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Rafters blasted over “rampant sexlife”

Fans of Packed to the Rafters have hit out at an episode this week which included fantasy scenes and a moment of privacy for a male character.

nathDid Packed to the Rafters misjudge its audience this week?

Yesterday the show copped a bit of a reaction to its episode which include several fantasy scenes involving sex, and a scene in which Nathan (Angus McLaren) was caught masturbating on the toilet by wife Sammy (Jessica MacNamee).

The scene followed a moment in which Nathan had told Sammy he was too tired to have sex, and was part of a larger episode which looked atmen being turned on by ‘simple biology.’

The fantasy scenes, which were shot in music video styles, were also breakout moments for Ben (Hugh Sheridan) and Carbo (George Houvardas).

But comments left on the show’s official website, reflected by talkback radio callers yesterday, criticised the show’s apparent flip from being a ‘family drama’:

– “Why is it so hard to write episodes without gratuitous sex as its main theme? The potential is there to explore some really great issues about family dynamics with all the trials and tribulations that make up life. But all we’ve seen of late is the rampant sexlife of the Rafters!”

– “We are totally disgusted with this last episode. An insult to the actors. This is not what we expected. This is cause us to stop watching this as a family.”

– “Why is it that the writers of so many TV shows think that if they aren’t full of sex romps no one will want to watch them? The producers of Rafters would do well to remember that they won a stack of Logies with a show that wasn’t full of sex. When you’ve found a good recipe, then you should stick to it.”

– “I don’t think it’s a case of being old-fashioned or religious. It’s simply good taste. I was very disappointed by last night’s episode. Were the writers have a bit of a slow week and couldn’t think of a good plot line, so they decided to write pure sexual fluff instead? Come on! I was embarrassed for the actors, and embarrassed that the writers think this is what Australians want to watch.”

– “Packed to the rafters WAS my favourites show. Last night was disgraceful, weird, tasteless and absolute rubbish. Im officially switching off.”

– “I do not have a problem with the infidelity portrayed in this show. You’re right, it is a fact of life, and it does happen. My problem is with the strong sex themes shown. It wasn’t necessary to have those long wild sexual fantasy montages. And I really could have done without the sight of Nathan having ‘fun’ in the bathroom.”

– “I used to love Packed To The Rafter when it was a nice, wholesome family show. Now the writers have gone off on stupid tangents with all those ‘fantasies’ the characters are supposed to be having. Why do writers spoil good shows by pushing the envelope by showing young men supposedly ‘satisfying’ themselves? Gimme a break!”

Others disagreed saying:

-“This show is meant to reflect reality. It’s a fact of life that young people, especially young men, spend a lot of time thinking about sex. Dave and Julie are the moral centre of the show and that has not changed. Nathan has always been the weaker member of the family and I think his actions with Layla are reflecting that.”

– “I’ve never seen this show as being something young children should watch either, even from the first episode. It’s an adult show with all adult characters. If anyone believes their children should not / no longer be watching it, they should use their powers of ‘parental guidance’, as the rating suggests.”

Some TV Tonight readers also criticised the episode as being weakened by ‘filler’ montages.

Rafters has always had PG-rated content, including back to its beginnings when it visited issues of domestic violence. But in that time it has also developed a family-following, and would appear to now face a delicate balancing act of wanting artistic freedom without alienating its broad audience.

Similar masturbating scenes have also appeared recently on The Librarians and United States of Tara -both of which saw female characters walking in on male characters. They aired at 9pm and 9:30pm respectively.

Source: Yahoo!7

55 Responses

  1. How can parents let their 7 years olds watch stuff at 8.30pm anyway? Shouldn’t they be in bed? And if your 7 year old kid knows what Nathan was doing on the toilet, then you have some serious discussions to be having with your child. Gone are the days of innocence if today’s parents don’t make the effort to protect their children from the things they should not be aware about until they are much older.

  2. This is why PTTR is winning ratings. It does light and fluffy and then dips into serious with a sweet touch of quirk. The unpredictability of this show is it’s charm. You never know if your going to be shocked or rolling on the floor laughing. Some are even touched but not like Nathan, LOL !

    Get grip but not like Nathan, unless ……………………

  3. If it’s being promoted as a family drama is should stay that way.
    Sorry for you that want to exclude the kids as being part of a family situation. They are important too

    That show should be on a paid channel for its lewd suggestive “fantasy” content. and people want to say kids are going downhlill and society sucks. Does life imitate art or is it the other way around?

  4. Packed to the Rafters tends to always be on in the back for some reason, and i tuned in too watch it the other night. there were some very inappropriate scenes for this to be classified a family show. how could a 7 year old be watching that with their mother and father. disgusting. i still do not understand how this is the top rated program.

  5. Yer and Underbelly is all nice and fluffy- Two words- boobs and bullets!! And that was an 8.30 show too!!

    So what if rafter’s had a bit of sexual fantasies in it, you should still support the show!

    If something like Rafetrs wasn’t around (which is on a level with city Homicide, McLeod’s daughters, sea Change ect) There would just be teen soaps like Neighbours and H&A where anything sexual is a taboo subject and dramas like Underbelly and Satisfaction (both good dramas) that you’d be mortified if you saw your kids watching them!!

    packed to the Rafters is anything I would let anyone of say over 13 watch.

  6. That episode was a little over the top for a PG rated show and especially one that should be family friendly, it seems to not fit in with the theme of the show. But what’s even more over the top is people saying that they are never going to watch again. It was just one episode after all!
    I disagree though with people saying that it isn’t for children. I’m pretty sure that many children watch the show and the writers should have taken that into consideration.
    @Everyone that says it’s okay for 8:30pm – it’s not about the time the show is on, the fact remains that it was PG rated and the content seemed too explicit for PG.
    @TV Tragic 9:51am, read the third quote in the article.
    @Bre Saxs, it does seem unrealistic but if Nathan had locked the door like a normal person and Sammy had knocked like a normal person then they obviously wouldn’t have had their scene. Even if that is a good thing.
    @Kay, that’s because those shows have a suitable M or MA rating for their content.

  7. You give the show too much credit, Adam. Those dream sequences were naff, plain and simple, and if they were intended as social commentary, they missed the mark. What’s surprising is that so many people found them offensive. I cannot conceive of a show more middle of the road than PTTR, and still it’s not tame enough for the Aussie mainstream.

  8. Talk about over-reacting! I agree that the episode probably should have been rated M, but the adult content is hardly some sort of betrayal of the audience. Rafters has always had “adult” storylines, right back to episode 1.

    Bre Saxs: Even if they did increase Rafters’ rating, there’d be no need to show the episode at 9pm – M-rated shows are allowed to be shown at 8.30. (And there’s no way any of the scenes in that episode would deserve an MA!)

    Some of the fantasy scenes were a bit tacky, though…

  9. I think the issue is not that a lot of people were offended, but the fact that PTTR storylines have stooped quite low this year.

    Another thing I’ve noticed this year is the decline in the Rachael character played by Jessica Marais. Last season she was an independant strong willed intellegent character who was a vegetarian btw. This year shes turned into a stereotypical blond bimbo, with a schoolgirl type crush on boys and now loves eating meat!

  10. Now that is a lot more like … at least some of us get the point and appreciate the power of what they are saying … and i am Soooo sick of hearing “what about the kiddies” … Parents, do your job and vet what they watch, do not dare dump that responsibility on the Networks!
    Jack!

  11. I has a completely different reaction to the fantasy sequences. Yes they were stupid, but it was clear the me that they were meant to be stupid. They were all parodies of the sort of rubbish we have foisted on us daily in highly sexualised music videos (Jessica SImpson and Pussycat Dolls anyone?) and I feel sure the producers were taking a swipe at the rubbish in popular culture that feeds men’s sexual fantasies. If you look at the credits, the director was Cherie Nolan, one of Australia’s finest female directors, and the writer Kris Mrksa, who wrote the award winning telemovie “The King”. I think these credentials suggest the foolishness of the fantasies was no sloppy film making, it was deliberate commentary on the real rubbish filling our airways. But we do not hear too many of the outraged Rafters viewers inveighing against them. “It’s a very strange world we live in, Master Jack”

  12. Get a life people, its only sex scenes. I am not offended. Why don’t people ever complain about shootings and gruesome murders as seen on criminal minds, underbelly and our own city homicide.

  13. Had a feeling this ep would get complaints. It’s just like that dress Brynne Gordon wore to the Brownlows. If she hadn’t turned up in that then there would be nothing to talk about the next day, other than how all the girls played it nice and safe.
    The Rafters can’t be nice and safe all the time. Good on them for addressing that stuff, because shock horror, fantasies and affairs actually happen in real life. Yes, I did squirm for some of it, but I thought it was good that they tried something different, and it was funny hearing how guys think! Otherwise it would be nice and safe all the time. Boring! Agree with other comments that it isn’t a kids show.

  14. BOQ I totally agree. When I was younger (I am almost 35) I wasn’t allowed to stay up past 8 or 8:30pm max. Those were the days when movies occupied that timeslot. I remember my Grade 6 mates were allowed to watch North and South (miniseries). I was not allowed to. After watching it several years later I understood why. Definitely was not for kids

    Parents need to stop thinking that tv stations will be doing their job. PTTR is not a children’s show. Have some sense and know if it starts at 8:30pm you need to keep in mind the content of shows changes. Don’t be lazy and think it’s up to others to monitor your children’s viewing habits

  15. I watched the episode and can understand why people are offended. However, I thought it was a good episode because it really did address some of the issues that married couples face. As embarrassing as it was to watch, many viewers could relate and wanted to see how Sammy reacted. They could have gone with the typical “husband is tempted by another woman/possible affair” storyline which has been done many times before.

    I think the only issue is the 7 promote as being a family show (i.e. people of all ages can watch it). I still think it is more of a young adult and older show because of the themes it addresses. If parents are worried about the show, instead of turning kids away, let them watch and you can discuss the issues with them. I actually think it confronts many issues in the right way, particularly which will confront many people later in life. Use a show like this as an education or else kids will find out in a way you don’t want them to.

    The only part I didn’t like about it was the whole Carbo/Car Wash scene. That was predictable and went on way too long.

  16. Everyone needs to get over themselves 🙂 It is on at 8.30pm – this should mean that the content is going to be far more adult that 6.30/7/7.30 timeslots. It is not at 7pm like Home and Away as the audience it wants to attract are adults.

    I am sorry, but parents need to have the forsight to know that from 8.30pm, tv becomes more adult. Showing my age here, but with A coutnry Practice it was on at 7.30pm at night and off to bed at 8.30 before the adult shows came on for me in those years.

    As an adult (37 next month), i dont want to have to wait til 9.30 for a show with an adult story line with a complex storyline. The kids have 3pm to 8.30 to get their tv fix!!

  17. I can’t vouch for this particular episode, but I’ve watched the first few episodes of season 1 and the domestic violence storyline should have been rated M. It seems that Seven are only issuing PTTR a PG rating in order to attract the widest possible audience in a timeslot which is usually reserved for more “adult” programming.

    Expect the ACMA to perform an investigation in 18 months time.

  18. Hasn’t Sammy heard of knocking or Nathan locking the door? My mum enjoys the show but doesn’t like the storyline of Nathan’s love triangle between Sammy and Layla.

    If that storyline had to be shown, then Rafters shouldn’t have started until 9:00pm. Seven could have slipped on an episode of Scrubs or How I Met Your Mother beforehand at 8:30pm.

  19. I loved this episode … Rafters is not a show for kids and never has been so that whole point is rubbish … “Family” is a category that is nothing more than “not strictly adult and not just kids” and it never means that it suitable for all the family … Doctor Who is the perfect example of a “Family” show and it can sometimes end up “M” rated on DVD …
    I thought the scenes were excellent as they portrayed the everyday reality of life and fantasy life and the comment from Dave about “being a man and sticking to boundaries” as well as “keep away from the temptation” was absolutely brilliant and powerful.
    The sensitive minority need to get a grip!
    Jack!

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