Stephany recommended Cue the Sun! The Invention of Reality TV by Emily Nussbaum almost a year ago and I just got around to reading it. I mean, I do eventually circle around to my TBR.
Like Stephany, if you had asked me about the origins of reality television, I would have said it all started with The Real World on MTV (RIP MTV). Of course I would think it was The Real World because man did I eat that up when I was a teenager (This is the true story…of seven strangers…picked to live in a house…and have their lives taped…to find out what happens…when people stop being polite…and start getting real), but Nussbaum goes back in time and talks about Candid Camera and The Dating Game and goes into the deep history of the genre.
And then things get darker as modern reality tv shows pop up. The way contestants and crew were treated on shows like Survivor and The Bachelor was atrocious and Nussbaum discusses living and working conditions and brings receipts with interviews with people who had been on set (or, in the case of Survivor, on island where in the first season they didn't have places for the crew to sleep). She discusses the evolution of contestants from Julie's naive presence on The Real World to contestants who see these types of shows as a way to jumpstart their own influencer status.
And then things get even darker with The Apprentice and I will say no more than that. It was incredibly hard to read.
What I like about this is that Nussbaum is clearly a fan of the genre. She doesn't pretend that she wasn't watching the live feed of the first season of Big Brother 24/7. She doesn't shy away from her eagerness to see the next episode of The Bachelor. But she also knows there are definite issues with reality television, with the exploitation of labor, including cast and crew, with the long-term psychological damage, with the way it sends contestants off into the world of pseudo-celebrity without any support (or money), with the way it edits and cuts to create stories that weren't there, and with the way it distorts what reality is. And that's not to mention the gender and racial inequities.
I appreciate when books take pop culture seriously (more on why I take it seriously is here). What is shown on television and in the movies moves the needle in the world. The needle is often sociopolitical - think of Mr. Rogers dipping his feet into a pool with a black man, Dawson's Creek showing two men kissing, or Pedro Zamora showing everyone the reality of life of a gay man with HIV (more on him below). I think Nussbaum carves the perfect middle point of discussing why we enjoy reality with the critical lens of why we maybe shouldn't.
Even if you aren't a reality television person, this book is worth reading. I mean, look what's happening to the American politick if nothing else. 4.5/5 stars
Lines of note:
It was the reality paradox that would, in later years, became [sic] endemic: They were superstars, but without the paycheck or social protection that usually accompanied mind-blowing celebrity. Each cast member had earned $2,600, with the first half paid weekly to cover expenses. (page 138-139)
But he did find it irresponsible that MTV hadn't offered the cast any counseling. Part of the problem with reality fame was having trusted the producers in the first place, absorbing their praise, he pointed out: If you hated your portrayal, you had to confront the fact that maybe your "puppet masters" hadn't cared about you, after all. (page 140)
That was the catch-22 of the reality genre: The savvier its subjects became, the more self-aware about their roles, the less authentic the footage was - but, arguably, the more ethical. (page 141)
The European reality phenomenon has its own complicated history, involving a separate set of pioneers, many of them easily as shameless and piratical as any Hollywood Hustler. (page 172)
He didn't dislike the cast, he told me; it was hard not to feel some tenderness for people you watched all day. But being in the control room felt like being a prison guard - it was tempting to use your power. (page 259)
When Trump was elected president, some of the people who had worked on The Apprentice felt responsible, even (and based on my interviews, especially) those low on the call sheet. Camera operator Sarah Levy lamented that they had "created this false view of him." Former audio technician Richard Velazquez told me, "It kills me, because we created this jerk. We assisted him with his plans. It's our fault." (page 383)
For Mike Fleiss, the creator of The Bachelor, Trump's rise felt like an indelible stain on the genre, exposing something existentially rotten in the industry. "All that talk about the decline of Western civilization and the sign of the apocalypse? It turned out to be true," he said. (page 386)
Things I looked up:
Pedro Zamora (xvii) - He was after my time watching The Real World. Pedro Zamora was a Cuban-American AIDS educator and television personality. As one of the first openly gay men with AIDS to be portrayed in popular media, Zamora brought international attention to HIV/AIDS and LGBTQ issues and prejudices through his appearance on MTV's reality television series The Real World: San Francisco.
Zamora's romantic relationship with Sean Sasser was also documented on the show; their relationship was later nominated by MTV viewers for "Favorite Love Story" award, and the broadcast of their commitment ceremony in 1994, in which they exchanged vows, was the first such same-sex ceremony in television history, and is considered a landmark in the history of the medium. He died shortly after the finale of his season of The Real World aired at age 22.
Baudrillard (xix) - Sean Baudrillard was a French sociologist and philosopher with an interest in cultural studies. He is best known for his analyses of media, contemporary culture, and technological communication, as well as his formulation of concepts such as hyperreality. Frankly, I'm a bit surprised I didn't know this name.
Stanley Kowalski (page 24) - a fictional character in Tennessee Williams' play A Streetcar Named Desire. Do I have to read this play now?
1985 music video "Stop the Madness" (page 94) - Insane anti-drug video starring, among others, Whitney Houston (woof)
1951 "Bloody Christmas" scandal (page 99) - Bloody Christmas was the severe beating of seven civilians by members of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) on December 25, 1951. The attacks, which left five Mexican American and two white young men with broken bones and ruptured organs, were only properly investigated after lobbying from the Mexican American community. The internal inquiry by Los Angeles Chief of Police William H. Parker resulted in eight police officers being indicted for the assaults, 54 being transferred, and 39 suspended.
sub-rosa (page 168) - a Latin phrase which denotes secrecy or confidentiality. The rose has an ancient history as a symbol of secrecy. Its opposite term is sub vino, meaning "under [the grape]vine", referring to being loose-lipped whilst under the influence of alcohol.
palapa (page 327) - ambiguous in the book - could be a thatched roof made of palm tree leaves, common in Central America and Mexico OR a Filipino condiment originating from the Maranao people
Hat mentions (why hats?):
...they all removed their hats. (page 21)
...as Funt breaks eggs into his expensive hat. (page 23)
Cracking a few eggs into a hat no longer felt especially transgressive...(page 27)
"Chuck would put a hat on me and make me his chauffeur, then have me drive to the dentist." (page 39)
He tugged his hat down over his eyes...(page 42)
...revealing a smirking drug dealer in a Panama hat...(page 94)
...lounge around their SoHo loft wearing clown hats and cowrie beads...(page 136)
"My hats are off to the people who created it..." (page 151)
Indiana Jones-esque Akubra hat (page 172)
a hat tip to the slavery miniseries Roots (page 244)
...wore only a red cowboy hat and a gun belt. (page 288)
********************
Did you click on the link to the "Stop the Madness" video? How batshit were the 1980s?

Completely off topic- "sub-rosa" was an answer on Jeopardy last night!
ReplyDeleteThis book sounds really interesting. I don't watch reality TV, although I used to (yep- i watched The Apprentice. Ugh). The reason I don't watch it is that I feel like it's manipulative to all involved (participants and audience.) I assume it's edited in a way to create stories that aren't there, and that bothers me. It's not really "reality." I don't watch much TV at all, but I just realized I watch some cooking shows (Beat Bobby Flay and some baking championships) which are, duh!, reality TV. Somehow they don't bother me as much, but I am still aware of the manipulation of the stories being presented.
Those baking shows are reality shows, though. People are taken advantage of and mistreated on a number of them. It's hard to escape reality if you're watching television these days!
DeleteI don't watch reality tv, but I don't feel superior about it. I love crap tv as much as the next person, i just prefer it with a script. Wait, I lied, I do watch it when Eve and her friends are at our house and it's on. And I hate the way I get sucked in. I never watch it voluntarily on my own. I still think I'll read this book, it does sound really insightful.
ReplyDeletePedro Zamora dying at 22. Oof. Interesting about the crew on The Apprentice feeling responsible for Trump's election, contrasted with people who had much more to do with it and probably feel zero remorse.
I studied Jean Baudrillard (typo on Sean?) in my Comp Lit courses. It gets a bit esoteric and woo-woo, but a lot of the semiotics theory (representation and/vs. reality) is really interesting.
I'm not judgmental about it at all. I watched early seasons of The Real World, Survivor, and Big Brother. I'm still a huge fan of Bake Off. But it's fascinating to see its long-term implications and I think this book did a great job of really exploring all sides.
DeleteAlso I think I learned what 'sub rosa' meant in Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose, which I read and couldn't figure out if it was profound or silly. The movie had Sean Connery and Christian Slater, though, so I wasn't mad at it.
ReplyDeleteHa! I feel kind of behind the times that I'd never heard the term before. What's wrong with me?
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ReplyDeleteI loved early seasons of The Real World. My favorite season—probably Los Angeles; I think that was season two? I had a crush on Dominic. I also loved San Francisco, but couldn’t stand Rachel. She’s now married to the head of the Department of Transportation, who was also on The Real World—I wish like hell I was making this up.
Reality tv seeps into everything in our lives...
DeleteNoted! I've been hearing about this book for a few years, but this is the first review I've seen that is making me want to pick this up.
ReplyDeleteI used to love a good trashy reality show, but I guess I've grown up (or maybe the shows have so they're above my sleaze level now?). Anyway, it's been forever since I've seen a reality show.
YES! I think early reality tv was better because it was more authentic (I realize my Gen X worry about authenticity is seen as old-fashioned with younger folks) because the cast had no idea about any of it and the editors played fewer tricks. So now when I watch Bravo or whatever, it seems fake and artificial and mean and I am not here for it anymore. But I think it's because I am An Old.
DeleteThis is so interesting. I've not heard of this book. I remember back in the day, when I had a few tiny kids and Coach and I used to watch Survivor. I've not watched reality TV in forever.
ReplyDeleteInteresting. I feel like reality tv is inescapable if you're a regular viewer.
DeleteI have always blamed The Apprentice for Trump. It gave people the idea that he was this super successful businessman, and made him a household name. I don’t blame the camera people or whatever, I just wish he had limited his reach to being a low level mob boss in his neighborhood or something.
ReplyDeleteI pretend that I don’t watch reality TV, but I will admit that we have watched a couple of seasons of The Bachelor. We started with The Golden Bachelor, then a few seasons after that. Finally cut that dumb habit. I do love the kind of reality TV that is Great British Baking Show. Did you hear that Nigella Lawson will be replacing Prue? Maya said that Paul had better not be flirting with her.
We watched Season 3 of Real World, because it was San Francisco and had lived there, were living in Philly, missing SF. I don’t think we watched any other seasons.
That anti drug video! Wow, I don’t think I’ve ever seen it, though I did watch some MTV back in the day. All I could think with the snippets of the little monkey was of a Warren Zevon song, “Leave My Monkey Alone”. Justice for the little monkey!
I definitely watched a lot more of reality television back in the day and it's interesting to think about a quarter century of "modern" reality has done to the landscape, both political and popular cultural.
DeleteI also watch GBBO and while this book focuses on reality tv in the US, I think GBBO is actually worse in terms of how it treats its contestants. It basically throws contestants to the wolves after the show airs without any help managing their social media and the press. And it's so big in the UK! I don't know. I still watch it, but I feel worse about watching it now that I've read this book.
I don't really watch reality TV (unless you call GBBO reality, which I don't think counts), but I am fascinated by behind-the-scenes anything so ordered this from my library as soon as I read your review!
ReplyDeleteI just wrote about GBBO to J in the comment above. I think it does count! And I think they're big offenders at leaving contestants who get paid peanuts to just deal with the fallout after the show airs without assistance. *shrug* I still watch it, but I don't feel good about it.
DeleteThis books sounds fascinating! I followed Emily Nussbaum on Twitter before it collapsed and love her take on pop culture. It's been awhile since I've really gotten absorbed in a reality TV show (although my husband and I are strangely drawn to Body Cam and To Catch a Smuggler), but I have always kind of loved them. We didn't have MTV in my household, so I didn't get in on the Real World phenomenon, but when I was in grad school (?) there was a competition show called Real World / Road Rules Race or something and I loved that. I have also at varying times been obsessed with The Bachelor and it's sleazy offshoot Bachelor in Paradise, several of the Real Housewives series, and some of those "celebrity's real life" shows, like the one with Jessica Simpson and Nick Lachey. I was even fascinated with the Kardashians for awhile. I love a lot of those competition reality shows, too, like Top Chef and America's Next Top Model. And, of course, Great British Bake Off. I *know* the shows are curated and edited, but I am still so interested in what people are like and how they interact and how they react to both everyday and extraordinary situations.
ReplyDeleteThis is all to say that I put this book on hold at the library the instant I read your post.
YES!! I have a lot of complicated feelings about reality tv after reading this book. I will continue to watch GBBO, but maybe I won't consume as much media like podcasts about it afterwards? Would that help? Ugh. I just don't know.
DeleteI think about how Candice Brown from GBBO was treated after her seasons. There were so many rumors about how Paul Hollywood favored her and she was having an affair with him and it was gross and she has long-term mental health issues because of it!
Yes, you do have to read A Streetcar Named Desire. Please. Failing that, promise me that you'll watch the film starring Marlon Brando and Vivien Leigh.
ReplyDeleteI'm never going to watch a movie, Nance. I can guarantee you that!
DeleteGod, I hate that I liked "The Apprentice." I can see why some of the crew blame themselves for his rise to power...ugh.
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