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Streaming Crack isn't Whack with 'Orange Is the New Black'

Jenji Kohan finally gets to do what she trickled into Weeds, whenever possible: a real lesbian portrayal on television. The Real L Word is no more "real" than The L Word - you know, those shows about heartless, confused, and deplorable lesbian femme characters who hook up for the sole pleasure of Showtime's male viewers. And then Orange Is the New Black came along, 50 years in the making. What is the only setting (at this time in 2013) that would work where one can feature what lesbians really look like? Prison. Then remove the lesbian sex for the male gaze. Throw in a handful of actresses that are, in fact, lesbians. Offer up Jason Biggs because he is a harmless hetero, nonthreatening in any way. Make the lesbian setting comedic, with truly good writing. Poof! Jenji Kohan has created a universally appealing television show which severely pushes boundaries including sexual orientation, gender, and race. And on Netflix, Kohan's Orange Is the New Black can do things to slash stereotypes, shock audiences, and educate the streaming-hungry masses. 

The story revolves around Piper Chapman (Taylor Schilling), a clueless blond WASP sentenced to 15 months in a federal prison because of a drug money smuggling crime she did a decade ago for her then girlfriend Alex (Laura Prepon). The show is based on the memoir of Piper Kerman, who wrote about her real experiences in prison. Orange has a colorful cast of characters who are all different in their own unique ways - a transgendered hair stylist, a lesbian drug dealer, a mother and daughter incarcerated together in unholy unison, etc. Each inmate's back story is explained through flashbacks, making them all multidimensional, rather than just a stereotype. Piper starts out as an orange, and slowly learns the ropes in prison, rightfully earning her beige twosie. So watch OITNB. It's kind of like NKOTB. You got the right stuff, Jenji.    

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