'The
Morning Show' moves beyond #MeToo to COVID and
cancel culture
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[September 15, 2021]
By Lisa Richwine
LOS ANGELES
(Reuters) - "The Morning Show," the Apple TV+
series that tackled the #MeToo movement via the
lens of a fictional newscast in its first
season, returns this week and explores topics
from racism and homophobia to addiction and
cancel culture. |
The COVID-19 pandemic prompted
the show's creators to rework the story for the
second season, which begins streaming this
Friday. The emergence of the coronavirus became
a major subject, alongside other real-world
concerns.
Starring Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon,
"The Morning Show" looks at the lives of people
who work on a New York-based newscast and are
shaken by a male anchor's sexual misconduct and
executives' cover-up of bad behavior.
The new episodes pick up immediately after
anchors Bradley (Witherspoon) and Alex (Aniston)
exposed the network's misdeeds on live
television.
Now a reluctant feminist hero, Alex takes a
break to reflect and try to make peace with her
actions, Aniston said in an interview. But she
struggles to regroup.
"I'm not as unhinged as Alex in any way, shape
or form," Aniston said of her on-screen persona.
"But I've met many an Alex along the way in my
life, and I remember seeing them and thinking
'don't ever let me ever become that.'"
Alex analyzes her relationship with Mitch (Steve
Carell), her former co-host who resigned after
mistreating women and is weighing whether he can
rebuild his life.
Aniston said the show's writers scripted nuanced
conversations about sensitive issues and whether
anyone can return from being "canceled" by a
scandal.
"They really address the gray area," Aniston
said. "They allow the characters to say the
things that are said behind closed doors that
they wouldn't dare ever say out loud. And I
think it leads to really good conversations."
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Bradley finds herself leading
the morning newscast, but ratings are on the
decline and she is working to find her true
identity.
"She doesn't know where she fits," Witherspoon
said. "Does work define her? Does her upbringing
define her? I think it's pretty cool to have a
40-year-old woman being on this journey of self
discovery." The actress has
publicly advocated for equal treatment of women
and had served on an advisory board for Time's
Up, the group founded to fight sexual harassment
in the workplace.
Time's Up's CEO and members of its board of
directors recently resigned amid controversy
over the group's ties to politicians and
corporations. The advisory board was disbanded.
Witherspoon said she was "really encouraged"
that the steps would make way for new leadership
that can "continue to grow and strengthen the
organization."
"The most important thing is Time's Up has an
incredible mission at its center, to really
create equity and disrupt systems that created
discrimination and harassment," she said. "It's
imperative that it continues because women are
still faced with these issues every single day."
(Reporting by Lisa Richwine, Editing by Rosalba
O'Brien)
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