A sendoff to obscurity: I Married Dora and the anti-cliffhanger season finale

Curator's Note

Besides this clip, you cannot watch I Married Dora (IMD). The episodes are not on Hulu, Netflix or even Youtube . There are no bootlegged VHSs on Ebay, and forget about DVD or Blu-ray. Thus, this series primarily exists in cultural memory of its small viewership, a liminal borderland between obscurity and oblivion. This marginality overlooks IMD's pioneering finale.  

Season finales are televisually unique, occupying a mythic resolution function for viewers' while piquing interest for next season, although, as Mittell notes, true conclusions rarely occur. Here, I want to consider how anti-cliffhangers trouble the audience's viewing experience and resist/negotiate television's commercial demands.  

I almost curated SNL's parody of Dallas's infamous cliffhanger, "A House Divided," to show how its cultural significance extendeds across decades, genres, and digital convergence. Its canonized status is a testament to this finale's success in generating anxiety and commercial profit. As Steve Herro reminded us, lest we forget, finales primarily function as advertisements. Dallas was so successful, this famous episode is usually referred by the "Who shot J.R." catchphrase CBS' marketing devised to promote the show in its summer absence.  

I Married Dora premiered in 1987, when TV increasingly engaged with Latinidad.  IMD follows a family whose single father, Peter, marries his El Salvadorian housekeeper Dora to prevent her deportation. Ostensibly, housework was more intimidating than INS. The series also boasted a young Juliette Lewis as the Gen X daughter, a reason in and of its self to campaign ABC for a DVD release. IMD's ratings were actually similar to Full House, yet ABC axed the show anyway after 13 episodes and it faded into cultural obscurity. The finale closes as Peter jumps on a plane to Bahrain, only to emerge back in the airport lobby moments later.  He announces, "It's been cancelled." Dora responds, "The flight?" and he says, "No, our series." Everyone then turns and looks into the camera, waving "Adios" as the show pulls back to reveal the set and rolling cameras. Literally breaking the fourth wall and shocking viewers with a (pre-Arrested Development) meta-reference to its own cancellation, IMD's series finale reveals the oft-hidden means of TV production. Thus, this anti-cliffhanger critiques the commercial expectations of the series finale. In a way, this finale is the antithesis of "I Shot J.R.", and has been dully forgetton, while Dallas has secured a spot in the annals of popular culture.

Comments

What a finale to a week on series finales.  I had never even heard of Dora let alone this ending.  

There is something refreshing about the honesty of this finale.  Why bother to try to tie up all the loose ends when the series has been cancelled and that's why its ending?

As Laura Mulvey says, 'the strength of the melodramatic form lies in the amount of dust the story raises along the road, a cloud of over-determined irreconcilables which put up a resistance to being neatly settled in the last five minutes' (Mulvey, 'Notes on Sirk and Melodrama' in Visual and Other Pleasures, 1989: 40). 

Surely much of what has been noted over the past week proves her argument which, despite being over 30 years old, is still as relevant as ever.

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