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Reality TV: Fame and Reality TV 249 Views


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Transcript

00:01

We speak student!

00:05

[ yodeling ]

00:07

Reality TV Part Six

00:09

Fame and Reality TV

00:13

[ bird caws ]

00:13

Why are people lining up to be on reality TV?

00:18

You know, we have the people who you're calling these desperate losers.

00:20

We do have the low self-esteem person

00:23

who wants to be famous.

00:25

It is so easy to be famous.

00:27

I guess, what we consider fame today.

00:30

It's so easy to get that.

00:32

You know, put your cat on YouTube

00:34

and you might become famous.

00:35

Same thing goes on -- Go on TV,

00:38

and date a random person who no one knows about,

00:40

and you might become famous.

00:42

So I think that fame is so tangible

00:45

that it just makes people wanna do it.

00:46

There's also the people who we also talked about

00:48

who aren't doing it because of low self-esteem,

00:51

they're doing it because they want to be a rock star

00:54

and they think if they go on the show

00:55

and their name gets out there, they might be a rock star.

00:57

So there's the people who want the reality TV fame

01:00

and then there's the people who use reality TV fame

01:02

to try to get other fame.

01:04

I think one of the things that

01:05

grabs people about reality television

01:08

is the whole question of

01:09

why are these people putting themselves through this?

01:13

Either they're a masochist and they just want to have people,

01:16

I don't know, I guess look down on them or look at them

01:19

in negative ways. Or they're delusional

01:21

and they think people actually admire them in some form.

01:24

Or they're so desperately lonely,

01:29

that they need the feeling of at least being recognized

01:33

to feel worthy somehow.

01:35

And it's very interesting,

01:36

Tamra on Real Housewives of Orange Country

01:40

was open about being suicidal and depressed and all that.

01:44

And you look at her behavior and you're wondering

01:47

why these people do this.

01:49

So what is that about? Is that something

01:51

systemic in society now?

01:53

We've become so desperately lonely

01:55

or at least an element of us that we need that kind of

01:58

dirty laundry aired and so on?

02:00

How does that work in the...?

02:01

Yeah, I think it's a combination of all the factors you mentioned.

02:04

It's incredibly sad, especially, as you said,

02:07

when there's no prize at the end.

02:09

Sometimes when people are embarrassing themselves

02:10

and doing things and you're like, "[ hesitant noises ]

02:12

If I was going to be given a million bucks,

02:14

- maybe I'd do the same thing." - Yeah.

02:16

When it's just kind of this documentary style,

02:18

it's incredibly sad, but it is reminiscent of

02:20

what all of us are doing.

02:22

Websites like ChatRoulette and Omegle,

02:25

which are these places where you just go on,

02:28

turn your webcam on,

02:29

and then just talk to a stranger.

02:30

People feel more comfortable airing their dirty laundry

02:34

to strangers than they do to people they know.

02:36

And I think that's kind of

02:37

what these reality TV stars feel like.

02:40

They're airing their dirty laundry

02:41

to people they will never meet.

02:44

The result of that is bullying.

02:46

And what you're describing is that

02:48

people thinking negative things about them

02:50

and talking negatively about them.

02:51

Even what we're doing right now

02:52

saying like, "Oh, these poor people. They're so lonely and depressed."

02:54

It's a form of bullying.

02:57

And they're putting themselves into that kind of situation,

03:01

but you can't say, "Oh, they're asking for it."

03:03

Because should we as a society

03:05

be saying negative things about people

03:09

and propagating this attitude? No, but we do it.

03:13

We absolutely do it.

03:14

So it's kind of like a chicken and the egg, right?

03:16

Okay, these people signed up for this, yes,

03:18

but they also -- Does that mean we get to treat them badly?

03:22

[ pen writing ]

03:23

Does the need for celebrity expand into everyday life?

03:27

It's a famous normal thing now that every wide receiver in the NFL

03:32

has to have their own touchdown dance.

03:34

And The Simpsons parodies this all the time.

03:37

So does Family Guy and some of those other shows.

03:39

They almost take on a character

03:40

that extends beyond the role and position

03:42

and they kind of humanize it.

03:43

And they can merchandise that.

03:45

And there's all this crazy stuff that's going on

03:47

as people fight

03:49

a more lonely universe

03:51

to try to find their own identity.

03:53

And it kind of maps to a lot of the themes that we saw

03:55

in 20th century fiction coming out

03:56

from that era.

03:58

I think this maps really nicely into the whole course,

04:00

the whole pop culture literacy course.

04:02

Everything that happens

04:05

everywhere, not just reality TV.

04:07

Sports, everything that happens, is tied into

04:09

the thing of pop culture.

04:11

A book is written,

04:13

is there gonna be a movie made?

04:15

Will there be action figures

04:17

made of the characters in the movie from the book?

04:20

So whether you're a reality TV star

04:23

or a football player

04:25

or the President of The United States,

04:27

you become a part of pop culture.

04:29

We have those little like -- I think someone I know

04:31

has a little Obama can opener thing.

04:35

It's like you become a celebrity if you are

04:38

at all put in the public eye,

04:40

You now become a celebrity.

04:42

As opposed to their being the select few

04:46

super famous celebrities

04:48

and then everyone else.

04:49

There's kind of this scale where

04:51

almost everyone is famous in some capacity.

04:54

[ pen writing ]

04:56

Why would anyone wanna be on TV?

04:59

Why do we crave being a celebrity?

05:02

What does this say about society?

05:06

[ singing ] Fame! I'm gonna live forever...

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