NEW YORK, NY.- The Jewish Museum is presenting Television and Beyond: Workplace Encounters from July 12, 2019 to March 20, 2020, featuring a selection of television clips exploring interactions in the workplace from classics such as The West Wing and contemporary programs like Atlanta and The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. One of seven sections that make up the Jewish Museums third floor collection exhibition, Scenes from the Collection, Television and Beyond draws inspiration from the Museums National Jewish Archive of Broadcasting.
Workplace sitcoms and dramas have long been an important staple of television programming, creating situations where diverse people, including colleagues of different religions, races, and beliefs, can interact. These interactions can bring out discomfort such as when, for example, people are insensitive to others identities, or strive to be sensitive but are tone-deaf to the implications of their words, leading to situations where language becomes charged.
The clip reel on view in the exhibition includes such settings as Mad Mens Sterling Cooper agency and The West Wings White House. On Mad Men, Don Draper and his colleagues struggle to secure an account from a Jewish-owned department store. In The West Wing, a friend and colleague of White House Communications Director Toby Ziegler gets Tobys rabbi to incorporate the issue of capital punishment into a sermon, hoping to influence Toby to speak to the President about it.
The stereotype of the Jewish lawyer is addressed by Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Atlanta, and Curb Your Enthusiasm, while Entourage and BoJack Horseman present comic takes on the Hollywood agent, the latter through an animated Jewish turtle. The very use of the word Jew in the workplace is the subject of clips from Schitts Creek and Black-ish, reflecting anxiety about acceptable ways of discussing religious identity. Clips from The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel explore Miriam Midge Maisels reluctance and eventual embracing of her identity as part of her stand-up comic persona.in the hyper-masculine world of 1950s comedy clubs.
With more than 4,000 holdings, the National Jewish Archive of Broadcasting is the largest and most comprehensive body of broadcast materials on Jewish culture in the United States. Inspired by the archive, Scenes from the Collection includes selection of television clips which change twice a year and examine how Jews have been portrayed and portray themselves, and how mass media has addressed issues of religion, ethnicity, and diversity.