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Introduction to Reality TV 566 Views
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Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:05
[ yodeling ]
- 00:07
Reality TV Part One
- 00:09
Introduction to Reality TV
- 00:13
So we're talking about reality television in this course.
Full Transcript
- 00:16
And we have with us Deb Tennen,
- 00:17
who actually runs our creative department here at Shmoop.
- 00:20
And she is a PHD in literature,
- 00:22
a published author in People magazine,
- 00:25
and also is a regular subscriber to --
- 00:29
- Where are you a subscriber to? - Entertainment Weekly.
- 00:31
Entertainment Weekly. That probably qualifies her best
- 00:34
to discourse on this topic.
- 00:36
The challenge is that reality television has taken over our lives in a lot of ways.
- 00:40
It accounts for about a third of the television programming on today,
- 00:44
and it's growing very fast.
- 00:46
So we're gonna talk about reality television from a few different perspectives
- 00:49
and have Deb sort of enlighten us
- 00:51
from the way that she sees things
- 00:53
from reality television as literature.
- 00:57
[ dog barks ]
- 00:57
What are the origins of reality television?
- 01:01
Reality TV can be dated as far back as Candid Camera.
- 01:05
Candid Camera
- 01:07
with Allen Funt
- 01:09
starring you, the people.
- 01:12
Welcome to the Candid Camera program,
- 01:14
which brings you secretly made movies
- 01:15
of all kinds of people in all kinds of situations.
- 01:18
Which was in 1948,
- 01:20
which most people know because there's been a lot of
- 01:22
reboots of it.
- 01:23
Hidden cameras, watching people do silly things.
- 01:26
And that's considered reality TV
- 01:28
because it's non-celebrities being put in unscripted situations.
- 01:32
But reality TV as we think of it today
- 01:34
really started more with The Real World.
- 01:36
In the 90s, put people in a house and see what happens.
- 01:39
Have them do stupid stuff
- 01:41
and hear what they have to say about it.
- 01:43
And the irony that it was called The Real World...
- 01:45
When reality TV started, it actually was pretty real.
- 01:48
Even the first few seasons of Survivor,
- 01:49
which started in 2000,
- 01:51
were pretty much unscripted.
- 01:53
Today you'd be hard-pressed to find
- 01:55
any reality show that is not, in some way at least, constructed.
- 01:58
[ bird caws ]
- 01:59
Does reality TV have a script?
- 02:02
Well, there's not a script in the way that you would think of a script for a sitcom.
- 02:06
They do have producers and writers
- 02:08
feeding them at least conversation topics
- 02:10
if not actual lines to say.
- 02:13
They put them in specific situations
- 02:15
and they give them conversation topics
- 02:17
knowing exactly where that's gonna lead.
- 02:19
So then, what's the casting process like?
- 02:21
It seems like all these people are lunatics
- 02:23
or trying to become stars, I guess. Does that ever work?
- 02:27
Absolutely it does work.
- 02:28
People become stars from reality TV all the time.
- 02:31
Elizabeth Hasselbeck, I think her name is,
- 02:34
who hosted The View
- 02:34
started as a contestant on Survivor.
- 02:36
There are tons of people on these food cooking shows
- 02:40
that become celebrity chefs because of it.
- 02:42
The casting process has changed a lot
- 02:43
since the beginning of reality TV,
- 02:45
since the early Survivor/Real World days.
- 02:47
It used to be that you would do a video interview
- 02:49
and show how kooky and weird you were
- 02:51
and then they'd say,
- 02:52
"Oh, this is an interesting personality.
- 02:53
Let's get them in the house."
- 02:54
Now most casting is actually producers going out
- 02:58
and finding failed actors and actresses
- 03:00
in Southern California and saying,
- 03:02
"You're hot. You're hot.
- 03:03
You can string a sentence together.
- 03:07
Let's put you, like you said, on an island
- 03:09
and see what happens."
- 03:10
I think the most recent season of Survivor
- 03:13
only had one auditioned person
- 03:17
cast on the show.
- 03:18
Everyone else was recruited from
- 03:20
producers just going around finding them.
- 03:22
So if you're a producer,
- 03:24
you're looking for someone with
- 03:26
an emotionally volatile personality.
- 03:28
Maybe someone who's kind of an alcoholic?
- 03:30
- Like, what are you even looking... - Yeah. [ laughs ]
- 03:32
Well, there are definitely archetypes, right,
- 03:34
that you wanna hit.
- 03:35
So, yes, you want the person who's emotionally volatile
- 03:37
because that's gonna make everyone else freak out
- 03:39
and what you're looking for is the most drama possible.
- 03:41
You also want someone who's really dumb,
- 03:43
because part of the excitement of watching reality TV
- 03:47
is feeling superior to everyone who's on there.
- 03:49
So if you feel more competent than them, that's good.
- 03:51
You want someone who's incredibly smart,
- 03:53
someone who's incredibly hot.
- 03:55
But that every single person watching
- 03:56
can relate to one type of person
- 03:58
and hate one type of person.
- 04:01
So you bring up two interesting perspectives here.
- 04:03
One is that of the contestant.
- 04:06
What kind of low self esteem
- 04:08
they must have to wanna actually be on
- 04:09
one of these shows.
- 04:11
And the other is the audience
- 04:13
needing to feel superior
- 04:15
- to someone who's kind of loserly to start with. -Right.
- 04:18
Yeah, the contestants - the ones that we're talking about
- 04:20
that get recruited - are people who just want exposure.
- 04:23
These are the people who -- You watch The Bachelor,
- 04:25
these are the people who go on
- 04:27
even though they're in a relationship or whatever.
- 04:28
They just wanna get their music career going.
- 04:30
And they just wanna cause as much drama as possible
- 04:32
so that people remember their name and their face.
- 04:34
From the other side of it...
- 04:37
- From the audience perspective. - Yeah, we, I mean...
- 04:39
It's the same reason that you sit at the counter at Starbucks
- 04:42
and watch people go by
- 04:43
and think about how ugly her purse looks
- 04:45
and how that person could lose a few pounds and all that.
- 04:48
It's kind of that same thing of, you know,
- 04:50
the way we all do.
- 04:51
We judge people because it makes us feel better about ourselves.
- 04:53
And some people voice it and some people don't.
- 04:54
So that makes a lot of sense.
- 04:56
Has society become more compressive?
- 04:58
So that needing to feel superior
- 05:01
has become a bigger deal to us
- 05:03
as a mass?
- 05:04
I think as we grow as a society
- 05:07
that is more materialistic and more superficial,
- 05:09
of course we're gonna wanna think
- 05:10
that we're more beautiful and more intelligent than everyone else around us.
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