Opinion / NIC MONISSE
Mixed media
I spent a good chunk of my teenage years obsessed with the American TV programme Scrubs. For the uninitiated, it’s an (admittedly silly) comedy-drama series that, in the eyes of a 15-year-old, made the life of an emergency-room doctor seem like an appealing career path, full of high-pressure situations and camaraderie. Thankfully, for the health of the general population, I didn’t apply for medical school – but it was a close call.
Which begs the question: would I have still flirted with the idea of becoming a doctor had there been an equally engaging drama about the life and work of a designer? Sure, Mad Men comes close and there are plenty of shows in which the job title “architect” points to a character with a sense of mystery. But why haven’t any production companies stumped up for a fictional series about a design studio, in which an industrial designer or landscape architect takes centre stage?
Perhaps it’s because they worry that long nights in the studio, brutal crits, difficult clients and seemingly endless tweaks to a design won’t make great television. But I would argue that triumphing over these very things is what makes the career most satisfying – and would make for compelling watching.
With pilot season five months away, there’s just enough time for an ambitious producer to pull together a crew and a room of writers to make it happen. Oh, and if you’re looking for a leading man, you know where to find me.