By Jeremy Lott on 1.12.07 @ 12:07AM
Ed Begley Jr., playing himself, loves to tinker in his garage, and it drives the Missus crazy. So what if he's totally green!
Ed Begley Jr. had an image problem. Hollywood is lousy with
so-called activists, but he's a genuine back-to-the-land
environmentalist and something of a rigorist. That fact has led to
some mockery over the years. On one episode of The
Simpsons, the writers had him refusing to board a protest bus
to help save a grove of redwoods. Begley preferred to drive a
vehicle that "doesn't hurt Mother Earth," a go-cart powered
entirely by his "own sense of self-satisfaction."
Thus the new reality series Living with Ed,
airing Sunday nights on the HGTV network. It's billed as one of
those shows where opposites attract and then drive each other nuts.
The title comes from his wife Rachelle's exasperated challenge:
"You try living with Ed." If the first two episodes are a
reliable guide, the show is really an effort to sell viewers on a
vision of the world through Begley's green-tinted glasses.
The "set" is Begley's home in Studio City, in the San Fernando
Valley. It's a 1930s era house on a large lot. It's also the
subject of constant bickering between Begley and the Missus. He
admits that the place is a shack "by Hollywood standards." However,
most of the world would consider the place "a palace." His wife
tells us she'd rather just "tear the whole place down and start
over."
Rachelle's thumbs-down judgment isn't limited to the size of the
house. After grousing about the large organic garden that takes up
most of the front yard, she tells the cameraman, "Let's go inside.
It's too depressing." Inside, we learn she "cannot stand" the
compact fluorescent light bulbs or the track lighting. She also
hates that the shop takes up a large chunk of the garage, because
that means she has to park her car "on the street."
Then there's the electrical system. The roofs of the house and
garage are covered with solar panels that supply enough energy to
run the place. Excess juice is banked in a custom-built energy grid
in the garage that is drawn on at night. Begley has also rigged his
exercise bike to feed electricity into the system as he peddles.
Ten minutes every morning equals enough voltage to toast his
bread.
It's not that Begley needs the extra power to make toast. He
simply likes the idea of getting something else out of his morning
exercise. So of course Rachelle objects. "How long did it take you
to make that -- like four hours?" she asks. He replies, between
bites, "It tastes all the sweeter, knowing that I worked for it."
Unspoken addition: "...and knowing that it would drive you crazy,
Dear."
The couple's squabbling has made for fun viewing -- so far --
but it also serves a propagandistic purpose. Just as Republicans
are often said to have a woman problem, environmentalists
definitely have a man problem. For a feature story in the green
magazine Plenty
last year, Political Editor Richard Bradley acknowledged the
problem and suggested the green movement recast its message to
appeal to the testosterone-based community.
"What could be more classically masculine than wanting to
protect your family from external threats?" Bradley asked. Why, if
the environmental movement could sell the notion that "being
pro-environment is manly," he detected "enormous potential
for political bridge building."
Living with Ed presents Begley's environmentalism as
very much a guy thing, though not in the way Bradley envisioned.
His politics are conventionally green but the focus of the show
isn't politics. It's all about the struggle between a husband who
wants to putt around in his shop and garden and try out new
environmentally conscious toys; and his wife, "the commandant," who
objects to everything he does ("The man needs to be monitored at
all times!") and often gets quite dramatic about it ("I would have
thrown my body up against it!").
The effect is to make Begley seem reasonable, or at least no
more eccentric than most middle-aged guys who like to tinker. "I
can still give you a cool beverage and a warm shower, but I'm gonna
do it more efficiently," he explains. If that were all that his
environmentalism entailed then nobody, other than Rachelle, would
object.
topics:
Environment, Hollywood, Energy