I mean, isn't the premise of Buffy the Vampire Slayer somewhat ugly and dealing with base subjects? It's a program about a young woman who is coerced by a cabal of old men into going out every night to murder re-animated corpses that lust for blood.
But it's set in a beautiful looking location, has likeable, interesting characters, many of whom I can relate to, humour, hope, adventure, clever dialogue, vampires and other magical creatures, drama...
Those are the things that make a work of fiction palatable to me.
Sorry that I was a bit flippant towards your message, I think it was mostly because of your examples (ugly mobster show, ugly show about some a-hole in the 50?60?). As I said I think there is objective quality in writing.
To keep it with genre shows...there is clear difference between a clever show like Buffy and superficial drivel like Charmed.
... I honestly didn't mean to write an essay about the gangster genre, but hopefully you can get a sense now of what it is people see in a story about a mobster.
it's alright, it was interesting to read. And I understand where you are coming from. I also enjoy stories about many of the themes you listed.
Thing is I just can't bring myself to enjoy or care about things mobsters or shows that unappealing to look at. I can't relate to Tony Soprano. And while I found some interest in Michael Corleone's story (that was the son int he first godfather movie right who was kind of forced into taking over the "family business", right? It's been over a decade since I saw that movie...) I would have enjoyed it a lot more if the setting had been different.
Without wanting to stereotype now, I also find it possible that Gangster/Mobster/Mafia fiction is a genre that with it's trappings and some of the themes it likes to explore might statistically appeal especially to heterosexual men, and I'm not one.
Like, I enjoyed Game of Thrones before the seasonal rot, it had a lot of ugly themes, but it wrapped them into a parcel that made it palatable to me.
And I stand by the statement that the Last Unicorn explores a lot of dark and bleak topics.
Bottom-line, I don't mind dark themes or exploration of the horror/brutality/pain of human existence. But I don't enjoy stories that take place in a setting that is as unappealing (to me at least) as the world of organized crime.