These are qualities that Fitzy finds hard to resist.

Theodore "Weasel" Taft, 22, Marblehead, Mass.
This college senior wants one last summer of fun before he graduates from Dartmouth and starts his job in sales at his family's sailboat company. He just wants to stay out of trouble for two months, but he has a history of being disqualified from regattas for unsportsmanlike conduct. He has one rule: "Don't fall in love at the Cape."

Aviva "Diva" Goldsmith, 20, Brookline, Mass.
Aviva works at her mother's nail salon by day, but by night her inner diva comes out. She's looking for that special guy in her life, but she's not willing to settle. Diva spends most weekend nights cruising for a husband at the bar across the street from Tufts' Dental School. She is a reality TV veteran, once appearing on an episode of MTV's True Life: I'm Getting Breast Implants.

Joe "Hot Rod" Tavares, 32, West Dennis, Mass.
The elder statesman of the crew and also the only local, Hot Rod's life is one endless summer share. He's the peacekeeper and the biggest sports fan: He has full-torso tattoo of a Red Sox jersey, as well as a second tattoo in his nether regions that says "10/27/2004 World Champions." During football season, Hot Rod is a groundskeeper at Gillette Stadium and keeps a piece of sacred sod under his pillow for good luck. He touched Tom Brady's hair one time.

DJ Pauly D., 28, Johnston, R.I.
For the die-hard Jersey Shore fan who will surely be crushed when the original goes off the air, Massholes should provide some continuity. Who better than the pointy-haired Rhode Island native Pauly D.? He will spin at whatever cheesy club the Masshole housemates go to and occasionally "creep" on Aviva. As fans of Jersey Shore know, he has a history of hearting Jewish girls, and has a T-shirt to prove it.

What, no diehard Cambridge/JP hippie character?
 
Wow, I guess Dartmouth shrank.

I'd rather see a reality show set in Boston/Cambridge. Oh, wait. Didn't MTV do something like that 20 years ago?
 
The Marblehead character is a little bit off. He's not going into sales at his parent's sailboat company, he's going into politics, law, or economics. And a big part has to be the college sailing and the partying that entails. Other than that, they're pretty accurate. Make sure he's always wearing pastels and he's always looking for an activity that he didn't get to enjoy on the sheltered peninsula.
 
He doesn't have to be from Southie, but, yes, a homophobic character who (spoiler alert!) ends up hooking up with another guy during the final episode.

Ah, memories of Northeastern.
 
The only measure of success for a show like this is the number of drunken brawls. MTV would need to think carefully about the volatility level of the cast members, as well as the probability of jerkoff New Yorkers wandering onto each prospective locale.

Also, it would be fascinating to me if they had one of those truly hardcore preppies from Connecticut (like an 18-20 year old) - that might help stir up some real intraregional badblood among the cast. He and the Marblehead kid could try to out prep each other.
 
He doesn't have to be from Southie, but, yes, a homophobic character who (spoiler alert!) ends up hooking up with another guy during the final episode...

Yes! And they rent a large sailboat and sail into the sunrise across Massachusetts Bay toward a rendevous with the Provincetown Town Clerk to pick up a marriage license! Perhaps in the closing credits a scene on the steps of the Episcopal Church there with rice being thrown.

(Perhaps the concept is too old fashioned. A hook up doesn't have to end in marriage.)
 
Would this sort of television programming be humorous (or socially acceptable) if it highlighted a the lives of Black or Latino kids living in Detroit or Chicago?
 
^^Considering the huge socio- and economic gap between the people in those groups who were born brown vs the people who have chosen to paint themselves orange, I'm not sure it is a fair comparison.

We can make fun of people people who have made stupid choices that have led them to live terrible lives, but not so much people who were born into terrible lives and then make stupid choices because of it.
 
Or actually are a racial minority. Massholes and Guidos aren't races, really. Guido doesn't really refer to Italian Immigrants anymore. It's more of a sociological classification, that wouldn't offend anyone. Making a show about a specific race of people living in a certain area certainly would offend people. But a show poking fun at a group of people united by region and other characteristics is unlikely to offend very many people.

And hey, everyone knows that TV vulgarity sells big.
 
I know that the comparison I make is a bit absurd. I was trying to draw out a response. Could we do it with affluent Jewish kids? Or Goths?

Our cultural appetite for the trainwreck is really deadening. I've no interest for most television these days. I'd rather watch Dick Cheney get a colonoscopy.
 
A bit offtrack: did anyone see 30 Rock tonight? References to Chet Curtis and Marina Bay. "They're all named Sean and they're mean". Wow.
 
Harvard sq pit rat, JP hipster, MIT nerd (of stereotyped ethnicity of course) - any room on the show for them too? Or too generic these days?
 
Could we do it with affluent Jewish kids? Or Goths?

I'm surprised it hasn't happened yet. Of course, in regards to the former there is this.

A friend of mine once suggested Who Wants To Build A Pyramid?. :D

Personally, I don't understand the appeal of these shows at all. But I have strange taste in entrainment.

As for your orginal suggestion, there might not be a TV show yet, but you can always take the $65 bus tour.

And, Ron, Yeah, I knew about that show. This stuff can be educational if done right.
 
Confession. I have never watched a reality TV show, although the commercials make them look very jolly. Same for American Idol. Seinfeld too.
 
I guess things like Dirty Jobs, Mythbusters, History's Mysteries, This Old House, etc are technically 'reality shows', so in that regard I do watch them. But I tend to avoid anything with a competition element or forced living arrangements.
 
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Mythbusters is good. I like Lock and Load, Deep Sea Detectives, Meteorite Men (sp?), Survivor Man, a bunch of cartoons (although I think the Simpsons is past its sell by date), Craig Ferguson. The Indian movies on AZN are good when you are wasted.
 
I have never watched a reality TV show, although the commercials make them look very jolly.

It was all predicted by one of my heroes, Paddy Chayefsky. I'm sure you've seen this caustic little movie, Toby. They coulda called it Apocalypse TV.

A friend of mine once suggested Who Wants To Build A Pyramid?.

Mr. Madoff Goes to the Penitentiary?

Personally, I don't understand the appeal of these shows at all.

It's a perfect storm of network suits value-engineering the writer and actor out of programming (see Michael Tolkin's novel, The Player [or Robert Altman's film] for details) and a demoralized audience, looking for a crumb of moral superiority between the sofa cushions.

How many folks realize that what we now call 'reality TV' started 40 years ago on PBS ?

I recall seeing some of this in the one psychology class I took in college. Trenchant stuff. Hope it turns up on NetFlix.
 

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