![]() ![]() The bigger a character Bill becomes on the show - and he has several juicy scenes in “Not To Be Believed” - the meaner it seems each time the camera boomerangs to Linda’s TV dinners. ![]() What felt like a novel way into a well-worn story in episode one has started to curdle for me by the end of episode three. Exploring the personal motivations of those involved in the Clinton–Lewinsky scandal risks exaggerating their significance. ![]() This week the show dares to ask: Would Bill have been impeached if Linda Tripp wasn’t already blue on the day a Newsweek reporter called her? If Linda hadn’t kept a bag of Utz in her desk drawer but instead needed to hit the vending machine, thereby sending the reporter to voicemail and allowing her time to cool off, would Bill have fared differently? In a way, wasn’t his perjury written in the stars on the afternoon an erstwhile TV dad accidentally slighted an erstwhile White House staffer? The series’ raison d’être is to center the women entangled in Bill Clinton’s near-downfall, and it continues to surprise by depicting Monica Lewinsky’s traitorous friend with painstaking attention. Linda, frustrated by her life of inconsequence, seeks refuge in a snack pack of sour cream and onion chips because all feelings are edible on Impeachment. In the spring of 1997, Major Dad from TV’s Major Dad was booked on a tour of Andrews Air Force Base organized with what appears to have been a herculean effort by Linda Tripp. ![]()
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