The Pacey Witter Theorem

Oct 12, 2010 13:46

As any veteran television viewer knows, the most important plot device is the love triangle. It can work in almost any scripted show (even The Hills!) - when executed well it can make a show very desirable, but when executed poorly it can drag on and on and make the viewers want to light themselves on fire to the point where they are no longer interested in the show.

This plot device is known as the Pacey Witter Theorem, based on the character of the same name on The-Greatest-Teen-Angst-Show-of-All-Time-With-the-World’s-Most-Annoying-Central-Character, Dawson’s Creek.

The plot device involves a good boy character, a girl, and a bad boy character to contrast the flaws of the good boy character. First, the girl must fall for the good guy, as he is the obvious choice. He’s generally good looking (however exceptions occur as with Dawson - that forehead and bad hair cut did nothing for him), smart, and loves his parents and has big dreams. But after awhile the girl grows tired of the cheery, happy, monotonous life with the good guy and recognizes his flaws. She then chooses the dangerous (I use this term loosely) bad boy, who isn’t necessarily book smart, who doesn’t always respect authority and who looks surprisingly good even in ridiculous flower prints. This theorem explains why good girls eventually all fall for bad boys - and it’s because all bad boys really need a relatively good girl to ail their bad boy ways, because they are only bad because they have no one to love them. And because they are hot. Very hot.

When applied to the show that spawned this theorem it goes a little something like this:

Dawson Leery is the most pretentious and annoying central character of any television show to date. The show, whose premise was to show that teens could act and speak like adults, was anchored by James Van der Beek’s forehead and a pre-Tom Cruise Katie Holmes as his best friend Josephine “Joey” Potter. Introduced as the sidekick to Dawson was Charlie Conway Joshua Jackson as the infamous Pacey Witter, the screw up best friend who entered the show by sleeping with his teacher. Pacey, it seemed, was meant to be the opposite of Dawson (the good guy). Pacey was the slacker with no possible real dreams outside of Capeside, who acted like an asshole, but who was necessary to complete the trio.

The trio was set to begin their sophomore year of high school in the first season, but to throw the group for a loop, the character of Jen Lindley (Michelle Williams) was introduced as a romantic lead for Dawson. Enter the first love triangle of the show. Jen was the opposite of good girl Joey Potter (OMG, see how well matched Joey and Dawson were? They were both good kids!). Jen was blond while Joey was a brunette, Jen was from New York City while Joey was from small-town Capeside, and Jen had lived a fast life in her short 16 years while Joey rowed her way down a creek for fun.

Fast forward through the boring, vomit inducing first season in which Joey wished Dawson would see her as more than just his best friend, through the point where they tried to be in a relationship and through the whole Jack McPhee trial (before we found out he was gay) and to the moment when Pacey Witter was fleshed out into an actual character, with family, feelings, etc in the following two seasons. As the opposite of the pretentious Forehead, Pacey Witter represented the stereotypical “bad boy” of teen angst. He’d slept with his high school teacher, did not perform well in school, disrespected authority, etc. And Joey Potter hated him.

This setup has been used in every teenage soap post-Dawson. Now, it isn’t to say the Good Guy/Girl/Bad Guy love triangle hadn’t existed prior to Dawson’s Creek, it’s existed as long as stories have been told, but the show laid the ground work for all other teen soaps. Pacey was contracted by Dawson to watch over Joey after he crushed her poor little heart, and was surprised to find himself falling for Joey, who was apparently unaware of her girl next door charms and good looks. Joey originally rebuffed Pacey’s advances until, SHOCKER!, she realized what a downer Dawson was and how suave Pacey’s Hawaiian print bowling shirts were. But this wouldn’t be a real love triangle without Forehead finding out about Joey and Pacey and throwing a massive hissy fit, declaring his best friend Pacey the enemy and giving Joey an ultimatum.

Most women would have seen Dawson as the creepy and annoying and pretentious man-boy he was and realize Pacey’s charming good looks, great sense of humor, etc. were the obvious winner, but Joey in all her love-triangle glory fell into the Pacey Witter Theorem and was constantly going back and forth between her “soul mate” Dawson and the love of her life, Pacey. Now, bad boy Pacey isn’t innocent as he broke up with Joey at the Prom because he claimed he wasn’t good enough for her and being around her just reminded of how shitty he was (oh Pacey, that’s not true!), but the show didn’t end there. No, no, no. The show carried on in to college and continued to employ the Pacey Witter Theorem, by introducing bad boy/girl characters for several other characters - Jen had scummy Charlie - who cheated on her with another girl, Audrey is introduced as Joey’s flirtatious, sexy, roommate who eventually begins a relationship with the one and only Pacey, and Joey is once again brainwashed by Dawson into thinking Forehead is worth anything more than a shoulder to cry on. Pacey and Joey rekindle their friendship (again, employing the theorem) as other characters are introduced, but the show finally gets it right when the two end up together in the series finale.

The Pacey Witter Theorem proved that Pacey, the original bad boy, was at first misunderstood, a little misguided, but ultimately a good guy. He became a great character, fondly remembered by any female between the ages of 18-35. He was the poster boy for bad boy turned good. His problem was he simply needed to find his place in life to realize he wasn’t the screw up everyone else made him think he was. Women still think of Pacey as someone to compare real life relationship to. Women still love Pacey so much that Joshua Jackson still deals with fans. He paired with FunnyOrDie to create a viral video for PaceyCon, a spoof of ComicCon.

As previously mentioned, other shows have employed the Pacey Witter Theorem to greater and lesser successful extents. Gilmore Girls was quite successful. Rory Gilmore first fell for the new guy, Dean Forrester. He was clean cut, had a happy home life and worked at the town grocery store. He respected her, he respected her mother and he was perfect in every sense of the word. Introduce Jess Mariano, the romantic bad boy foil, who liked punk music, was from NYC, had a bad attitude and disrespected all forms of authority. What became clear however, was that Jess was misunderstood. He had a really crummy childhood without a father who loved him and simply wanted his own life. But the hook that caught Rory was his love for books - a love she shared. His personality was magnetic and Rory was bored with her perfect life with Dean who didn’t understand her book loving ways. It was only a matter of time before Rory and Dean ended and Rory and Jess began. Jess eventually screwed up and things ended with Rory, but as the Pacey Witter Theorem requires, he cleaned up his act, found himself and attempted to re-woo Rory by telling her he loved her and then running away like a little girl. His attempts failed, but not because he wasn’t worth it. Rory was in a really bad place when Jess showed up the first time. The second time he reappeared in her life he told her all the things she needed to hear, because again, as the Pacey Witter Theorem requires, Jess knows Rory like no one else knows Rory. He’d also cleaned up so nicely that he had written a book (OMG!) and was working at a small publishing house. The show tried to employ this same theorem with the unlikable Logan, but the theorem only works once per show. Unfortunately, Jess never returned to Stars Hollow or Rory’s life, but most viewers choose to assume the two eventually rekindled their romance - as the Pacey Witter Theorem dictates it to.

Other shows employing the Pacey Witter Theorem:

* Buffy the Vampire Slayer - Angel/Buffy/Spike (success)
* Veronica Mars - Duncan/Veronica/Logan (success … sort of)
* Battlestar Galactica - Lee/Kara/Anders (….. Kara fucks everything up)
* Greek - Evan/Casey/Cappie (success …in progress)
* True Blood - Bill/Sookie/Eric (still in progress)
* Friday Night Lights - Jason/Lyla/Tim (successful until Lyla chooses life outside Dillon)
* The OC - Anyone/Marissa/Ryan (ummmmm ….)
* Gossip Girl - Nate/Blair/Chuck (success … at times)
* The Vampire Diaries - Stefan/Elena/Damon (in progress, with many people desiring an Elena/Damon hookup)

As one can see, the Pacey Witter Theorem is still in use, and will continue to be used by all teen dramas, because every girl needs a bad boy. Or so the world of television wants us to think.

tv: gilmore girls, tv, character: pacey witter, character: jess mariano, tv: dawson's creek

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