Tarot In Popular Culture - Two TV Shows That Featured Tarot Cards

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christopher dale

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May 4, 2009, 12:03:36 AM5/4/09
to tarotlem

"We move from terror and loss, to unexpected good fortune, and out of
darkness, hope is born." -Angela Chase in My So-Called Life, quoting
the tarot.
It's inevitable that tarot cards should make it into pop culture.
After all, in this world where people are worried about death and
mortality, nothing is more alarming than the image of the Death Card.
This tarot card is perhaps the most popular in the deck.
Traditionally, TV, film, literature, and the other art have always
dramatically presented the sinister side of this tarot card, and so
audiences can be forgiven if they mistakenly assume that the Death
card is equivalent to actual dying.
Just to clarify things, the Death card is not always a dreaded card
signifying death. Instead, the Death card should be welcomed for the
rebirth that must surely follow; it is the only way to be reborn.
Death then is not just physical dying, but a catalyst for change and
transformation to something better and grander.
Tarot as a Story-Telling DeviceWhat really makes tarot ingrained in
pop culture is its inherent story-telling powers. Tarot cards' rich
imagery and symbolism are a great minefield of stories and narratives
which have inspired artists everywhere.
And thus we come to two remarkable TV shows which featured tarot cards
in an innovative and un-clich'd light.
Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose, episode in The X-Files (first aired
October 13, 1995)In this episode, a serial killer is on the loose,
targeting fortune-tellers and tarot card readers. Peter Boyle gives a
splendid performance here as Clyde Bruckman, a psychic gifted with the
ability to predict people's death, and whom FBI Agents Mulder and
Scully enlist to help them catch the killer's next victim.
Inarguably, this is one of the favourite episodes of many X-philes
(fans of the show). Clever story-telling has made an otherwise simple
detective drama into a brilliant story. As such, the episode clearly
reveals the tension between Scully's skepticism and Mulder's
unwavering faith in matters such as psychic divination and fortune-
telling.
Other People's Daughters, episode in My So-Called Life (first aired
November 4, 1994)Delving into the conflict of mothers versus
daughters, this episode has Angela Chase (played by Claire Danes)
learning tarot reading through a crash course from her best friend
Rayanne's mom.
Who exactly is mothering whom? Here, Angela realises she is a daughter
to her mother, as her mother is also a child to her, and their
disagreements often arise from their refusal to acknowledge this fact.
Angela decides to escape her grandparent's wedding anniversary party
in favor of Rayanne's birthday party, and there she sees firsthand her
best friend's troubled relationship with her mom.
In the end, Angela declares that each tarot card has a name, her
friends and family corresponding to the characters in them: the
Magician, the Fool, the Empress, etc. No card is all good or bad. We
all play a role, each of us is master of our own fate.
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