Tuesday, May 1, 2012

'Gossip Girl,' where did you go wrong?


Last November, I wrote a post for Her Campus about why I chose to continue watching “Gossip Girl,” even after the loss of two vital characters and a plot that grows more ridiculous each week.

In the article, I said that “Gossip Girl” is well executed, with legendary stylist Eric Daman sneaking product placement, like Serena’s Marc Jacobs iPad case on last night’s episode, into every show and guest stars ranging from Cecily von Ziegesar, the author of the “Gossip Girl” books herself, to Julian Tepper and Jenna Gribbon of The Oracle Club.

But the show has becoming increasingly difficult to enjoy as of late. The storylines aren’t just twisted. They’re also not original.

“Gossip Girl’”s second season ended with Serena attempting to figure out who, exactly, was behind this slanderous website, but the Upper East Siders eventually realized that no one person was responsible. 

Each of them sent in tips, photos and rumors about their classmates. The person behind the website didn’t matter, because that person depended on all of the students. Everyone was “Gossip Girl.”

The CW could have ended the show then and there, with a “Mean Girls”-like critique of teenage gossip and its negative effect on self-esteem. The anti-gossip theme is prevalent in the book series, and there are many days I wish -- and pretend -- that there were only two seasons to this show. But there are five, and “Gossip Girl” history is already beginning to repeat itself.

Several episodes ago, Serena again decided to embark on a journey to discover who was really behind GossipGirl.net. But instead of (re)discovering that everyone was responsible, she became an interim Gossip Girl herself! The second season’s lessons apparently taught her nothing, and she once again has to learn the hard way that spreading rumors doesn’t end well.

And with two episodes left in the season, the show’s writers have once again sparked conversation among their audience about Gossip Girl’s identity. 

They can't believe this relationship has lasted this many episodes, either. Photo: Giovanni Rufino / The CW.
To recap: In the last few episodes, the “Gossip Girl” writers have brought Chuck’s father back from the dead, made Serena’s cousin her half-sister by throwing in a twist of adultery, and most unforgettably, created a romance between Upper East Side queen Blair Waldorf and Brooklyn hipster Dan Humphrey.

All of this, and the plot they choose to revive is who Gossip Girl is? Seriously, CW writers, that’s all you’ve got?

I understand that it’s difficult to keep the site relevant to the episodes since the characters aren’t in high school anymore. In that respect, Serena acting as Gossip Girl was a nice twist. But surely there is a  better way to incorporate the site into the show without rehashing what was actually a powerful moral lesson in the second season.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

'Best Friends Forever': Breaking NBC's comedy rut


NBC’s Thursday nights are well-recognized for being bastions of sitcom humor, but many of the channel’s shows aren’t doing as well this season. Even with new shows added to the lineup, many viewers are switching to Fox and other channels for their comedy fix. 

“The Office” and “30 Rock” are arguably two of NBC’s best productions in history, but the sitcoms, which are in their seventh and sixth seasons, respectively, are beginning to feel as if they’re past their prime. Though both still receive a good amount of viewership and have been renewed for another season, it’s difficult to content that the sitcoms are as funny as when they first premiered.

New to the NBC Thursday lineup this season were “Whitney,” produced by standup comedian Whitney Cummings, and “Up All Night,” a classic, family-based sitcom that stars Christina Applegate, Will Arnett and Maya Rudolph. 

Other NBC Thursday forerunners include “Community” and “Parks and Recreation,” two sitcoms that still receive generally positive reviews in their third and fourth seasons, respectively.

But even with moderate viewership from “30 Rock” and “The Office,” in addition to “Community” and “Parks,” NBC has still struggled for ratings this season. The channel has altered its Thursday night schedule multiple times in hopes of attracting more viewers if more popular programs are placed differently on the schedule, though this has largely been to no avail.

In addition to picking up “Whitney” and “Up All Night,” NBC produced a new solution to the problem: airing new sitcoms on Wednesday nights. 

The channel picked up comedian Chelsea Handler’s sitcom, “Are You There, Chelsea?,” to air on Wednesday nights. Soon after, Betty White was producing her own Wednesday night NBC sitcom, “Betty White’s Off Their Rockers.”
Jessica St. Clair (left) and Lennon Parham on the "Best Friends Forever" set. Photo courtesy of NBC.
 But it’s NBC’s latest show debut, “Best Friends Forever,” which really shows that the channel can still produce incredible sitcoms.

“Best Friends Forever” stars Jessica St. Clair and Lennon Parham as two middle-aged best friends who live in Brooklyn. Lennon lives with her boyfriend, Joe, but when Jessica’s husband faxes her divorce papers after an extended vacation, then she has no choice but to seek comfort in her friend’s home.

As Salon.com’s Willa Paskin notes, the lead characters of “Best Friends Forever” seem more relatable than other females leading sitcoms. Though most women probably haven’t faced the awkward scenario of her boyfriend’s parents walking in on her without a bra, it’s a fair point. Lennon and Jessica are regular women to whom regular things happen, like arguing with a significant other about treatment of household guests and trying to impress potential in-laws.

The bad news? “Best Friends Forever” will only be on for six episodes. Four episodes have already aired on NBC and are now available on Hulu. The network has chosen not to air the final two episodes until later in the summer, but Lennon tweeted last week that the last two episodes will hopefully be available online soon.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Fashion TV: When is enough enough?

When people find out I'm interested in fashion, one of the first things they ask is whether I watch Project Runway. (The answer? I only watched one season, and I wasn't too into it.)

Project Runway's been through nine seasons so far and has been wildly successful. It’s been so successful, in fact, that there have been numerous fashion TV spinoffs on various channels.

People expect the fashion circuit to be in the know about these programs, but when there are so many, who has time to watch all of them? How does one know which ones are really worth watching?

Perhaps most of us were introduced to the concept of fashion TV years before Project Runway, thanks to a little MTV reality show called The Hills. The lead characters’ lives as Teen Vogue fashion closet interns were glamorous -- they flew to New York on a whim, hung out with members of famous bands and never seemed to do homework, even though they were both technically college students.

Following The Hills was the lesser-known The City, which chronicled Whitney Port’s job with -- and resignation from -- Diane von Furstenberg’s label and Olivia Palermo’s work at Elle magazine. Elle fashion editor Joe Zee has his own TV show, All on the Line, on the Sundance channel, and Elle was involved with Project Runway before fashion editor Nina Garcia moved to Marie Claire.

Aside from designer competitions, celebrity stylists have found their niche in the fashion TV world, too -- Rachel Zoe, stylist to big-name stars like Anne Hathaway, just finished her fourth season on Bravo TV show The Rachel Zoe Project, in addition to having her first child this year. Zoe’s assistant, Brad Goreski, now has his own Bravo show, It’s a Brad, Brad World, to chronicle his life as a stylist, too.
Brad Goreski, photo courtesy of People StyleWatch magazine.
 If these programs weren’t enough, three more fashion TV shows have cropped up in the past year. British It Girl Alexa Chung hosted a reality show called 24-Hour Catwalk, which was loosely based on the Project Runway premise of a design competition. The catch, however, was that designers only had 24 hours to produce their collections.

Even NBC hopped on the fashion TV wagon and is currently mid-season with its new show Fashion Star. Hosted by Elle MacPherson, the show is quite similar to Project Runway in that designers compete on a themed topic each week to produce a winning collection in the season finale. Like Project Runway, Fashion Star also boasts celebrity and designer judges, though John Varvatos is less of a household name than Michael Kors.

With all of these fashion-based shows on major cable networks, even fashion editors can’t possibly have time to watch all of them. My advice? If you’re going to watch one fashion TV show, make it the one that’s produced by Vogue.

The Council of Fashion Designers of America teams up with Vogue each year to give their Fashion Fund award to one budding designer whom they feel deserves recognition in the fashion industry. In the new show, available on Hulu, finalists compete for the endorsement of the CFDA and Vogue itself. Now that’s fashion TV!

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

256: Trend Story: Women and comedy: the eternal debate?


If you heard the phrase “women in comedy,” you’d probably think of stars like Saturday Night Live’s Kristen Wiig or 30 Rock’s Tina Fey. While women like these have set the path for other female comedians to follow, startup comedians like the members of Hamilton 100, a trio of UNC alumni who founded their own comedy group in L.A., know from experience that more steps need to be taken to reach gender equality in the comedy scene.
 
“As far comedy goes, I'd be lying if I said everyone is open minded and you're never treated differently anymore,” admits Mary Sasson, Hamilton 100’s only female group member. 

UNC alumni Mary Sasson, Ben Greene and Robert Stephens, the members of L.A.-based comedy group Hamilton 100. Photo courtesy of Hamilton 100
“When I've done open mics for stand-up, I've often been annoyed with MC’s announcing me as the first woman comic, instead of the next comic,” Sasson says. 

Hearing a young comedian like Sasson speak so openly about gender bias in comedy might come as a shock considering the strides that female standup comedians have taken in the past year. 

Both Whitney Cummings and Chelsea Handler, two prominent females in the standup comedy scene, have secured full-season orders from NBC for sitcoms based on their comedic performances. Cummings produces and stars in her show, aptly titled Whitney, in addition to co-producing the highly-rated CBS sitcom 2 Broke Girls, which Entertainment Weekly ranked sixth in their list of TV shows to watch this past fall.
 
Chelsea Handler doesn’t star in Are You There, Chelsea? (the show’s main character, Chelsea Newman, is played by Laura Prepon), but don’t let that fact fool you into thinking she’s not amazingly successful. Handler is the show’s executive producer and has penned four bestselling books, three of which have reached the top spot on the New York Times’ list of best sellers. Her second book, Are You There, Vodka? It’s Me, Chelsea, inspired the name of her show.

With successful women like Cummings and Handler dominating the comedic arena, it’s difficult to imagine that female comedians might still be considered separately than their male counterparts. And in some situations, they aren’t. 

Lauren Lapkus, who plays Dee Dee on Are You There, Chelsea?, is also an improv and sketch comedy actress at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theater in Los Angeles. She says that during her involvement in comedy, she’s never experienced discrimination on the basis of gender. 

“I have not personally felt that I had to work harder in the comedy world solely because I’m a woman,” Lapkus says. 
Lapkus on the Are You There, Chelsea? set with Laura Prepon. Photo by Jordin Althaus / NBC Universal, Inc.

“I have always just striven to be the best performer I can be, and I never really looked at it as a competition between men and women. I admired so many male comedians when I was growing up, but it never crossed my mind that I couldn’t be as funny as them because I'm not a guy.”

While Lapkus’s positive statements are inspiring for gender equality in comedy and in other industries, not everyone in the entertainment industry is as open-minded as Lapkus. According to Mark Washburn, an entertainment writer and reporter who currently writes television and radio commentary for the Charlotte Observer, the issue of gender inequality in the comedic realm is one that’s as old as comedy itself -- and one that’s still in progress.

“In Elizabethan England, men were required to play the women's roles,” Washburn says. 

“But women were in the entertainment business from the start in the colonies. Most people don't know it, but even by the mid-19th century, women were stars in both drama and comedy.”

“John Wilkes Booth was a great actor of his time, but it was the great Laura Keene whom Lincoln went to see the night of April 14, 1865 at Ford’s theater. She was one of the leading comic actresses of her time. Gracie Burns -- she played dumb, and you have to be really smart to succeed at that -- still has an award named after her that is one of the highest honors to women in media. 

“Lucille Ball, one of the greatest of the physical comedians, set the template for modern sitcoms in 1951’s I love Lucy, and was one of Hollywood’s smartest producers as well.” 

Yet even with all of these female comedic accomplishments, women are still compared to men in the subject material they choose to feature in their works.

When Bridesmaids was released in 2011, many critics said the film proved that women could be as funny as men, implying that this was still a question under dispute. Others said that because the women in Bridesmaids relied heavily on typically male humor, i.e., jokes about bodily functions, women were still relegated to comedy that is defined by men.

Ben Greene and Robert Stephens, the remaining two (male) members of Hamilton 100, provided male opinions on the topic of women in comedy, agreeing with Lapkus that gender shouldn’t be a consideration when evaluating a comedian’s work.

“It feels weird to talk about whether women are as funny as men ‘cause it’s such a no-brainer,” Greene says.

“The same way it would feel weird to talk about whether women are as smart as men. For every funny man I know I can point to a woman who’s just as funny or funnier… but at this point it feels silly to even have the discussion.”

Stephens agreed with Greene, echoing the critical response to Bridesmaids and gender-specific humor. “I think that in mainstream comedy -- what we see on TV and at the movies -- we see the biggest difference between how men are portrayed to be funny and how women are,” Stephens says.

“The man always seems to be set up, while the woman is only allowed to be funny in certain roles and situations. It’s outdated, weird and ultimately not that funny.” 

In the context Stephens suggests, then, the crude humor of Bridesmaids can be seen as progress, because the cast wasn’t limited to jokes typically reserved for female roles. By using humor that would typically be created by men, women are proving that they can be just as funny and diverse as male comedians. But for many women, this is not a compliment, because they want to be considered as their own entities, not as women who aren’t afraid to act like men.

Katie Perry, a UNC junior, is a member of the student comedy group CHiPs, where the members of Hamilton 100 got their start. Perry says that she doesn’t normally experience gender bias in campus shows, though one interaction with an audience member at a CHiPs show this semester did leave her perturbed at the gender gap in comedic performances.

“I had an audience member walk up to me and tell me I was his favorite performer of the evening. At first, I was pleased to hear that, but he went on to say it was because I surprised him because I am a female who is not afraid to drop f-bombs,” Perry says.

“At the end of the day, I want to be remembered because of the scenes I created, not because I have no problems using expletives. And I truly think he wouldn't have thought the same thing if I had been a male player.”

But even aside from the potential gender gap in what’s considered “male humor,” it’s hard to ignore the progress that women have made in the comic sphere even in the past year alone. 

Zooey Deschanel on the New Girl set. Photo courtesy of Fox
Zooey Deschanel’s Fox sitcom New Girl is one of the highest-rated programs among the 18-49 demographic of both men and women and has been nominated for two Golden Globe awards. Betty White made a fantastic comeback in 2011, starring in multiple movies and producing her own NBC sitcom, Betty White’s Off Their Rockers. Julia Louis-Dreyfus, the comedy actress of Saturday Night Live and Seinfeld renown, is currently starring in the new HBO series Veep as the vice president of the United States. 

One of Deschanel’s most high-profile friends is Mindy Kaling, another woman whose comedic achievements have reached an all-time high this year. Kaling earned her comedic chops playing Ben Affleck in an off-Broadway musical and writing for NBC sitcom The Office, pitched a sitcom idea to Fox earlier this year. While the project has not received an official title, the pilot episode is rumored to feature comedy greats Bill Hader and Ed Helms. 

Krysten Ritter, an actress whom you may recognize from small roles in shows like Breaking Bad  and Gossip Girl, was set to star in the 2009 Fox sitcom Don’t Trust the B---- in Apartment 23, but the network dropped the show before it aired. This year, however, ABC picked up the series and released the first two episodes as a midseason premiere. In addition to getting her sitcom off the ground, Ritter also co-wrote and starred alongside Kate Bosworth in the independent comedy film L!fe Happens, which was selected for the Tribeca Film Festival in 2012. Even though only two episodes of the show has been released so far, Ritter has already been featured in Nylon and Bust magazines for her performance on the show, which reflects positively for comedy’s future.

“In general, I think that we are in a golden age of women comedians, in part because successful women comediennes make more room for successful comedians,” Sasson says.

-- SIDEBAR--
Top five female-driven sitcoms to watch this season
·         New Girl, Fox, Tuesdays, 9 p.m. EST
·         Parks and Recreation, NBC, Thursdays, 9:30 p.m. EST
·         Don’t Trust the B---- in Apartment 23, ABC, Wednesdays, 9:30 p.m. EST
·         30 Rock, NBC, Thursdays, 8:30 p.m. EST
·         Are You There, Chelsea?, NBC, Wednesdays at 8:30 p.m. EST
------------------
“Hollywood is a business and when they see something work, they jump on the chance to replicate it. 30 Rock, in some ways, begets New Girl, and New Girl’s success will certainly beget more female-driven comedies.”
 
Where, then, is the future of comedy in regards to gender? 

To answer that question, one needs to look no farther than IFC’s Portlandia, a sketch comedy sitcom that won a Peabody Award in March and has been renewed for a third season. 

Portlandia stars Saturday Night Live’s Fred Armisen and singer / actress Carrie Brownstein as hipsters living the “dream of the ‘90s” in Portland, Oregon. While some of the sketches, such as “Cacao,” offer gender-bending performances by Armisen and Brownstein, the show never makes jokes about the fact that Armisen is of Hispanic descent or that Brownstein is a woman. They’re just two funny, talented people, and one of them happens to be a woman.

Both Sasson and Lapkus had similar ideas on the future of comedy -- they both, like anyone else, want to be recognized for their talents and not for their gender.

“As far as the whole, ‘are women funny?’ debate goes, I know female comedians are sick of it, and every intelligent, modern male comedian is, too,” Sasson says. 

“It’s a silly, misguided, sexist debate that only allows certain outdated, narrow viewpoints to surface.”

Sasson’s on-point remark is in good company. In the conclusion of her book Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me?, Mindy Kaling says she didn’t address the question of women in comedy in the book because she doesn’t like to “seriously discuss nonsensical hot-button issues.”

Sasson and Kaling’s words here echo the New York Times review of Tina Fey’s novel, Bossypants.

“She doesn’t need to make an intellectual argument that women are funny. She just is funny,” writes Curtis Sittenfeld.

Citing her favorite female comedians, Lapkus agrees with Sasson that the question of women in comedy is a non-question.

“I am incredibly inspired by many women, including Kristen Wiig and Lena Dunham, who have so recently achieved great success,” Lapkus says. 

“Knowing that Bridesmaids and Tiny Furniture were Kristen and Lena's first screenplays, respectively, made me want to pursue new avenues I might have otherwise kept in the back of my mind.

“They are just two more people proving you can accomplish whatever you set your mind to -- and they happen to be female.”
Further reading:
Best Friends Forever: When lady sitcoms go right,” Willa Paskin, Salon.com
Funny Girl: The Power of Improv Comedy,” Rachael Combe, Elle
Kristen Wiig: Funny Business,” Eve MacSweeney, Vogue
Bossypants, Tina Fey
Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me?, Mindy Kaling
Are You There, Vodka? It’s Me, Chelsea, Chelsea Handler

Sasson and Lapkus (center) with friends in the Hamilton 100 sketch “Secrets, Secrets.” Photo courtesy of Mary Sasson.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Women in comedy: current findings

An article about the role of women in comedy might seem like a topic that's been overdone in recent feature writing or one that no longer needs to be addressed. Female-led sitcoms are popping up on every major cable network — even Betty White has her own TV show.

But as one delves into the world of comedy, it's clear that there's still a divide between female and male comedians. Tina Fey's Sarah Palin impersonation is one of the most memorable sketches in recent Saturday Night Live history, but the show only has five female actresses out of 14 permanent cast members, and that's including the latest cast addition, Kate McKinnon. As Tina Fey noted when she hosted, SNL is still very much a "boy's club," as is the field of comedy.

Other shows, like Krysten Ritter's new Don't Trust the B---- in Apartment 23 and Mindy Kaling's upcoming Fox sitcom, were in production years ago and are only now reaching the air because of scheduling issues. Abby Elliot, one of the female SNL actresses, had a Fox sitcom pilot in the works that was cancelled before it even aired. Yes, women in comedy are making strides, but there are still a lot more steps that need to be taken.

The inspiration to begin work on this article came from a variety of sources.

I recently read Mindy Kaling's book, Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me?, in which she discusses writing for The Office and being a guest writer for SNL as well as what it was like to be interested in comedy as a child.

The January issue of Elle included a wonderful feature on improv comedy, focusing on the achievements of Tina Fey and Amy Poehler.
Kristen Wiig and Seth Meyers in February's Vogue, as photographed by Annie Leibovitz.
In February's Vogue, legendary photographer Annie Leibovitz shot Kristen Wiig and Seth Myers for an editorial profile on Wiig by Eve MacSweeney.

But sources like Vulture's weekly New Girl recaps are what remindme that women have a lot more work to do to be taken as seriously as men. Izzy Greenspan often quips that the show would more aptly be titled New Schimdt, because even a dream actress like Zooey Deschanel can't command her own show, and her unknown supporting actors end up stealing the scenes.

Other sources I'll be using in the article are the 2010 Saturday Night Live "Women in Comedy" special and the 2011 meta episode of 30 Rock in which "The Girlie Show" addresses the question of women in comedy. I am also working on getting in touch with local comedy groups like CHiPS and DSI Comedy Theater as well as examining the work of comedians who visit college campuses to perform standup routines and the success of males vs. females doing similar acts (ex. Aziz Ansari being received much more positively than Mindy Kaling). I'd like to include female-led sitcoms like New Girl, Whitney, 2 Broke Girls, Are You There Chelsea? and the mini-series Best Friends Forever, which I discovered through Dr. Smith's recommended Salon.com article praising the new show.

I also contacted Mark Washburn at the Charlotte Observer last week, so hopefully I will hear back from him and be able to utilize his vast entertainment knowledge.

I'd also like to look into HBO's new series Girls and compare the portrayal of women in this series versus another HBO success — Sex and the City. When writing a recent article on Sexual Assault Awareness Month for USA TODAY College, I began to realize that in many of these female sitcoms, women have to act like men in order to be considered funny, including telling rape jokes as in 2 Broke Girls or making inappropriate jokes out of bodily functions as in Bridesmaids. In the ideal comedy, gender wouldn't matter, and we would just recognize someone as funny no matter who they were, and that's something the entertainment industry needs to set as a goal.

Monday, April 9, 2012

America's sweetheart strikes again

You've probably heard about Betty White's latest endeavor: producing an NBC sitcom in which the elderly pull pranks on unsuspecting young people. Betty White's Off Their Rockers is a low-budget program filled with innocent, simple jokes. But in the era of Michael Bay films and elaborate special effects, this show might be exactly what we've been waiting for.

Most young people will likely not recognize any of the cast members save for White. But that's hardly a problem -- by the end of the first episode, you'll likely form a favorite character whose pranks you'll anticipate in episodes to come. (My personal favorite is Michael Yama, who chopped a cake in half because he didn't want to purchase the entire treat.)

Betty White's Off Their Rockers appeals to young and old people alike. The elderly will enjoy the show the way hipsters enjoy Portlandia, and they'll appreciate the simple humor's similarity to shows like The Three Stooges. And the young will learn from the elderly's intelligence levels while enjoying how witty these senior citizens can be.

The show officially premiered on April 4, but the first two episodes are currently available on Hulu for free.

Do watch this new sitcom on ABC

If you read women's magazines or watch Hulu on a regular basis, you've probably seen advertisements and promotions for ABC's latest sitcom, Don't Trust the B---- in Apartment 23. The show stars Krysten Ritter, whom you may recognize from Breaking Bad or Confessions of a Shopaholic, as the titular character with costars James Van Der Beek (Dawson's Creek) and Dreama Walker (Gossip Girl).


The show will premiere on ABC this Wednesday after Modern Family, but the first two episodes are currently available on Hulu. If you haven't watched them yet, it's definitely worth it. James Van Der Beek steals the show playing himself, an actor who wants to be recognized as someone who isn't typecast. Ritter's character steals from all of her roommates until they move out, but Walker's innocent June stands her ground against Ritter until they become friends.

Apartment 23 without being too predictable, and the Van Der Beek jokes are entertaining even if you didn't watch Dawson's Creek. Once this show gets on the air, it may gain enough traction to rival New Girl in terms of quirky, female-driven primetime sitcoms.

In preparation for my feature on women in comedy next week...

What defines a good comedy, anyway? I love Horrible Bosses, but lighthearted jokes about sexual violence are never in good taste.

"It is time to rethink 'comedy,'" USA TODAY College.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

New shows you should be watching


Caveat: Portlandia is the only show on this list I actually recommend. I wanted to use Whitney, but the editors said everyone hates that show. (I don't.)

10 TV Shows You Don't Watch (But Should Start Watching!), Her Campus national site.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

256: Place story: Old Chapel Hill Cemetery

John Brooks gave UNC alumnus Robert Foushee his college wish: to be buried in the Old Chapel Hill Cemetery. Just a few weeks later, the town of Chapel Hill dug up Foushee's ashes.


While a student at UNC, Foushee was a senator of the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies. Because of his involvement in the organization, Foushee thought it appropriate that he be buried in the Philanthropic Society's plot in the Old Chapel Hill Cemetery.


The Philanthropic Society plot in the Old Chapel Hill cemetery.
But as any current senator will note, the Di and Phi plots are reserved for senators who die before graduation from the University, i.e., while still a student. The half-destroyed columns in the plots symbolize these students' lives being cut short. These columns were created in the style of a Masonic tradition, as the Masons greatly influenced the founding of the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies.


Last November, John Brooks, Foushee's legal adviser, contacted the president of the Societies, Emma Pham, regarding the possibility Foushee's burial in the Philanthropic society plot. Pham passed along the request to the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies Foundation, the legal owner of the Di and Phi cemetery plots.


The Foundation chose to deny Brooks's request, but that didn't stop him from depositing Foushee's cremated remains there one March night.


Brooks approached the Societies at a general meeting and informed the current senators that he had personally deposited Foushee's ashes in the Phi plot. After this meeting, the Societies contacted the Foundation, who informed Brooks he had 30 days to remove Foushee's ashes before further action was taken. The ashes were not removed.


Rather than taking legal action against Brooks, Michael Kolb, the president of the Foundation, contacted the Town of Chapel Hill, the legal owner of the Old Chapel Hill Cemetery as a whole. The Foundation and the town agreed that the Foundation would pay for Foushee's remains to be transferred to Memorial Grove, the columbarium section of the cemetery.


"Mr. Foushee, as a distinguished alumnus of the University, commands respect and dignity in the burial of his ashes, but his personal merit is not a consideration for the Foundation," said Kolb.

"There are many deceased alumni deserving of such an honor. In addition, Mr. Foushee did not request such a future honor while living and he was never promised a place. The cemetery plots are historical sites and, for all practical purposes, closed."

Brooks was not available for comment. According to Kolb, Brooks has refused contact with the Foundation on multiple occasions.


What makes the Old Chapel Hill Cemetery such a desirable burial ground?

Why would Brooks go to these seemingly extreme measures with Foushee's remains? What is it about the Old Chapel Hill Cemetery and the Di Phi plots that were so appealing to Foushee while he was alive? 

The answers to these questions date back to 1798, the year the graveyard was established.


A land grant to UNC by the state of North Carolina, the cemetery serves as a burial ground for students, UNC alumni and residents of Chapel Hill. Many distinguished alumni, whose names are recognizable by campus buildings like Venable or Robert House, are buried there. 


In 1922, the Town of Chapel Hill took responsibility for the care of the cemetery, but the University became the cemetery's owner in 1988. The cemetery currently spans over 6.98 acres of land and hosts more than 1600 burials.


Some of the cemetery's most distinguished and most visited residents include CBS newsman Charles Kuralt and Paul Green, author of the Pulitzer Prize winning play In Abraham's Bosom.


The appeal to students and alumni, then, is likely the same appeal that caused John Brooks to fulfill Foushee's wish. To be buried in the same place as legendary North Carolina figures lends a sense of importance and belonging to something bigger than one's class at the University.


But along with University history, the cemetery also reminds its visitors of the South's and the University's mistakes — it was racially segregated and separated by a rock wall until the late 1960s. The two sections (out of six burial sections in the cemetery) are still divided today. In addition, a number of prominent Confederate soldiers are buried within the cemetery.

For current UNC students, the cemetery is an outlet for learning about the university.


Most students and faculty in the UNC community as well as Chapel Hill residents don't know the Old Chapel Hill Cemetery exists, or they have passed by it without giving it much thought. But many students take interest in the graveyard and choose to learn more about the cemetery and the University's history as a whole.


Current senators of Di Phi are traditionally given their letters of acceptance to the Societies inside the plot of the society they've petitioned and are explained the significance of the cemetery to the University. As the owners of the first plots in the graveyard, Di Phi has a special place in the Old Chapel Hill Cemetery, and new senators are encouraged to visit and explore these plots after their admission.


Di Phi also holds a "graveyard poetry reading" night each semester where classic works of Edgar Allen Poe like The Raven are read among other poems by candlelight both in the gazebo and in the Di Phi plots.


Each Halloween, UNC students dress up and hide behind the graves as part of a special tour intended to teach their peers more about the cemetery. The Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies also hold a special ceremony on the night of Halloween and offer remembrance for Di Phi senators and UNC alumni who have died. This ceremony dates back to Edward Harrelson, Di Phi's Joint Senate Historian in 1990, and a copy of the procedure for this special meeting can be found on the Societies' website.


Other controversy in the cemetery's history


Vandalism has also been a common problem in the cemetery, especially for the African-American side of the cemetery's segregated section. Recent research indicates that the stone wall that segregates Sections A and B was built using grave markers of African-Americans buried in the cemetery. Several UNC graduate students in the anthropology department have taken it upon themselves to research these grave markers to find out more about the deceased N.C. residents whom these stones represent. The Town, though, is not currently in the midst of any projects to reinstate these stones as proper grave markers.

Additionally, more than 40 grave markers were broken and removed from their bases by unknown vandals in 1974. In the 1980s, avid Carolina sports fans used the Old Chapel Hill Cemetery as a parking lot to attend football games, destroying grave markers. Brooks's deposit of Foushee's ashes isn't the first controversy the cemetery has seen, and it's likely not the last.


The apple tree that replaced Foushee's ashes has been removed since this article was written.
Foushee's memory, however, won't be forgotten — an apple tree appeared in the Philanthropic society plot shortly after the removal of his ashes.

Though all of the burial plots in the Old Chapel Hill Cemetery have been purchased, there are still open spaces in Memorial Grove for anyone who wishes to be cremated and buried in the cemetery.

Visitors welcome! 

The Town of Chapel Hill offers guided tours of the Old Chapel Hill Cemetery every second Saturday of the month at 10:00 a.m. These tours depart from the gazebo and cost $5 to participate. The tour groups are composed primarily of students, though residents of Chapel Hill who are interested in learning more about the cemetery often choose to participate as well. 

For more information and to reserve your place on a tour, visit the Town of Chapel Hill's website or call (919) 942-7818.


The Old Chapel Hill Cemetery's gazebo is a common meeting place for gatherings at the cemetery.
Sources:
Michael Kolb, President, Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies Foundation
Emma Pham, Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies Joint Senate President, Fall 2011 semester 
Steve Burges, Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies Joint Senate Historian, Spring 2012 semester
"Mysterious Grave at UNC," Buchanan, Bill, The News and Observer, August 14, 1949.