Blog PostsWomen Doctors: Professionally Competent, Messy Personal Lives

You know what I’d like to see more of on television? Stories about women who are successful in their professional lives, but whose personal lives are a complete mess. I especially want to see more of these stories about female doctors.

Take Emily Owens, M.D., for example. Starring Mamie Gummer, Emily Owens, M.D. tells the story of a medical intern who discovers that life in a hospital is just like high school. In the first episode, she confesses to her old high school crush that she likes him only to be shot down, and realizes that her high school nemesis is interested in her high school crush, but she also diagnoses a condition and performs a life-saving procedure during her first day on the job.

Or let’s look at Mindy Kaling’s new sitcom. The Mindy Project, recently picked up for a full season, tells the story of Mindy Lahiri, a gynecologist whose dating life is a mess. In the first episode of the show, she rudely interrupts an ex-boyfriend’s wedding and drives a bicycle into a pool, but by the end of the pilot, she’s heroically delivering a baby to a patient who doesn’t have health insurance – even interrupting a date to do it.

Or let’s go back in time a few years to a show called Grey’s Anatomy, the drama that won’t die (even when most of its characters do). Ellen Pompeo plays Meredith Grey, an intern who accidentally sleeps with her boss the night before her first day. (By “accidentally sleep with,” I mean that the sex was intentional, but she did not know the man was her boss.) She struggles with a patient, but gets a sexy love interest and a guy crushing on her forlornly from the minute he meets her. She’s also the intern who makes the miraculous discovery of what’s wrong with her patient, and figures out how to help a fellow intern’s patient.

Now, pretend you’ve been living under a pop culture rock for the last few years and know nothing about these three shows or the actresses who play these characters. Based just on the descriptions, would you be able to tell which program was the satire/comedy and which two programs took the “professionally skilled, personal mess” trope seriously?

…Okay, so maybe the bicycle in the pool was the giveaway. Fair enough. The point remains that television continues to have a problem with professional women. Showrunners don’t seem to know how to write professional women characters without turning them into neurotic messes who can control nothing about their personal lives, and lately, female doctors are getting the brunt of that particular cliche.

I like comparing these female doctor characters to a character like House on House, M.D. or Dr. Perry Cox on Scrubs (who has been compared to House by other characters on Scrubs, amusingly enough). These men are professional geniuses whose personal lives are also fraught with drama, but we’d never call them neurotic. They’re curmudgeonly assholes who bark perfectly crafted sarcasm at their professional inferiors, colleagues, and bosses. Their personal lives are messes because they’re misanthropic, or because they’re masking years of built-up pain. Women doctors have messy personal lives because they overanalyze and are neurotic and always pick the wrong men.

I don’t know if showrunners write women doctors this way because they lack imagination, or because they’ve internalized sexist stereotypes, or because they don’t know how else to make a professionally competent women sympathetic to an audience. “We’ve got a woman doctor here, because women can be doctors now, but women who are TOO put-together will be a turnoff, so we’ll make her a mess outside of work! INSTANT EMPATHY!”

Fortunately, Mindy Kaling is aware of this cliche, and the episodes of The Mindy Project following the pilot have veered away from “professionally competent, personally messy” plots.Show-Mindy is often portrayed as less neurotic and more of a jerk, and Kaling is more interested in making the character funny than making her likable. Show-Mindy is several steps in the right direction, and I hope we start seeing more characters like her, soon.

But not too soon, because I want there to still be a market for my own pilot about a professionally competent, neurotic female doctor. Doctor Love tells the story of Hilarie Love, a young physician who can’t seem to get her personal life together. In the pilot episode, Hilarie goes on her first date since high school, where her prom date stood her up to go have sex with the cheerleader. Unfortunately, she winds up wearing an outfit where none of the clothes match, and gets so nervous that she throws up on her date in the middle of a restaurant, and almost accidentally kills him when she stands up and knocks the table on him. Then she gets called into work, and performs a miraculous, life-saving surgery (even though she’s not a surgeon) on a young blind boy who’s been shot, removing the bullet with her bare hands and donating her own blood to rejuvenate the child. This catches the attention of a handsome attending physician who finds her competent and pretty, and is still intrigued by Hilarie even after she throws up on him, too.

What do you think? Do we have a hit?

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5 Responses to Women Doctors: Professionally Competent, Messy Personal Lives

  1. Karolina says:

    I think your show could run for at least six seasons. Add a handsome reformed douchebag and make it 12.

    You make a great point as to the stereotyped portrayal of professional women in TV shows.
    And it is so far from reality! I am a daughter and granddaughter of female doctors and guess what? They both have been in happy, loving relationships for decades, managed to raise their children (because they wanted to) and have (or had) a fulfilling, life-saving professional life AT THE SAME TIME. Of course, it wasn’t always easy — but life never is (barfing at my own cliché, sorry). Some of their colleagues decided to stay single, and you cannot say they have “a mess of a personal life” just because one is single! Grrr…

    Speaking of Grey’s Anatomy, my mother pointed out that each time she caught an episode of it, she was amazed by how they were always having sex in closets and get caught by someone (it’s not only Grey’s Anatomy — ER, Scrubs, House…). She is surprised that she has never found anyone making out in any supply closets in her hospital:P

    • Lady T says:

      You mean people AREN’T making out in closets all the time in real hospitals? My world is shattered.

      My mom’s a nurse, and she was always baffled at why Scrubs and Grey’s Anatomy had characters changing in co-ed locker rooms. She said co-ed locker rooms in hospitals would never, ever happen in real life.

      I am a daughter and granddaughter of female doctors and guess what? They both have been in happy, loving relationships for decades, managed to raise their children (because they wanted to) and have (or had) a fulfilling, life-saving professional life AT THE SAME TIME.

      Too bad they’ll never get a sitcom based on them. Their lives sound too fulfilled 🙂

  2. Thalia says:

    There definitely are some good points about female doctors though Hart of Dixie (another CW show) might’ve been a better example since it’s in its second season as opposed to Emily Owens, MD which is a freshman offering.

    Having said that, there are aspects of Emily Owens, MD that I like despite myself. Her personal life isn’t actually a mess… She’s definitely, unfortunately, neurotic and an overthinker but she’s also honest about what she wants with the men in her life and she accepts their response without crying or freaking out. She attempts to move on, acknowledges the challenges with that, and continues on. For a CW show, that’s positively ground-breaking.

    All of that aside, I know a lot of female doctors and they’re perfectly competent and completely “normal” as opposed to being neurotic overthinkers who can’t manage to be happy when single.

    • Lady T says:

      I thought about writing about Hart of Dixie, but that struck me more as a “fish out of water” show than a “neurotic female” show – more like a Northern Exposure, except with a woman and in the South instead of Alaska. Correct me if I’m wrong, though.

      I want to give Emily Owens, M.D. a chance, largely because I’m two Kevin Bacon degrees away from one of the cast members (we have a mutual friend). I’m glad to hear that the female lead is little more complex than meets the eye.

      • I watch both because, apparently, I’m a sucker for the CW in the 2012-2013 season. Hart of Dixie is both a fish out of water and a… I’m not even sure what to call her love life. Suffice to say, her personal life in general was a mess in the first season.

        I realized just yesterday, actually, that I honestly enjoyed Emily Owens, MD. It isn’t perfect but it has its moments and she’s a competent professional whose love life, while not successful, isn’t awful either. She has friends, she has work, and so the world turns, you know? It was actually really nice to see her be honest about her feelings and then be an adult in the aftermath. She still “over-thinks” and seems far too invested in her crush but it’s not as soapy and dramatic as I expected of a CW show.

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