This is just the start of a wave of televised propaganda that you should come to expect. Cartoons are on the way for the kiddies, too. Learn to love the very thing that will destroy you.
FromThe Associated Press:
A group of Muslim worshippers were gathered for evening prayer inside the Islamic Center of Southern California when Moses Port and David Guarascio arrived.
“The fact that we’re here is bigger than anything we could have even hoped for,” said Guarascio, creator, along with Port, of the CW sitcom “Aliens in America.” “But being here seems to make sense, you know, appropriate.”
Appropriate, certainly, for the bold, satirical comedy, premiering at 8:30 p.m. Oct. 1, which explores Americans’ fears and cultural ignorance of Muslims. Port, who’s Jewish, and Guarascio, who was raised Catholic, were at the Islamic Center this night to introduce their new series to the faithful.
Though not unique – the popular Canadian series “Little Mosque on the Prairie” also deals with anti-Muslim attitudes – it’s rare these days for an American sitcom to tackle such sensitive social and political issues.
At first, “Aliens in America” seems more akin to NBC’s short-lived 1999 series “Freaks and Geeks” with its story of Justin Tolchuck (Dan Byrd), a nerdy Wisconsin high school student who just doesn’t seem to fit in.
Then the twist: His overly involved mother, Franny (Amy Pietz), agrees to take in a foreign exchange student, hoping it will help Justin become as popular as his sister Claire (Lindsey Shaw). Only the student who arrives is Raja Musharaff (Adhir Kalyan), a Muslim from Pakistan.
Raja is polite, idealistic and hardworking, much to the pleasure of Justin’s father, Gary (Scott Patterson). But everyone else in town sees Raja as a potential terrorist.
In one scene from the pilot, Raja sits wearily in class listening to a student confess that she is angry with him because “his people” blew up the twin towers. The teacher then asks if others in the class are angry with Raja and all raise their hands.
The response from the Islamic Center crowd was overwhelmingly positive, just as it has been with TV critics. Although a small minority of columnists complained that the pilot suggests Americans are “bigoted and stupid.”
“Maybe it appears in the pilot that Raja is the moral center of the show,” says Pietz, “but the character of Justin and the relationship between them is the moral center – what’s happening between these two young men, that’s the lesson for all of us, and it’s the lesson of tolerance.”
Guarascio and Port, who created “Aliens” in 2005 for NBC, insist that their intent was not to be edgy or socially provocative – just funny.
And who can’t relate to feeling like a fish-out-of-water?
“Everybody will be able to get it on some level because irrespective of who you are or where you’re from, your race or religion, we all at some point in our lives feel as though we don’t quite fit in,” says the 24-year-old South African-born Kalyan.
“Adhir and I have a lot more in common than our characters,” adds Byrd. “We didn’t have to force it on ourselves as far as trying to get along. We just kind of work on similar wavelengths … that’s really been the blessing in all of this, because if we didn’t get along on that level, then this would not work nearly as well.”
But these are difficult times for TV sitcoms. In the past decade, the number of half-hour comedies on television has been cut by nearly a third, notes “Aliens” executive producer Tim Doyle, “so there’s a caution and a lot of calculation that go into comedies because they’ve failed so much and the studios and networks are a little gun-shy.”
That said, Doyle contends “family comedies got a really bad rap because critics were not particularly generous with the things that followed in the wake of ‘Cosby’ and ‘Roseanne’ … ‘Aliens in America’ takes place within a family, but it’s also a high school show, and we’re still finding the voice of the show. We want to defy classification.”
Individual Muslims aren’t the problem. Islam is the problem. Series like this one do not do us a service, they simply blind more people to the real issue.





We have a TV program in Canada something like this. It’s very pro Muslim, featuring witless dhimmi infidels and is an insult to anyone who understands what’s real and what’s not.
Pass the bucket please.
We have a CBC program something like this in Canada, pro-Muslim, featuring witless infidels and is nothing more than an insult.
Pass the bucket please.
Now that we are having islam rammed down our throats on TV, and I speak on the principle as I have not seen this show, it’s going to get easier and easier for the west to be utterly destroyed.
I wonder if there is a way we can find out exactly what the saudis et al own.
I rarely read the program blurbs in the WaPo TV guide, but I caught the one for Aliens in America. The heading = “Allah in the Family.” The review went on to say that the Pakistani Muslim brought a “moral compass” to the American family.
Can we have a family sitcom where someone from the KKK is the ‘moral center’ of the show? Am I in the friggin twilight zone here or what??
Savitch,
The review I saw put me in mind of OBL’s idea that Islam will save America from its own decadence. I wonder if whoever penned that review has any idea as to that connection?
Yes, the twilight zone. Cue the music.
Oh, and the review mentioned a “Koran-carrying” Pakistani. Sheesh!
I caught the preview for this program on YouTube. These were my thoughts on it:
http://mosinging1986.livejournal.com/1188953.html
I’m watching Aliens in America right now.
The way the American teacher is presented is beyond belief. She refers to “Muslimism” and makes smarmy and sarcastic statements to the class.
Now the Pakistani is praising the merits of “shahada,” which gives him strength.
This show plainly targets teens and is quite the slick production, loaded with propaganda. ARRRRGGGHHHH!!!!
Something else, with a very popular series.