'Real' TV by Bill Kirton
I suspect that most, probably all, of the other Authors
Electric either don’t watch TV at all or concentrate on programmes devoted to
culture, the arts and serious discussions of crucial social issues. I imagine
them sitting back on a Charles Eames chair, sipping a glass of Château Pétrus
and enjoying a serialisation of Kant’s Critique
of Pure Reason on the latest Bang and Olufsen. My own diet, on the other
hand, is predominantly of football, rugby, cricket and golf viewed from a Scrabble-named
IKEA chair as I scoff a tub of peanut butter ice cream.
A Charles Eames Chair |
Fine, it’s a very popular, quite addictive medium with
highly professional writers, actors, presenters, producers and the rest who cater
for almost all tastes. Even the despised commercials show levels of creative
and professional excellence way beyond those of some blockbuster movies. But I
really don’t like what it’s done with the notion of ‘reality’.
I know it’s a cliché, but one of the reasons is the
preponderance of ‘reality’ TV shows. I think it maybe started with Big Brother.
I watched tiny bits of the first ever series in the UK and remember nothing of it. I
do, however, remember channel hopping when the third or fourth series was on
and coming across what I thought was a hilarious spoof version of it. The
characters were so inane, their conversations so dull, so lacking in any
redeeming features, so devoid of interest that I was lost in admiration of the
writers. (You know where this is going, don’t you?) The problem was that the
sketch went on too long and, after a few minutes, I realised that this wasn’t a
spoof; it was the actual thing.
OK, that’s not a crime. The inmates weren’t chosen for the
contributions they might make to the sum of human knowledge, but the thought
that people were sitting watching this night after night, finding these people
more ‘real’ than those in the world around them was depressing. Then along came
Susan Boyle. I know, I know, it’s a long time ago, but nothing seems to have
happened since to change my opinions of it all.
By then, I was already watching very little TV, and certainly
not the stuff generated by cynical exploiters of ‘ordinary’ people, so I hadn’t
heard of Ms Boyle until a visiting American friend (a sensitive, intelligent,
caring friend) described watching her on TV in the USA. She was careful to set
the scene, talked of Ms Boyle’s dress, bad hair, etc., and how she seemed
generally to be an embarrassment to the human race. Then came the revelation of
her voice, and she became an angel.
So, encouraged by the friend, I duly watched her performance
on YouTube – and it was very, very depressing. Not because of her. To me, she
sounded fine, far better and more powerful vocally than most of those rentastars
who churn out regular hits. No, I was appalled by the audience’s and the
judges’ reactions to the way she looked and to her apparently gauche attempts
to inject some ‘personality’ into her presence. (I say ‘apparently’ because Ms
Boyle obviously knew she had helluva voice and that the people in the audience
making faces at her and conveying their confident superiority over her to one
another would soon be silenced. In her way, she was as manipulative as Cowell
and the rest – and good for her. Her ‘manipulation’ was without malice.)
So, in the end, she triumphed. In fact, she triumphed rather
too quickly for comfort. No sooner had she belted out the first couple of notes
than the audience was baying its approval and the judges were doing their
‘gosh, what a lovely surprise’ faces. She was immediately ‘forgiven’ for being
whatever their previous sneering at her implied.
The whole Susan Boyle phenomenon didn’t arise from the fact
that she had/has that voice, but from the implied gap between it and her ‘unprepossessing’
appearance. If she’d slapped on some make-up, bought a new dress and played
herself as the shy, quiet individual she is, she’d probably still have got
their votes, but it wouldn’t have been good television. So the producers had to
contrive the Quasimodo effect.
But why is that so depressing? Well, watch the clip and pause it before she starts to sing. Look at the
carefully chosen images of the reactions of everyone else there. Without
exception, there’s total scorn for this person standing before them, a
preening, sneering rejection of her, a reduction of her to a figure of fun –
based on what? On the fact that she has questionable dress sense? That she apes
the confidence of all the other wannabes who strut across our screens? That she’s
a middle-aged virgin from a small Scottish town?
I really do hope that she was canny enough to have chosen to
project this image of herself deliberately. I want to believe that Susan Boyle
manipulated Simon Cowell. But even if that’s true, the initial images of the
baying, self-satisfied citizens so devoid of compassion confirm that her
victory is a small one and that we’re losing more and more of our humanity.
Those few minutes made Susan Boyle a winner, but the few seconds of pre-voice
reactions and the patronising nonsense the judges poured over her afterwards took
any meaning out of her victory.
The glut of reality TV shows seems designed to highlight the
worst aspects of our attitudes to one another and I find it hard to think of
that as entertainment.
Comments
Great post. I don't understand the allure of the Kardashians and why they haven't gone extinct by now...maybe I'm clueless because i rarely watch the drivel on American TV, especially that masquerading as news.
Jan, you should have got in touch before incinerating the Eames. I’d have organised a whip-round. Glad the kids are OK, though. And I missed Cowell in the Mirror (my copy must have fallen out of the Journal of Applied Research into Intellectual Anomalies which I use to hide it from the neighbours).
Dipika, you have impeccable taste.
Thanks, all.
We don't 'do' reality TV in this house. We know how it's manipulated, as we know a few people who work in TV including someone who used to work behind the scenes in Big Brother. Also we don't like the way people are manipulated and that includes us the audience. Oh and we've never and would never watch I'm a celeb get me out of here because of the animal cruelty.