What I heard is, they've taken the cable trope of "unlikable characters" too far. Gotta have someone you can root for, or what's the point of watching?
Even famously dire Deadwood started off with a few charming characters. Al was a charming rogue, and Wild Bill, Calamity Jane and that guy who plays Unser now on Sons of Anarchy were all relatable folks.
However, historical fiction (pre 1950) is so rare on TV, that I'm determined to give this one every chance to shape up. Sometimes cable shows need a bit of time to develop.
If this show were on broadcast or even a cable channel like TNT with more mainstream sensibilities, that is exactly what they'd do. Good for AMC in refusing to pander to the audience. A show with a former Confederate as the lead character should be offensive to some degree.
Even famously dire Deadwood started off with a few charming characters. Al was a charming rogue, and Wild Bill, Calamity Jane and that guy who plays Unser now on Sons of Anarchy were all relatable folks.
However, historical fiction (pre 1950) is so rare on TV, that I'm determined to give this one every chance to shape up. Sometimes cable shows need a bit of time to develop.
That actually lays to rest my primary fear, which is that the characters would be presented as having anachronistic attitudes in order not to offend and drive away the audience. Imagine if they did they opposite, portraying the former Confederate lead character as a good guy who didn't have a racist bone in his body, was fighting for the Confederacy because it represented freedom (the war had "nothing to do with slavery," dontchaknow?) and instantly becoming bffs with the former slave character. Blech.“Wheels” is one of the least politically correct series on American TV. The native Americans are introduced as perfectly despicable bloodthirsty savages, the term “nigger” finds its way into a lot of dialogue, and there’s even a curse word in the show’s title.
If this show were on broadcast or even a cable channel like TNT with more mainstream sensibilities, that is exactly what they'd do. Good for AMC in refusing to pander to the audience. A show with a former Confederate as the lead character should be offensive to some degree.