"Why didn't they just have the characters be closer to the actors' age? How does that impact the story? It's not like it's set in high school."
I agree. I just started watching this show out of curiosity while browsing Hulu (because I began reflecting on its wild but brief/fleeting popularity back in the 90s including the 'dancing baby' weirdness). When Ally said she was 27 in one episode I did find that rather jarring. Calista Flockhart may have not been much older than that, but as an actress over 30 there was no reason she couldn't be portraying her own age in a show whose premise did NOT necessitate making her younger. The show's premise in fact, concerns a woman who while successful in her law career, is rather 'worn down' by life and haunted by her biological clock and failure to fulfill her dreams of a big family. Uh, doesn't that sound like someone closer to 37? What would make an evidently intelligent woman think it realistic to have finished building her career AND her big nuclear family less than a decade out of high school? No one ever told her there are only so many hours in the day?
Fact is, career-hyperfocused women throughout their 20s tend to be so consumed in a life of grinding and 'climbing the ladder' that babies (let alone DANCING ones) are rarely at the front of their minds. It would be rather illogical to be fretting about 27 being 'too late' when you CHOSE to put your career first. Still, this understandably starts to change after these women reach their 30s and 1) they are feeling in a more secure place to settle down 2) the countdown on their unused eggs becomes hard to continue ignoring. While Ally's just a TV character, she seems to be one who pursued the classic feminist career path while thinking that classic traditional motherhood was just as easily within reach. This would indicate that she is unbelievably naive, and doesn't comprehend the importance of time, sacrifice and patience in building a life...not to mention the hard work that 'having it all' will ALSO take to continue maintaining.
Was Ally written to be simply THAT clueless in her understanding of life? Or was she maybe written as say, an illustration of how second wave feminism's promises to women could be horribly misleading enough to turn them into confused messes?
Hmm.
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