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Reality TV: The Evolution of Reality TV 211 Views
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Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:05
[ yodeling ]
- 00:07
Reality TV Part Seven
- 00:09
The Evolution of Reality TV
- 00:13
[ dog barks ]
Full Transcript
- 00:14
Has reality TV evolved much since its beginning?
- 00:17
Reality TV has been around a while.
- 00:20
Candid Camera in the 40s,
- 00:23
gameshows like Truth and Consequences
- 00:25
and Beat the Clock in the 40s, 50s, 60s, et cetera.
- 00:29
One show that I love to talk about is the show --
- 00:32
I think it started in the late 40s called Queen for a Day.
- 00:34
[ crowd cheering ]
- 00:38
This is a great example of how reality TV
- 00:40
has really not changed that much.
- 00:42
This was a show where
- 00:44
women and only women
- 00:46
would come on and there would be
- 00:48
a few women telling their stories.
- 00:51
And they were always these terrible sob stories.
- 00:53
So it would be like -
- 00:55
Because my husband had two heart attacks
- 00:57
he's not supposed to lift.
- 00:58
See, this is not your season, Mrs. Burn.
- 01:00
- It hasn't been for a while. - No.
- 01:02
Mrs. Rogers, do you have a family and children?
- 01:04
Five.
- 01:05
Five! One husband. What's Mr. Rogers do?
- 01:09
Well, he isn't employed now.
- 01:11
And you've got shattered nerves.
- 01:13
You're wrinkling your nice little handkerchief here.
- 01:16
And they would just tell these stories.
- 01:17
It was so demeaning and so depressing.
- 01:19
Let's hear your applause for candidate number one.
- 01:22
[ applause ]
- 01:24
Time away. Number two.
- 01:26
[ louder applause ]
- 01:28
Number three.
- 01:30
[ thunderous applause ]
- 01:34
And then at the end of the show,
- 01:35
one woman would be crowned queen for a day.
- 01:38
She'd get a robe
- 01:39
and a little crown and they'd give her the refrigerator.
- 01:43
And then they'd also give her a vacation
- 01:45
or something to treat her.
- 01:46
But it's this exact same thing that happens now
- 01:50
except that
- 01:52
these people are demeaning themselves as opposed to producers demeaning them.
- 01:55
These are the people who
- 01:57
go on these competitive reality shows
- 01:58
and tell their sob stories,
- 02:00
as if their tragic history has anything to do
- 02:04
with their cooking abilities.
- 02:06
And, yes, I understand the, you know,
- 02:09
let's say, "My mother passed away
- 02:10
and she was the chef of the family
- 02:12
and it really inspired me." Done.
- 02:14
But these are sob stories --
- 02:15
You see it a lot in the American Idol kind of shows.
- 02:18
They just travel through the entire show.
- 02:21
And that's what gets people to vote for you
- 02:23
if it's an audience participation show,
- 02:27
is telling these sob stories.
- 02:28
So this is the kind of thing where
- 02:29
when reality TV started, these folks
- 02:31
knew that you wanted this sob story.
- 02:34
That's been there from the beginning and that's still there now.
- 02:37
[ pen writing ]
- 02:38
Will the Hunger Games be the future of reality TV?
- 02:42
If you talk to speculative fiction writers,
- 02:44
they would say exactly that.
- 02:46
I mean, we've all read The Hunger Games.
- 02:48
You're gonna have children killing children on TV.
- 02:51
If we keep going at the exact rate we are going,
- 02:54
yes, that is going to happen.
- 02:56
Unless we do somehow come into some dystopian future
- 02:58
after the world ends,
- 03:00
I don't think we're going to get to that level.
- 03:03
It will have to plateau at some point.
- 03:06
I think that's when reality TV dies
- 03:09
and either we go back to scripted television
- 03:11
or we come up with something new that we wouldn't have thought of.
- 03:13
If in the 1940s, you presented the idea of
- 03:15
The Bachelor to someone, they'd be like, "Hah!"
- 03:18
So there might be some idea like that
- 03:19
where you'd present it to us now and we'd be like,
- 03:21
"That's not a thing."
- 03:22
But 50 years from now, it might be.
- 03:25
- But I think the Internet is where most of that is gonna live. - Yeah.
- 03:28
Not prime time TV for sure.
- 03:30
Where are the other areas? You know, each season
- 03:35
we've seen bold new steps in different areas.
- 03:38
So, my son and I watch Naked and Afraid
- 03:40
and it is so not sexual.
- 03:43
It is gross. There are people having to eat
- 03:46
worms and snakes to stay alive.
- 03:48
It's really cool to look at.
- 03:50
The naked part has nothing to do with the show.
- 03:54
And yet it's a great marketing hook for people to
- 03:57
come and watch, I guess, and leave it to Discovery.
- 04:00
But how does that work then in the next generation?
- 04:05
Are we gonna have naked Shark Week
- 04:07
where people jump in with hungry Great Whites
- 04:10
- without their clothes on and we see them eaten? - Yep.
- 04:12
Once a year, someone dies on camera.
- 04:15
I mean, absolutely.
- 04:16
What's happening with reality TV
- 04:18
is that we're starting out with these base shows.
- 04:20
And there's The Real World,
- 04:22
and then there's Survivor.
- 04:24
Combine them and you get Temptation Island.
- 04:27
That's how reality TV works
- 04:29
is you have these shows that don't seem that crazy on their own,
- 04:31
and then some producer is like,
- 04:33
"But what if we did both of them?"
- 04:34
It's kind of like how in Silicon Valley,
- 04:36
you have Twitter meets Yelp for old men.
- 04:39
And here you have Survivor meets The Real World
- 04:42
for 18-year-old girls.
- 04:44
That's what happens
- 04:45
is these producers take different
- 04:47
reality shows, combine them --
- 04:49
So, like you said, Shark Week dating.
- 04:51
Yes, I honestly don't think that that's
- 04:53
that far out of the question.
- 04:54
I don't think we're gonna get that much more nudity
- 04:57
and that much more violence, et cetera,
- 04:58
but we're gonna get weirder and weirder combinations of stuff for sure.
- 05:02
It's a great game show we also watch called Wipeout.
- 05:05
Where people run through syrup and have like --
- 05:08
It's just, for like, 300 dollars. That's what the winner wins.
- 05:12
Meantime, they have broken bones and whatever.
- 05:14
Yeah, that's like American Gladiators meets Nickelodeon
- 05:16
- or something, yeah. - Exactly.
- 05:18
There are so many combinations.
- 05:19
So if you think of something like The Apprentice, right?
- 05:22
This is a social experiment, absolutely,
- 05:25
but it's also a game show.
- 05:27
It's also a competition.
- 05:29
So you get shows like this where
- 05:31
you're combining so many different elements
- 05:34
of so many different genres of reality shows
- 05:36
that you create a new genre.
- 05:38
And I don't know what I'd call The Apprentice.
- 05:40
We'd have to come up with a totally new genre for it, right?
- 05:42
And that's, again, how reality TV from the beginning has grown
- 05:46
is that it starts with a game show and then you throw in
- 05:50
a social experiment, put them together,
- 05:52
you have a new genre. Then take that genre,
- 05:53
add it to another one, you have a new one.
- 05:55
And it kind of snowballs like that.
- 05:58
[ pen writing ]
- 05:59
Has the overall theme of reality TV changed?
- 06:03
What do we expect the future of reality TV to be?
- 06:08
Yeah, like, children killing children.
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