From Deseret News archives:

Polygamist response to 'Big' mixed

Published: Wednesday, March 22, 2006 9:16 a.m. MST
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HILDALE, Washington County, AND COLORADO CITY, Ariz. — Amid the sagebrush isolation and the warehouse-sized houses that spawned the inspiration for the new polygamy series on HBO, "Big Love," the buzz is decidedly mixed.

I spent a couple of hours Monday morning in this plural-marriage enclave asking people if they had watched the latest episode of "Big Love" the night before.

In the older, more established parts of Hildale and Colorado City, where the conservative Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS) is firmly entrenched and the additions to the houses are bigger than the original houses, I found zero interest in the television series that premiered earlier this month and is the first ever to portray a polygamous relationship.

For that matter, I found zero interest in television, period.

At the Hildale city offices, city clerk Ruth Barlow said not many residents own TVs. "I'd say less than 10 percent," she estimated.

And even if they did, they probably wouldn't tune into a cable TV network attempting to depict life as they know it.

"We've had umpteen hundred reporters down here who are going to tell the story," she said, "and not one of them has got it right."

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A little farther up the road, outside the Cooperative Mercantile Corporation, a man getting out of a pickup truck had a similar take. "If life here was like it is in the paper," he said, "people wouldn't live here."

Reporters are not welcomed with open arms in old Hildale.

At the Dezereta gas station and convenience store, the woman working the counter, when asked about "Big Love," said, "I don't know what it is and I don't want to see it."

The man pumping gas outside did not so much as look up when he was asked the question.

I kept trying — at the hardware store, the restaurant, the fresh-baked pizza place, outside the fire station.

The conversations, what few there were, went like this:

"Did you watch that TV show about polygamy?"

"No."

"Do most people watch TV?"

"I don't know."

"Can you get cable here?"

"I don't know."

"Is it against church rules to watch TV?"

"No. You can watch it if you want to."

"Do you have a TV?"

"No."

Even when I offered my unsolicited editorial comment that perhaps a TV show about polygamy might help improve tolerance for the practice, I was met with either stone-cold silence or, in the case of Ruth Barlow, a skeptical shrug followed by, "We'll see."

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