Over the last few days, feeling compelled to re-watch due South, I rediscovered my love for the earliest episodes as well as my love for Ray Vecchio. I also realized - again - how big the difference is between the episodes of season 1 and the later ones with Ray Kowalski. Starting with the pilot, we are introduced to a Benton Fraser who's like a knight on a crusade, bringing justice, neighborliness and hope to the disenfranchised people living in the poorest part of Chicago, dragging an only semi-reluctant Ray Vecchio after him as his squire.
Fraser is snarky, manipulative, sincere, optimistic and stubborn, and it would be wrong to claim he only became more than a cardboard-cutout with the arrival of Ray Kowalski. He is also not totally overwhelmed by women as long as their interest doesn't tip over into sexual harassment; in fact, in the show's beginning, in each episode he usually encounters at least one woman who shows a certain degree of interest in him. He agrees to a date with the journalist Mackenzie King in order to sound her out ("Diefenbaker's Day Off"), he rides out with Stephanie Cabot who shares his love for horses ("They Eat Horses, Don't They?"), and he is genuinely happy to see again Julie ("Manhunt"), Frobisher's daughter (whom we somehow never meet again in Fraser/RayK fanfic, not even in stories set post-CotW), only getting uncomfortable when he has reason to think that the woman in question might have deeper feelings for him... and even then, he neither flees nor loses the power of speech, although his penchant for eyebrow-rubbing gets into overdrive.
He defends Ray Vecchio in front of Lieutenant Welsh (who, at that point in the series, is far from a supportive father figure, but rather a danger to Ray Vecchio's chances of continued employment) and is a master at inducing guilt in the former in order to make him go along with his crusade-of-the-day.
Not that Ray Vecchio ever needs much inducement. Even in the pilot, after knowing each other only for a short time, Ray Vecchio goes out of his way to solve the murder of Fraser's father once the first awkwardness is out of the way. Heck, he even flies to Canada to inform Fraser of the result of his continued investigation into the person behind Frankie Drake, the hitman, only to just arrive in time to defend Fraser's cabin against an attack by Gerard and his hired thugs.
Ray Vecchio rather passes on handling career-making, high-profile murder cases and instead supports Fraser digging into a meat scandal ("They Eat Horses, Don't They?") or a car-theft ring on stolen vehicles ("Pizzas and Promises"). Vecchio seeks Fraser's approval, instinctively knowing the Canadian's the better police officer, and becoming a better cop in the progress. He simply cannot turn his back on Fraser, even if the latter makes it clear that he expects nothing and would be perfectly alright on his own. The majority of the effort to maintain this unlikely friendship is made by Ray Vecchio, and he sticks to it despite reprimands by Welsh and ridicule by Huey and Louie.
Vecchio and Fraser are comrades, friends, best friends even. And while such a setting usually screams "slash!" to me, in this instance the little voice in the back of my head is silent. I reserve the slashy thoughts on due South for Ray Kowalski.
But sometimes, I think the earlier seasons were the better ones.
Fraser was an optimist and crusader, not a clown with a phobia of attractive women, the cases investigated were less weird and more of a means of bringing across a certain amount of social critique, and the absence of comic relief characters like Turnbull and Thatcher as depicted later in the series made the whole setting darker, more realistic, and more thought-provoking.
Not that I don't like seasons 3 and 4 of due South. I do.
I just hate the stance taken by many fanfic authors who prefer to pretend that pre-Kowalski Fraser didn't exist, or at least - perhaps apart from Victoria - didn't experience anything that might have had an impact on his character development.
Ray Vecchio's more than the guy in a suit who had the audacity to dare marry The Stella.
Fraser is snarky, manipulative, sincere, optimistic and stubborn, and it would be wrong to claim he only became more than a cardboard-cutout with the arrival of Ray Kowalski. He is also not totally overwhelmed by women as long as their interest doesn't tip over into sexual harassment; in fact, in the show's beginning, in each episode he usually encounters at least one woman who shows a certain degree of interest in him. He agrees to a date with the journalist Mackenzie King in order to sound her out ("Diefenbaker's Day Off"), he rides out with Stephanie Cabot who shares his love for horses ("They Eat Horses, Don't They?"), and he is genuinely happy to see again Julie ("Manhunt"), Frobisher's daughter (whom we somehow never meet again in Fraser/RayK fanfic, not even in stories set post-CotW), only getting uncomfortable when he has reason to think that the woman in question might have deeper feelings for him... and even then, he neither flees nor loses the power of speech, although his penchant for eyebrow-rubbing gets into overdrive.
He defends Ray Vecchio in front of Lieutenant Welsh (who, at that point in the series, is far from a supportive father figure, but rather a danger to Ray Vecchio's chances of continued employment) and is a master at inducing guilt in the former in order to make him go along with his crusade-of-the-day.
Not that Ray Vecchio ever needs much inducement. Even in the pilot, after knowing each other only for a short time, Ray Vecchio goes out of his way to solve the murder of Fraser's father once the first awkwardness is out of the way. Heck, he even flies to Canada to inform Fraser of the result of his continued investigation into the person behind Frankie Drake, the hitman, only to just arrive in time to defend Fraser's cabin against an attack by Gerard and his hired thugs.
Ray Vecchio rather passes on handling career-making, high-profile murder cases and instead supports Fraser digging into a meat scandal ("They Eat Horses, Don't They?") or a car-theft ring on stolen vehicles ("Pizzas and Promises"). Vecchio seeks Fraser's approval, instinctively knowing the Canadian's the better police officer, and becoming a better cop in the progress. He simply cannot turn his back on Fraser, even if the latter makes it clear that he expects nothing and would be perfectly alright on his own. The majority of the effort to maintain this unlikely friendship is made by Ray Vecchio, and he sticks to it despite reprimands by Welsh and ridicule by Huey and Louie.
Vecchio and Fraser are comrades, friends, best friends even. And while such a setting usually screams "slash!" to me, in this instance the little voice in the back of my head is silent. I reserve the slashy thoughts on due South for Ray Kowalski.
But sometimes, I think the earlier seasons were the better ones.
Fraser was an optimist and crusader, not a clown with a phobia of attractive women, the cases investigated were less weird and more of a means of bringing across a certain amount of social critique, and the absence of comic relief characters like Turnbull and Thatcher as depicted later in the series made the whole setting darker, more realistic, and more thought-provoking.
Not that I don't like seasons 3 and 4 of due South. I do.
I just hate the stance taken by many fanfic authors who prefer to pretend that pre-Kowalski Fraser didn't exist, or at least - perhaps apart from Victoria - didn't experience anything that might have had an impact on his character development.
Ray Vecchio's more than the guy in a suit who had the audacity to dare marry The Stella.


Comments
After that, the slash with RayK makes up for the lack in quality, because the two men have so much chemistry together that it's blinding. But I do love them both.
I think that the raging war that tore the fandom apart - when people had to choose between the two rays - left scars and that these scars are very visible in fanfic.
Of course, the pre-Kowalski era existed - you only have to see Fraser's reaction when he meets RayV again, and RayK's jealousy, to understand it.
Irene Zuko - yes, I loved that. Plus, I'm still waiting for a Fraser/RayK fanfic set during RayV's time undercover in which RayV's ex-wife Angie shows up, meets "Ray Vecchio" and has to be informed of the Langostini gig.
I think that the raging war that tore the fandom apart - when people had to choose between the two rays - left scars and that these scars are very visible in fanfic.
Seriously, I never got the viciousness that came up in which was inititally a difference of opinion about OTP. Other fandoms have fanfic on different pairings (like McKay/Sheppard, Sheppard/Dex and McKay/Beckett in SGA) and somehow manage to not rip each other apart in the process.
To each their own. I've always seen RayV as too Catholic and a bit homophobic to see Fraser in such a light, but if written well enough, an author can convince me of the working of the Fraser/RayV pairing.
The underlying affection is certainly there, although RayK is definitely prettier. But since I read The Invisible Man fanfic, RayV's looks aren't really an insurmountable obstacle, and I'm not always shallow. Much.