Am I Really Depressed or Am I Watching Too Much Lifetime?

By: Tim (Timothy) Pearce

Lifetime Television: the place to go when Iwant to fall into a deep depression or when my hormones are totally out of whack. I guess Lifetime won’t hire me to come up with their marketing slogans,but this is how I feel. This channel is not satisfied until every last teardrop in my body has burst through my eye sockets. And I’m not talking about a single glistening teardrop that rolls gently down my chubby cheek. No, I am talking hysterical, give-my-face-red-rashes-from-bawling-like-crazy tears.

I guess when it comes down to it, the waterworks are my fault. Since I work from home, my number one rule is that the TV does not go on until after 5 PM unless I want to play a little hooky and watch an old classic movie. Recently, I did play hooky and turned on the TV which happened to be on the Lifetime channel. I started to watch a movie that was already in progress, but still, I got engrossed in it, and it had one of my favorite Lifetime actors, Patty Duke.

Patty Duke is the quintessential mother in all the Lifetime flicks. For some reason, she always portrays the perfect, sweet, southern mom whose kid gets knocked off by a serial killer or spouse. The ensuing grief inspires her to turn into Mother Detective so that her child’s murderer can be brought to justice. And she does all this while taking care of an invalid mother, a philandering husband, and her infant grandchild, who is usually the offspring of the murder victim.

Get all that? Anyway, this Patty Duke movie had pretty much the same plot, and as I predicted, Patty caught the murderers and then gave this heart-wrenching speech which resulted in massive amounts of water erupting from my tear ducts. As I was convulsing in sobs, I was cursing myself for falling into the Lifetime trap. And while this movie was on, the promos for another film premiering kept playing, and the new movie contained the next most popular theme in Lifetime flicks– women in prison.
The upcoming flick was about Amanda Knox, a girl about my daughter’s age, who is locked in an Italian prison for killing her roommate. The mystery remains if she is the killer or not, but my mother mind began to panic, and I came up with a game plan and a list of lawyers who can handle foreign criminal cases in case my daughter found herself in the same predicament. Logically, I know that my daughter works for a company that is just 15 miles from home and she doesn’t have to travel for business so her chances of foreign imprisonment are slim at best, but if it happens on Lifetime, it can happen in real life, so it’s best to be prepared.
I have learned from the Lifetime channel that women wind up in prison for the most bizarre reasons. In another one of their films — also based on a real-life event, the female protagonist was hauled off to jail for something her husband did. Yes, he was supposedly involved in espionage and just because they were married, she was considered an accomplice, and the FBI raided her house and took her away in handcuffs, and let me just say that her first night in prison was not a welcoming experience.So, once again my mind wandered, and I thought about how I would handle prison.

First problem, I don’t look good in orange, and in fact, that color gives me migraines. I wonder if I could plead a disability and get a softer color jumpsuit to wear. Yes, this was a concern in my totally freaked out mind, so I put “different colored jumpsuit” on my to-do list of things to find out about  right after finding lawyers who handle Americans in foreign prisons. My next week calendar was filling up quickly with research about stuff that will probably never happen but needed to be addressed if I was ever going to have a good night’s sleep again.

After the prison movie was done — and by the way, the woman was exonerated and sent home to rebuild her shattered life which will forever include pictures on the internet of her in that orange jumpsuit and messed up hair because I don’t think police photographers give prisoners a chance to fix their “do” before they snap the photo, I marched upstairs to my bedroom and demanded to know exactly what my husband did for all those years he traveled overseas for business. After seeing that flick, I knew there was no freaking way I was doing time for him. I would sing to the feds the first chance I got.

Although he was half awake, he looked at me and mumbled,

“Are you watching Lifetime again? I thought we agreed NO MORE LIFETIME.”

And with those words uttered, he fell soundly asleep and ignored me, so I added one more thing to my research list: divorce lawyers.

photo by ioffer.com


Share this Post:

7 thoughts on “Am I Really Depressed or Am I Watching Too Much Lifetime?”

  1. As a bemused Brit, I’ve no idea what ‘Lifetime’ TV is. From what I can glean from your highly entertaining prose, you Yanks seem to have a channel entirely devoted to films about people being imprisoned for ‘Life’. Talk about niche marketing. Next we’ll have a channel devoted to films about people who get parking tickets or even those who have overdue library books. Slightly less dramatic than receiving a life sentence, I suppose, but equally narrow in their focus.

    Over here we have a single sitcom – Porridge – a brilliant and hilarious look at life in a UK prison from the 1970s.

    1. Porridge? Only you British can take a bland cereal and turn it into something funny! I can’t believe you don’t get the Lifetime Channel. If only the British women got a taste of it, they would never let it go.

      1. It refers to the staple diet of prisoners in the UK – porridge.

        Must adjust my settings to receive email notifications . . .

  2. You have Lifetime. I have the History Channel. Where can we seek help for our addiction?

    1. I will admit L.B. I do like the History channel as well. I guess we could try and sneak onto Celebrity Rehab – oh wait, that’s on A&E, another trouble spot.

  3. You just reminded me of why I never watch Lifetime TV anymore.

    by the way, if I ever go to jail, I want a fuchsia colored jumpsuit. Orange really washes me out.

    Ooh! I just had a thought! Forget the idea of being locked up. To keep women from following a life of crime, just remind them that they will have to wear orange the whole time they are in jail!

Comments are closed.