The Amy Poehler-produced âI Feel Badâ looks at the challenges facing working women â including in the writers room
Produced by Amy Poehler and Aseem Batra, âI Feel Badâ is a comedy that hopes to illuminate some of the struggles a working woman faces in attempting to âhave it allâ in balancing career, family and personal life.
Both women are TV comedy veterans, with Batra having worked on âScrubs,â âMarlonâ and âThe Cleveland Showâ and Poehler expanding upon her breakout roles on âSaturday Night Liveâ and âParks and Recreationâ to produce comedies like âBroad City.â And yet, in their presentation at the last day of the TCA summer press tour on Wednesday, one of the assembled journalists expressed semi-serious concern for the showâs male stars on the panel amid such a strong feminine perspective.
For the record:
2:25 p.m. Aug. 9, 2018For the record: An earlier version of this story mistakenly identified the main characterâs job on âI Feel Badâ as behind the scenes on a TV show. She works in the videogame industry.
âWhatâs great about this show is that itâs about Sarayu [Blueâs] character, but what you get to see, and what everyone can relate to, is that all these people are living with a certain kind of modern anxiety they feel bad about,â said Paul Adelstein, who plays Blueâs husband on the show.
âI think itâs fair, everyone looks like an idiot,â added Brian George, who portrays the father of Blueâs character.
Batra couldnât resist. âI think if we all work together,â she said playfully, reaching for her actorsâ hands, âwe can make sure men have their voice heard.â
Blueâs character works in the videogame industry. Within this setting, the creative team hopes to portray womenâs challenges in the workplace, and to do so with an honesty not often seen onscreen.
âThis is a lens,â Poehler said, âin which to tell a working womanâs story that I havenât quite seen before, which is this idea that whenever weâre doing âit all,â thereâs about two or three things on that list we feel like weâre giving 10% to. I think Leslie [Knope, of âParks and Recreationâ] would be a fan of the show.â
The showrunners also touted the diversity of their writerâs room, which helps tell the story of an interracial couple from a South Asian perspective. But Batra pointed out how much she appreciates a television climate where that doesnât have to be a focal point.
âWhat Iâm excited about is the normalization of a family that looks like this,â she said. âLook, if we make room for all kinds of color on TV, then people can tell stories in different ways. ... In 2018 you can have a family that looks like this without that being a thing.â
This being 2018, the show also drew scrutiny for an upcoming scene in which the main character asks her young subordinates if she is still âdoable,â a moment Batra said rose in part from her work experience.
âIâve been the only woman in writers rooms all the time, and thatâs how people talk, and the guys â if i tell you some of the things that men have said to me, itâs shocking,â she said as Poehler snickered.
âAnd in a way you get sucked up in that culture because they reject you unless you can be one of the guys, and I wish that in a 21-minute sitcom we could get into why that was,â she went on. âBut I just wanted to show a moment that was really real for me, and I think things are changing now, which is great.â
But she stressed the difficulty of that moment. âI had to cut up with the guys like that, and it doesnât feel good. But I promise you I wouldnât be sitting here if I went, âStop it. This is wrong, I donât like this.â They wouldâve kicked me out.â
Follow me over here @chrisbarton.
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