This essay is dedicated to the wonderful Alla Palagina who generously shared countless episodes of Monk with me and with whom I initially discussed this episode after we watched it in early 2011. May she rest in power.
Originally posted on CiCO3
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Adrian Monk could represent a potential alternative masculinity. His clumsy, fumbling, mumbling, constantly terrified competence as police detective stands in stark contrast to the chest-puffing, misogynist, homophobic normative masculinity that pervades popular culture. Instead of embracing his competence though Monk is constantly aspiring towards normative masculinity. A telling episode is 2006’s “Mr. Monk and the Astronaut”.
Wagner prepares to murder Raphelson
“Mr. Monk and the Astronaut” begins with famous astronaut and test pilot Steve Wagner (Jeffrey Donovan) drugging Joanne Raphelson (Brianna Brown), a former Vegas showgirl he once dated and whom he severely beat and hospitalized several years before. Raphelson planned to reveal the beating in a tell all biography.
Wagner is a confident, charismatic white alpha male predator. And he has an airtight alibi for Joanne’s murder having been in planetary orbit at the time of Joanne’s death. He charms the police, Monk’s personal assistant Natalie and the children in Natalie’s daughter’s class when both he and Monk go to present on career day. Monk is the only one who believes he killed Joanne.
Children mock Monk at the career day then proceed to terrorize him with laser pointers. Hijinks ensue and afterwards he confronts Wagner in the hallway. Wagner uses aggressive physicality to cower Monk then tells him, “You’re a flincher, you’ll never stop me. Because when the chips are down when it really counts, you are always going to flinch.” This, combined with Monk’s panic about the laser pointers sets up the episode’s final confrontation.
Wagner makes Monk flinch
Wagner ridicules, questions and challenges Monk’s masculinity throughout the episode. Monk confesses to his psychologist, “When I look at a manly man like Steve Wagner, I just feel weak. I just feel so inadequate. I know he’s guilty, but I’ll never be able to prove it.” Here Monk affirms Wagner’s perceptions as well as Wagner’s masculinity. This violent misogynist represents the manhood to which Monk aspires.
Monk is steadfast in the face of laser scopes
The show concludes with Monk confronting his fear and placing his body in front of a jet Wagner is piloting to prevent its takeoff. Monk remains steadfast in front of the plane even when soldiers arrive with (for some reason) laser scope rifles which cover him much like the earlier laser pointers. Wagner is taken into custody from the plane. As he is being handcuffed Wagner makes eye contact with Monk and gives him an acknowledging nod, validating his manhood. Alternately put, the episode resolves with Monk receives validation of his own manhood through the toxic masculinity of the “manly man” he succeeded in incarcerating.
Murderer of women gives Monk a nod of approval
Monk is not exceptional in embracing toxic masculinity to validate the manhood of its male characters. The episode in question does not invent it but is does represent yet another exchange in and (re)production of normative patriarchal discourse.
“Mr. Monk and the Astronaut” (season 4, episode 14) originally aired on 3 March 2006 to around 5.65 million households in its initial airing.
I loved Monk, and I loved this episode. Donovan’s performance was of someone who embraced being a sociopath. As a result, I always felt that head-nod of approval at the end was kind of an insult to Monk’s intelligence, and the audience’s.
Monk’s long conversation with his psychiatrist about his feelings of masculine inadequacy, specifically in comparison to Wagner, and his prior conversation with Wagner about “flinching” point towards a kind of validation from the head nod. I like Monk too. More often than not it’s a clever, funny show although it sometimes feels very mean too for making Monk’s tragic illness a recurring punchline.
I’m not disagreeing with you. Actually, now that I think about it—given that it’s a show about a highly intelligent detective who sees his psychiatrist twice a week, I’m actually surprised that a good conversation about sociopaths never came up.
…I think it’s probably a mistake to take that show too seriously, charming as it was. Adrian is supposed to have severe OCD, in addition to everything else, yet is able to walk past all those parking meters in the opening of the show without touching each or even looking to count.
It probably says more about me than the shows, mind you, that I can nit-pick series about OCD people like Monk and The Big Bang Theory at length…
Thanks for writing this. Very interesting thought. ;)