Julianna Margulies blasts TV executive “a–holes” for sexist TV programming

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I’m still not watching The Good Wife (original typo spelling: The Goose Wife – which would be an AMAZING pitch meeting). I know, everything I hear about it is awesome, great acting, great writing, totally solid cast, etc. I just don’t get into hour-long dramas until they’re put into syndication. If TNT or USA hasn’t run a marathon of your show, chances are that I’m not watching it. So I’ll be watching The Good Wife then, hopefully.

For now, though, the star of The Good Wife, Julianna Margulies, is being extremely vocal about what she perceives as a sexism amongst the male hierarchy of TV programmers. Yes, programmers. As in, the people who decided what timeslot a TV show should have. Julianna was pissed that ABC put Dana Delany’s new show in the same timeslot as The Good Wife. And Julianna blames the sexism of “a–holes” who program this junk:

Television, in many ways, its a copycat game. Make one successful police procedural, get five more. One single camera comedy set in a workplace begets another. And even in a world of ever-expanding cable dials and an exploding number of niche channels, facsimile still rules the day. And so it was at last week’s television upfronts, where network executives trotted out their fall series hopefuls. While, by and large, the presenters were middle aged men in suits, the products they were presenting had a distinctly feminine feel.

While women dominating television is nothing new — the tradition goes back to Lucille Ball, picked up by Mary Tyler Moore and carried through to the era of police procedural teammates, Carrie Bradshaw and the Desperate (and Real) Housewives, rare has it been that a woman anchors, front and center, an hourlong drama. Especially on network television. Enter Julianna Margulies, an Emmy winner for her ensemble work in “ER,” now breaking boundaries as the solo lead in the Peabody-winning series “The Good Wife.”

The role is notable not just for its leads gender, but the message it sends: the wife of a sex scandal-plagued politician, going back to her job as a lawyer, taking the lead in court and at home. Its impact and significance won the show a 2011 Peabody, and speaking to The Huffington Post, Margulies said that she feels a certain pride in blazing the trail for the new batch of women-led programming.

“If you look this year at the pilots that they picked up, I would say more than not, women are the leads in network television, and I think we were the catalysts for that,” she said. “And that makes me so happy.”

Still, she understands that there’s a lot of work to be done to change the perception and treatment of women stars, even when their shows are so successful. Citing the perceived women-led ratings battle between her show and “Body of Proof,’ Margulies made no secret of her disdain for current scheduling practices.

“I don’t understand executives that pit women against each other, the fact that they brought in ‘Body of Proof,’ Dana Delaney is a friend of mine, and the two of us were just rolling our eyes, it’s like, of course, you finally have two great female leads and you’re going to put us on against each other,” Margulies said. “You’re a–holes. You should have put them on against a different show to see where they go, and then in the end, it was split down the middle. It’s the feeling that you want to celebrate not de-calibrate.”

Perhaps the message had already been received; “The Good Wife” was moved by CBS to Sundays at 9 PM, a change that the star is embracing — and something she thanked CBS chief Les Moonves for making happen.

“I’m thrilled. At first I was taken aback because you always think a move is a bad sign. And then I started thinking about it — this was all in the span of like five minutes — and I was like wait, that was ‘The Sopranos’ spot. That’s like my favorite time to watch television,” she said. “Hold on a minute, this opens a whole door to the kinds of people that we want to attract to our show: a younger audience and an older audience, because a younger audience, young people can stay up at nine, and old people can stay up at nine… what it also does is, you can’t really categorize our show. We’re not a procedural, we’re not a serial, we’re a legal, political, human show, and any given week can be something else, and I think it allows us not to be pigeonholed.”

No matter the time slot, though, Margulies’ feels a great responsibility to keep the show at its height.

“I feel a tremendous responsibility to my crew, to my cast, to every guest star that comes on,” she said. “I feel responsible that everyone has a really wonderful experience and to do the best work possible, and to always know my lines and to always be on time and to bring a level to the show in terms of quality that other people will follow.”

[From The Huffington Post]

Unfortunately for me, this means that I’m still not going to watch it! Nine p.m. Sundays are when Masterpiece Theatre comes on! That’s the go-to timeslot for Miss Marple and Poirot and (RIP) Inspector Lynley. I even enjoyed that South Riding miniseries too! Sigh… I love Masterpiece.

Anyway, regarding Julianna’s comments… I like that she has the balls to say this stuff. I liked when she took NBC to task for pushing out many of their hour-long dramas too. She walks the line of being abrasive and rather unprofessional, but she consistently has a (good) point to make, and she stops short of actually being a balls-out unprofessional. And yeah, they should stop programming two shows, both with strong female leads, in the time slot. Next thing you know, The Goose Wife (starring… Christina Applegate?) will get the 9 p.m. Sunday timeslot at NBC.

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Photos courtesy of WENN.

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43 Responses to “Julianna Margulies blasts TV executive “a–holes” for sexist TV programming”

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  1. matt says:

    The Good Wife is my favourite show. The whole cast is solid and the plotlines are gripping. You are missing out Kaiser!

  2. Hazel says:

    I think she’s perfectly professional. Nothing abrasive here!

  3. Cy Fort says:

    what would a chick know?

  4. Flan says:

    Good for her.

    I think I will give this series a try, sounds like an interesting theme.

    @Cy Fort: On average more than you

  5. wtf? says:

    is that her husband? he’s yummy.
    i agree with everything she says about the programming.

  6. mamaT says:

    excellent show. second fav behind NCIS but that only because of my love of all things Mark Harmon.

  7. Stephie says:

    They have Body of Proof at 10p because of its content — I haven’t seen the show but it involves murder and autopsies — can anyone tell me if it’s gross like CSI?

    But she’s right, they didn’t have to put it opposite another female led show. I think the Good Wife is a great show (why did Cantubury Law tank tho? writing? story? she starred in that too) and after the last finale I wonder where they’re going to go from there.

  8. Sue says:

    I like both of those shows. DVR both of them. Not happy to hear The Good Wife is going to Sunday night, those shows are always late because of football games and the DVR does not get that concept. 🙁

  9. garvels says:

    She needs to get over it. It’s business. The competing network is competing for RATINGS and ADVERTISING DOLLARS, on this day at this time slot. So the competing network is scheduling a show with a strong lead actress to go against a similar type show like the Good wife. I think Julianna is a wonderful actress but she is off base on the network’s motivations.

  10. MuzzikLvr says:

    Sunday at 9:00? Now instead of airing opposite one woman, she’ll be airing opposite four desperate housewives.

  11. OXA says:

    I wish the networks would stop messing with the time slots of my fav shows.
    Tues nights 8 to 11 is CBS, used to be ABC on Sunday nights, I and so many others do not watch CBS on Sunday night so the Good Wife is gonna lose viewers like the rest of the shows they move around then they can cancell another excellent show.

  12. Birdix says:

    Isn’t Sunday at 9 when Desperate housewives is on?

  13. gobo says:

    I don’t think it’s unprofessional to voice her opinion on this matter.

  14. Sue says:

    garvels@ Julianna has been doing TV long enough she know her stuff and about network’s motivations.

  15. lucy2 says:

    I love the show and like JM and that she’s not afraid to speak her mind, but I’m not sure I agree with her on this. Esp. because she’s thrilled with her new timeslot, which puts it up against…Desperate Housewives, another female-driven show. Is it only a problem when her competitor is a friend?
    I think BOP was put where it was to launch a new show out of Dancing with the Stars, more so than to compete against another female lead show.
    I do agree that it’s great there are so many new shows coming with female leads. It’s about time networks caught up to cable.

  16. Jeff R says:

    “The Good Wife” is genius! Archie Panjabi, Julianna, Christine Baranski, Matt Czuchy and Alan Cummings rule. Aided and abetted by a host of great NYC actors. You’re missing out – watch it!
    @garvels: It’s my understanding that the airwaves technically belong to the people although they’re licensed out to various networks, etc., and the FCC is ostensibly safeguarding our interests. They’re obviously doing a great job, LOL! The execs and programmers Julianna criticizes are “assholes!” Have you noticed the absolute lack of cast and character diversity in most network programming?!? Latinos are the largest minority in the country and their representation is underwhelming at best. The same goes for Asians, the LGBT community, women of a certain age, etc. How do we say GLAAD, La Raza, etc?!? How many shows have non-stereotypical characters like Archie’s? Played by a person of color?!? Even shows like “Modern Family” and “Glee” fall into the trap of stereotypes. Sofia Vergara is a beautiful, talented and smart actress – it takes a smart person to play dumb successfully – and in real life she’s incredibly nice and VERY smart – but her character is a stereotypical Latina bimbo/firecracker. Her co-stars play gay are talented actors but their characters pander to dangerous stereotypes. The only non-stereotypical gay character on the networks WAS, IMO, Luke MacFarlane’s Scotty. Sorry, but the “asshole” execs and programmers do have a lot to answer for. It may be business but making a profit does not excuse their myriad of sins. According to your skewed logic, all safety regulations should be abandoned to maximize profits because it’s business. Julianna is very involved in the production of “The Good Wife” – she’s the one who insisted that it be filmed in NYC, cast with good actors, etc., and it’s a successful, critically lauded show. The proof is in the pudding. Unlike most of the shit promoted by the “assholes” that she’s criticizing. Her criticism is valid and on point. Best, Jeff R

  17. Lucy says:

    Julianna is talented, inteligent and very professional.

    I think it’s great she spoke up.

  18. MMF says:

    I tried watching the Good Wife. I found it boring, with no real story.
    Two times and I was done.

  19. guilty pleasures says:

    Love TGW, love Juliana. Seems like a strong woman of conviction. Didn’t she leave ER for a political reason? (maybe not, but it was odd, she was at the top of her game…)
    She is a wonderful actor, and intelligent. i also like her work ethic, like most actors-committed to her craft and respectful of everyone on set, unlike some of the non-talented divas out there!
    I didn’t realize she was so small, in that light coloured dress she seems like a ‘pocket person!’

  20. gee says:

    All she ever does is complain. I can’t stand her.

  21. HotLatino says:

    I get what she is saying but Body of Proof’s ratings aren’t high enough to threaten The Good Wife but now her show’s gonna compete with Desperate Housewives, prepare to be destroyed, because DH might not be the powerhouse it was in 2005 but it still gets high ratings.

  22. HotLatino says:

    @Jeff I agree with you completely about Latinos, I know, we’re hot as hell, LOL, but we can be other things too!

  23. bluhare says:

    I quit watching Good Wife when she and her boss started making googly eyes at each other. Before that I thought it was a really good show. Then that brought it down to Network Soap Opera and there’s a ton of those. So I quit.

  24. padiddle says:

    I wouldn’t want to move to a Sunday time slot and compete against the cable programming – I always thought Sunday night was HBO’s night, yes?

    Game of Thrones is on at 9, so I know where I’ll be 🙂

    And of course they pit similar shows against each other, they want you to chose their lady procedural, not the other networks. Networks are vying for supremacy, so in this case I don’t think that was an example of their lack of diversity (which I agree with her that network TV is seriously lacking)

  25. k says:

    Crap. I love Masterpiece Theatre and The Good Wife.

  26. original kate says:

    she looks amazing.

  27. Ally says:

    The Good Wife is excellent. My only quibble is that they set up interesting situations and then wimp out on them… e.g. It looked like Kalinda was toying with Alicia, cat-and-mouse style, but then they turned it into just another weepy female friendship. Also Alicia likes to think she’s such a cool, open mother, but she always shuts her kids down when they want hard questions answered — but she’s never confronted with the contradiction — the show just keeps pretending she’s an awesome parent.

    The cast is great, though, and the writers/producers create interesting stories within each episode (and I say this as a Law & Order alum who can’t be surprised much by legal dramas anymore) as well as long series arcs that keep you invested in the characters.

    Body of Proof is dreadful, though. The basic story and characters are super cheesy and lame, like Diagnosis Murder with slicker sets. This is then garishly contrasted with super graphic corpse stuff. Pass.

    Btw, not-fun fact from Harper’s: 8 out of the top 10 U.S. television shows feature corpses. The culture needs to get out of the morgue.

  28. garvels says:

    @Sue-Juliana is a wonderful actress and I am sure she does know her business..so what is her solution? Perhaps she would like to have government regulate programming to ensure shows highlighting women leads are not in competing time slots. I really don’t see the point in her complaint if she doesn’t have a suggestion or solution to remedy the situation.

  29. FakeJohnLocke says:

    But I don’t like her hair style. All pulled back and slicked down. She looks like Gomez Adams! I’d like to see some hard hitting discussion of that.

  30. 4Real says:

    L-O-V-E HER!

  31. Kim says:

    Her show is about a husband who cheated on her – yeah thats a really original role for a female. Really ground breaking Julia =(

  32. londonLady says:

    She rocks. Love her

  33. Mara says:

    I love her but I’m not sure I agree with her here. Networks make business decisions. That said, when they wrote The Good Wife a half a dozen times in the press release for Body of Proof it was clear what the intention was. I do admire her for having the nerve to say what she thinks though. She is so beautiful /shallow. I hadn’t seen the pics of her in the grey dress before.

  34. KateNonymous says:

    Ahem–Juliana, remember when ER started? And it was programmed directly opposite what, again?

    Oh, right. Chicago Hope.

    I’m not convinced this is an issue of sexism.

  35. Quercus says:

    Is she not aware that people have DVRs? Just curious… I haven’t had a TV for well over a year, so scheduling has zero impact on what I watch.

  36. kibbles says:

    Go Julianna! She’s amazing in The Good Wife and her husband is quite handsome.

  37. Kisha says:

    The Good Wife is my favourite show on tv. It is well-written, well acted, and the cast is superb. I agree with Julianna’s comments and find her to be very professional and tactful.

  38. ADS says:

    @garvels- I would hazard a guess that Julianna is more qualified on the subject she has spoken about than you.

  39. Cy Fort says:

    It’s all gone down hill after we let them vote.

  40. Sarah says:

    The show sounds pretty interesting!

  41. cy fort says:

    her mother did not train her very well.

  42. cy fort says:

    she may need a slap or two.

  43. cy fort says:

    leaping lanny poffo