‘Bad Education’ Review: A Scandal With Smarts The real-life story of malfeasance inside a suburban New York school system brings a human perspective to financial crime. By John Anderson
https://www.wsj.com/articles/bad-education-review-a-scandal-with-smarts-11587674969?mod=opinion_reviews_pos2
The rise and fall of Frank Tassone as told in HBO’s blackly comedic “Bad Education” is mostly about his fall and hinges, ever so Greekly, on his own hubris. Early on, Frank, the wildly popular, handsome and successful superintendent of the Roslyn, N.Y., school system on Long Island, is interviewed about an overly ambitious building project by a student journalist, who gets her quote and prepares to go. “It’s just a puff piece,” explains Rachel Bhargava (Geraldine Viswanathan), but Frank stops her in her tracks. “It’s only a puff piece if you let it be a puff piece,” he admonishes. “A real journalist can turn any assignment into a story.” What you feel then is just a tremor, but the foundation of Frank’s meticulously fabricated life is beginning to turn to sand.
Which it famously did. Frank Tassone and his assistant, Pam Gluckin—played with an actorly joy by Hugh Jackman and Allison Janney, directed by Cory Finley—were eventually indicted and convicted in an $11.2-million embezzlement scheme that involved houses in the Hamptons, vacations, plastic surgery, more vacations and Frank’s Park Avenue apartment. It was certainly the biggest crime of its kind that Roslyn had ever seen and made quite the impression on screenwriter Mike Makowsky, who was a student in Roslyn when Frank was indicted in 2004. Mr. Makowsky’s storytelling isn’t just true-crime. It’s true-human.
Corruption is, among other things, inconvenient. When Bob Spicer (Ray Romano) and the rest of the Roslyn board of education start losing their minds over the outrageous intramural pilfering—it’s discovered that Pam has been putting thousands in personal expenses on her school-district credit card—the board immediately wants to call the cops. But Frank—so sage, so political—reins them in: The high school has just been rated No. 4 in the country; the rate of Ivy League acceptances is phenomenal and, most important, property values in Roslyn are soaring compared with other towns on the North Shore of Nassau County. Pam’s exposure might well undo it all—would Harvard think twice about accepting kids from a scandal-plagued school system? No one wants to find out.
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