dreamer_easy (
dreamer_easy) wrote2006-04-28 06:55 pm
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Chav-tastic
Oh, now I get what the hell a "chav" is. They're the young people in Britain you're supposed to be afraid of and allowed to sneer at. It was a reference to "the national sport of chav-baiting" in a news item that tipped me off. The Australian equivalent at the mo would be young Lebanese-Australian men.
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Becks and Posh are the King and Queen of the Chavs. They and their fans aren't feared, and the media loves them - but they sure get sneered at a lot.
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Back in the day, it used to mean a guy who had a mullet and lived out in Henderson-way.
And it was mostly used as a joke.
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Not moral indignation so much as moral contempt, a portrayal of them as degenerates. A la Deliverance.
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When it moved southwards the word chav came to be used unisexually, amd implied that someone was aspiring to join the nouveau riche without having the skills or education to be middle class. Track suits were jazzed up and started to be bolstered by "bling" (cf. Ali G), and around Essex the chav culture's love of Burberry began to create a very distinct class.
Chavs these days are seen as poorly educated people who have the wealth of the middle classes but the social characteristics of the unemployed. Sample chavs are Michael Connelly ("King of the Chavs" - a lottery winner) and Daniella Westbrook (ex-Eastenders actress renowned for disintegrating her septum on cocaine and wearing lots of Burberry).
There's a reasonably detailed explanation at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chav but some of it's a little suspect.
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I have to absolutely agree with this. Disclaimer: I am a huge Seven/Ace fan. But... there doesn't seem to be anything about Rose or her environment that could be perceived as threatening. Even though the council estate setting is potentially very relevant in this current era of ASBOs, underclass conflict etc, there's no hint of these problems in the show at all. Quite interesting to compare the portrayal of Rose's harmonious council estate with that of Perivale, which was condemned as a no hope pit full of NF supporters and lost youth. I think both could be argued to be middle class representations though?
I'm quite uncomfortable with the use of the term 'chav, actually, even for comedy purposes. Perhaps that's just me.
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I dunno whether showing one of these council estate places and its inhabitants as fairly safe and normal is subversive or patronising. I wonder if at some point RTD will retool Damaged Goods for the new show? Probably leave out the scene where the gay-bashed man stitches up his own wound with needle and thread, though.
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Ah, fair enough.
I dunno whether showing one of these council estate places and its inhabitants as fairly safe and normal is subversive or patronising.
That's what I can't work out, either. I mean, in one way it's a positive model, and there are seven squillion children watching, so that's good, and it could be wonderfully subversive, but at the same time, there's a sort of 'look at these comedy poor people!' feel about it to me, especially with Jackie Tyler. Again, MHO. Jury's still out. It's like it's as political as the McCoy era, but angled somewhat differently. I'd be intrigued to see if Damaged Goods worked its way into the new series.
Oh on an entirely different subject, dunno if you're at all into funny little synchronicities, but in this week's Time Out (London) there's a special feature on Paris, and one of the people they've talked to about their favourite places in the city is a young African woman called Kadiatou. Tickled me, anyway.
Um, hope you don't mind if I friend you. I've been a big enough fan for long enough, I should really... :)
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The portrayals may have been somewhat lacking in authenticity, but two of the first Doctor's companions, to whit Dodo and Ben, were supposed to be present-day working-class people. Admittedly it would take the show until 1987 before that happened again (unless you count Benton), but it deserves points for early effort, at least.
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Later on, the programme wouldn't even make this effort, which I agree was a shame... and Ace on TV isn't a much more convincing working-class teenager than Dodo was, so they hadn't learned much in the interim either.
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I don't know anything about Australian society, I'm afraid, but I think that one difference between Lebanese-Australian men and chavs is not so much race, but nationality. The chavs are British, so they can't be talked about as not assimilating in "our" culture, as immigrants and refugees are. I think that's a major cause of the fury they inspire in people.
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Sister: Yeah. They're called bogans.
Descriptive? I guess if you were to call someone a chav, the aforementioned Vicky from Little Britain would be a great example. As would, it has to be said, Rose Tyler. And maybe her mother. Kerry Young off The Bill would probably qualify, too. (They don't necessarily have to be blonde, but the 'stereotype' often is.)
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Here, at least, it's not really a class thing - it's more upbringing, where you live, and what you've been exposed to, I guess. "Chav" seems to mean someone similar - willfully ignorant, lowest common denominator kids. Although only someone as snobby as Cassandra would think Rose was a "chav."
...or do I have no idea what I'm talking about?
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(This may have been pointed out already, but I'm not wading through the whole thread.)