Title Card - Party of Five

2 Comments

  1. Hey there, Amari long time no see, lol As usual great review.

    I am on season 1 episode 15 of the original/real Party of Five from the 90’s, so when I heard about this reboot, I had to check it out. It was good, very emotional, but damn did the writers take a lot from the original PO5’s pilot episode lol Some lines and even some scenes were straight up from the original lol, I almost had to do a double take. If it weren’t for the Spanish names and cellphones I would have thought it was the original from the 90’s lol Heck even with the siblings calling Beto – Bae or Bay lol

    I think that the show hit on all of the right emotional spots, the court room scene, the deportation scene, heck even seeing poor Valentina having to witness her parents being arrested was rough, along with Gloria realizing that they couldn’t take Rafa with them. I mean to go from taking baby Emilio over the boarder to, not being able to take their youngest was heartbreaking, I could not imagine going to another country without my baby.

    I love all of the characters they are very easy to relate to and sympathize with. For Valentina to be 12 and taking 9th grade math, damn she smart lol. They are the good illegals so to speak, the parents, they pay their taxes, and they pay their workers, and they give jobs to people in need. But sadly in the end they did and have been breaking the law for 23/24 years, unfortunately. It all is just a messed up situation.

    And even though, like I said the show hit all of the emotional spots that is should have, and I don’t want to bring up the original PO5 too much, but for me how the 5 Acosta kids end up having to “raise” themselves, it is totally different. With the original PO5 you felt the tension and the dysfunction on screen because we knew and understood that the Salinger’s parents were dead. They weren’t coming back, they weren’t just a phone call, or a Skype call away.

    When Charlie, Bailey, Julia, and Claudia went at it, and fought with each other you really felt that s*** because you knew that no parental figure was going step in and defuse the situation or have the kids kiss and make up, they really were on their own. Their grief was always there, even with all of the good, and happy times.

    You felt for Owen because his parents would literally be nothing to him but some photographs and stories his older siblings told him. There was no getting over that. Although little Rafa, is now without both of his parents as well. And considering how long a person who is now deported has to wait in order to come back to the USA and become legal, poor Rafa may also have to grow up with just pictures, video’s, phone calls, and stories from his older siblings about who his parents were.

    Now with this part, I don’t mean to offend, but because real people and families are going through this I think that it should be okay for me to able to say how I feel on this part, but I really do feel that the parents are to blame for the unfair situation that they put their kids in. I’m sorry but I think that it is totally messed up that the parents in their 24 years in America didn’t try at some point to get some sort of legal paper work started. Like I get that they didn’t want to get caught and that they wanted to make a better life for their children, but damn. The parents got married, they have 5 kids, the oldest is 24, you mean to tell me that they managed to get a house, a car, a whole ass restaurant and throughout that whole time they didn’t think to get their citizenship in order. Did the parents just believe that they would be able to send all of their kids to college, before the government found out about them. I’m sorry but everything that a person wants to do and have in life requires that you to have some sort of legal documentation, right? So, did they have all of those things except the starting papers needed for their legalization and citizenship?

    Also with the restaurant don’t you have to have some sort of legal documentation when it comes to that? Like even if a friend gave them the restaurant, they would still need to have something in writing because on the off chance something happened they would have legal papers saying that they owned restaurant? Cause I think that it would be pretty messed up for the parents to have legal paperwork over a restaurant, but have nothing in regards to their citizenship. Now the kids are going to have to suffer. And that is what always makes me mad, is now the kids have so suffer because the parents didn’t think to at least try to start the process of legalization.

    That’s all that it really comes down too. Is the children suffering. I know that Emilio is damn grateful that his parents did what they needed to do, not only for him, but for all of his siblings as well, but for them to have nothing in regards to their own citizenship is sad.

    But overall, just like with the Salinger clan, I feel a connection to the Acosta clan and I am really excited to see where the show goes with them, and like you said hopefully the show doesn’t get stuck and that they can evolve past their initial hook. I love all of the characters, especially as of now Emilio.

    1. In regards to their paperwork, there is a combination of ways they could have gotten past that. The legal method would be having someone with a valid SSN and information have everything registered under their name. The illegal method would be having a fake SSN and documents made up. However, considering all the paperwork required to run a business year in and year out, I can only fathom the sole reason they didn’t start the process is out of fear. For while DACA protects people who came before they were 18, there isn’t any known protection for those over 18 who are undocumented. Plus, as you noted, it is one thing if you overstay a VISA, have some form of refugee status, or what have you, but to just come and set up a life? As much as I admire what they have done, there is the need to question, was there never a conversation with a lawyer? If Emilio can look into DACA, why wasn’t there some questions into what could happen with them?

      Now, granted, I haven’t gone through any of this and my point of reference is a book I read quite a long time ago. But, as much as my eyebrow might be raised, I do feel the immigration process is probably far more complicated than given credit for and when you add in the situations the US created or contributed to that created crises, its hard to say anything.

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