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This is an archive article published on September 7, 2008

Some like it rich

On TV, teens have planes, go places and don8217;t tell their parents because it8217;s no big deal

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In the past 18 years the rich have gotten richer, income inequality has widened and the middle class has grown ever smaller and more squeezed.
And that8217;s just the teenagers. The new incarnation of Beverly Hills 90210 made its splashy two-hour debut last week adjusted for inflation. As in Gossip Girl and Privileged, the conceit of 90210 isn8217;t fish out of water so much as fish moving into an even bigger swimming pool.

On the first season of Beverly Hills 90210, in 1990, an average mid-western family, the Walshes, moved to California from Minnesota, and the kids had to confront8212;and assimilate8212;Beverly Hills privilege and snobbery.

The 2.0 versions of the 90210 family, the Wilsons, come from Kansas, but they are hardly outsiders. The father, Harry, is the son of a wealthy, hard-tippling former actress, Tabitha. He is a prodigal Beverly Hills prince who returns to his old high school as the new principal and moves right back into the family mansion, a Renaissance-style villa.

The wealthy on television are now really, really wealthy, and anyone who doesn8217;t have a beach house and a butler might as well be on welfare. When the Wilsons8217; teenage daughter Annie is asked out by a handsome schoolmate, she is dazzled not by his sports car, but by the private jet he uses to whisk her to an after-school date in San Francisco. 8220;That8217;s what kids here do,8221; Annie tells her mother. 8220;They have planes. And they go places, and they don8217;t tell their parents because it8217;s no big deal.8221;

It8217;s quite a change from the days when the most notable young people on television belonged to a comfortable middle class. After the Reagan revolution restored Gilded Age values, plutocratic wealth became fashionable on prime-time soaps like Dynasty.

It could be that adolescents simply do not want to identify with ordinary folk. Some economists argue that many lower-income Americans vote against their own financial interests8212;opposing tax increases on the wealthy or a national health-insurance plan8212;because they identify with people who have more money and hope that some day they too will reach those lofty tax brackets.
Teenagers are known for having eating disorders. Increasingly some seem to suffer from income dysmorphia. Sex and beauty could also be to blame; sex sells, but it is oversold on prime-time television. Money has more elusive allure.
_ALESSANDRA STANLEY, NYT

 

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