The 1990s was a golden age for television. From Twin Peaks to The
X-Files to The Larry Sanders, it was a decade where television grew up
and broke barriers that film was afraid to touch. It was the
culmination not only of the 20th century but the Millennium and there
was an air of closure and looming revolution. We were in the dawn of a
technological age of information and the dusk of a more spiritual and
simpler understanding of our selves. The 90s brought a post-modernist
and metaphysical color to the way we see and represent ourselves in
media and entertainment. Not all TV programming was this awakened,
adventurous and accepting of the future, but the children's network
Nickelodeon was a surprising home of many next-level shows that
appealed to adults and kids alike.
The Adventures of Pete was Nickelodeon's crown jewel and is comparable
to the best television shows in history.
What P&P offered was a unique worldview and satirical but highly
emotional tone that contextualized the transition from childhood to
adulthood by revolving around the straining bond between two twin-like
brothers who were only separated by their levels of maturity. This
central relationship reflected the unconscious drama that was effecting
the world (and still is) and united viewers of all ages. The show
captured a nostalgia and fear of aging that is universally felt and
only grows stronger as we reach death.
These serious themes of existentialism, alienation, paranoia, delusions
of grandeur and a quest for immortality played out in the lives of
suburban youths who found epic spiritual dramas in the most mundane and
absurd times and places. Yet viewers can relate to that massive
pressure and frustration with being a child, powerless and yet full of
potential. The brothers Pete were most often awakening to their place
in the universe and making peace with being small and human rather than
superheroes or godlike historical figures. The show was a great
examination of the frail human ego and all of its pitfalls and
triumphs. But it was so much more than a coming-of-age sitcom. It was
an almost mythological analogy of the human spirit told from with a
childlike innocence tempered by the brilliant temperament of its adult
creators.
The show lasted 3 short seasons and ended rather anticlimactically
before the quality could take a major dip. This only enhances the
simplistic poetry of the series as we never get to see the characters
age or learn anything of their adult fates. Their universe ends and
bleeds into our own. We take these characters, their stories and their
lessons with us, which should be the ultimate goal of storytelling but
is even more pronounced and delicately rendered in children's
storytelling. The overwhelming success of Pete & Pete is proved in the
sentimental reverence the show has amassed from an entire generation
that tuned in. Its highly unlikely another show will recapture or top
this one and so it will live on forever as the new classic that it is.
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