Bozell Column: 'Reality Shows' Distort the World
Networks hungry for viewers know the cheapest way to nab eyeballs is to produce a "reality show" with no stars, and supposedly-unscripted-but-in-reality-very-scripted and often uber-sleazy content. But in the rush for the prized adult 18-49 viewers, what about the millions of youngsters, the audience aged 11 to 17, also lured into the soup?
The Girl Scout Research Institute recently surveyed 1,000 girls in that age bracket and found these children aren't clueless. Everyone surveyed thought reality shows promote bad behavior: 86 percent felt the shows often set people against one another to increase the dramatic value; 73 percent thought reality shows depict fighting as a normal part of a romantic relationship; and 70 percent believed that reality TV leads people to believe it acceptable to mistreat each other.
So the youngsters see through the mud? Not exactly. Here's the rub: 75 percent said that competition shows (like "American Idol") and 50 percent of "real life" shows like MTV's "Jersey Shore" are "mainly real and unscripted." They may not find the antics admirable, but they see them as real, for them a mirror of what awaits them in the "real world" when they grow up.
What kind of "unscripted" sludge are teenagers watching on "Jersey Shore"? A new episode finds the cast taking their alcohol-drenched misbehavior to Italy (so much for "unscripted"). Deena desperately wants Pauly D to "do sex" with her, which causes Pauly to go trolling through nightclubs looking for a one-night-stand alternative. Does this sound like a show for eleven-year-olds? Of course not, presumably would argue the producers. Our show is aimed at an adult audience. But millions of middle-schoolers watch, too.
Pauly can’t find an adequate partner, so back at the MTV-rented villa, Deena is drunk and telling Pauly "I'm a good f---! And I have no shame!" With all the tenderness you’d expect from "Jersey Shore," Pauly replies, ""Deena, I would knock the dust off your [blank] if we weren't friends."
The New York Daily News recap explained: "The next morning, Deena and Snooki decide to drown their sorrows -- or at least the memory of their sorrows -- with a day (and night!) of binge drinking, meatball grinding, and showing strangers how to do the ‘Jersey turnpike’ dance move. If you don't know it, look it up. Not at work."
You shouldn’t look it up at work for that would be inappropriate. But your sixth-grader can watch it -- on basic cable. Not only that, but with Halloween coming, your kids can buy the trick-or-treat costumes to imitate them. Last year, MTV proudly displayed a photo of what looked like second-graders dressed like their channel’s promiscuous drunks. Their headline read, "These Jersey Shore Halloween Costumes Make Us Proud."
The "reality" shows featuring young people with no discernible talents whatsoever has also led to a distorted and unhealthy view of fame. The GSRI study asked girls 11 to 17 if they expect to be famous. One in <ital>four<ital> think so.
So how does one achieve this fame? Here's where the damage from the "reality show" is documented. Two very different world views emerged when the sample was divided into regular viewers of "reality" and non-viewers. On the statement: "You have to lie to get what you want," 37 percent of regular viewers of reality TV shows agreed versus 24 percent of non-viewers. On "Being mean earns you more respect than being nice," 37 percent of viewers agreed versus a fourth of non-viewers. On the notion, "You have to be mean to others to get what you want," 28 percent of "reality" viewers agreed, compared to 18 percent of non-viewers.
This is what networks like MTV are achieving. Regular viewers of reality TV accept and expect a higher level of drama, aggression, and bullying in their own lives. The study found that 78 percent of regular viewers agreed that "gossiping is a normal part of a relationship between girls," compared with 54 percent of non-viewers. Sixty-eight percent agreed that "it's in girls' nature to be catty and competitive with one another," while only 50 percent of non-viewers thought so.
Obviously, not all "reality" shows promote societal disfunctionality (though I'm hard-pressed to find an exception on MTV). Some are positive and truly inspirational by design, like "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition'" And before the cynics pipe in to say that "the market" demands the raunchy, let us underscore that shows like "Extreme Makeover" can be wildly successful commercial ventures as well. So it follows that the reverse of the present "reality show" poisoning is also possible. What would happen if these reality shows were to promote decency, and chivalry, and honesty, and respect, and manners, and modesty, and beauty, and innocence, and goodness, and fortitude?
It would all sell.
- Brent Bozell's blog
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Comments
What would happen if these
Submitted by motherbelt on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 8:50am.
What would happen if these reality shows were to promote decency, and chivalry, and honesty, and respect, and manners, and modesty, and beauty, and innocence, and goodness, and fortitude? It would all sell.
Yes, it would. One only has to consider the success of shows like "Seventh Heaven" (and yes, I know that was fiction) to realize it.
But apparently this dreck sells too. And it's plain how the producers choose to make their money.
One has to wonder why. Is there an upside for them in debasing our kids?
Seems a certain demographic is that bored....
Submitted by drsamherman on Sun, 10/23/2011 - 9:11pm.
...that they would turn on crap like reality TV shows. There is absolutely no value in them.
There is a satellite seminar at an upcoming psychiatry meeting talking about the effect of reality television programming on sexual behavior and risk management, and it will be interesting to hear what the faculty have to say. At some APA meetings in the past, there were interesting presentations and discussion sessions on celebrities, actors and what effect fame had upon them. One of the more interesting findings, based on a blinded case series review from the psychiatry departments at UCLA and USC, was the high level of risky sexual behavior attributed by STD patients to mimicry of what those patients considered to be the sexual mores and behaviors of high-profile actors and celebrities. I don't know if this research will be updated, but I can imagine it will be considering the recent spate of even more risque shows.
Here is a reality show pitch....
Submitted by Ashrak on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 9:04am.
and it is somewhat patterned after the UFC's Ultimate Fighter model.
16 New Media political newshounds enter a house and live together for 16 weeks and engage in a tournament political discussion, a set of debates, rather than fights.
At the end, the winner is set up with 500 grand in a PAC setting to run for a elected office of their choice.
Like the UFC, the referee is there to only punish clearcut low blows and does not participate like today's "moderators" in the "primary" and "general" elections.
To be determined is if there are set judges or whether winners are determined by phone and text votes like American Idol.
Interesting,isn't it, that none of the reality shows today air next to none of the footage of political discussion by the "participants"? Gee, I wonder why......
Elizabeth is where she is today because, imho, of footage from Survivor that we never got to see.
Target Audience?
18 to grave.
I finally saw a little of Jersey Shore.
Submitted by NeoKong on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 9:11am.
It's on at the gym.
I saw what a Snooki was.
I was horrified.
All those little retards ever do is drink, cry, fall down, fight, give crotch shots, stumble around drunk and act like little Soprano/gang bangers with their shirts off.
It was Loozer City.
Ditto
Submitted by jon_torlin on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 9:41am.
I read about it from various sites and Fox News had a review/accounting of it and what you described was an understatement. One of my part time workers even showed me about five minutes of it online and my reaction was similar to yours, but also of disgust, even contempt of those people. I think one of those idiots even decided at one point to hurl himself headfirst into a wall to see what happens and then complained about the headache?!?! Good lord, excise them from the gene pool!
Small wonder New Jersey wanted to get rid of them. I wouldn't want to be in the same room with these idiots, I might end up brain damaged just listening to them.
-Jon
What would happen if these
Submitted by Jerry on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 9:12am.
What would happen if these reality shows were to promote decency, and chivalry, and honesty, and respect, and manners, and modesty, and beauty, and innocence, and goodness, and fortitude..
Careful now, wouldn't want to push morals down anyone's throats. Hollywood (D) is only comfortable with pushing immoralities down our throats. Besides, which is harder, coming up with a decent script and storyline, or just video taping a bunch of lowlifes drinking, cussing, and screwing? It takes talent and time to produce goodness. Any monkey with a camera can fling poop.
Money talks......Jerry -
Submitted by ray johnson on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 9:55am.
Money talks......Jerry - you're 100 % right on, Love that Clinton lookback...answer "yes"
How anyone can watch this
Submitted by jessieH on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 10:12am.
How anyone can watch this crap is beyond me. There is no "reality" to any of them.
Let's face it: all TV is based on fantasy!
Submitted by Mary Louise Turner on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 10:16am.
The brutal truth is that all television is based on empty fantasy, whether it's bogus "reality" shows, advertisements, sports,"sitcoms", dramas or even so-called "news shows" (particularly on MSDNC and the broadcast nutworks). Television, unfortunately, exploits people's fantasies about being fabulously wealthy, young, and beautiful, and young people in particular swallow it whole.
Parents: if you want your children to grow up in a real live world, turn off the TV!
Hold the phones!
Submitted by CherryBomb on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 10:47am.
You mean to tell us reality TV isn't reality? How will I ever know what it's really like to compete with 30 other guys to win the bachelorette? Or the life of dwarves? Or hoarders? Or addicts? Or Sarah Flippin' Palin???
Sarah "Flippin" Palin?
Submitted by NJRightWinger12 on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 11:44am.
Whats that supposed to mean?
Incoherence
Submitted by Unsane on Sun, 10/23/2011 - 5:09pm.
Other than taking a cheap shot at Sarah Palin, who enrages you by continuing to breathe...what is your point?
"CONSUMED DEMOCRACY RETURNS A SOCIALIST REGIME" - Slayer, "Fictional Reality", from Divine Intervention (1994)
Garbage in, garbage out. The
Submitted by LAM SON 719 on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 10:49am.
Garbage in, garbage out. The media offers nothing of value. It mirrors the low intelligence level of America produced by the public school sytem.
My remote comes with a channel changer.
Submitted by mandrake on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 12:07pm.
I've never watched a 'reality show' in my life. Too boring to watch people make fools of themselves. I much perfer shows written by professional writers. So change the channel..seems they have some way to monitor ratings. If nobody watches, then it dies.
Your internet browser comes with a field for http addresses.
Submitted by The Vet on Sun, 10/23/2011 - 12:18pm.
You don't like what you read, you can always leave and go elsewhere.
Or do you enjoy wasting everyone's time repeating piffle that everyone on the planet knows just to showcase your lack of class and brains.
Well unlike 'reality shows'
Submitted by mandrake on Sun, 10/23/2011 - 2:17pm.
Well unlike 'reality shows' this site is not boring. Especially when you don't fill in the subject line. ;)
Deal with it
Submitted by Unsane on Sun, 10/23/2011 - 5:12pm.
As if I needed any more proof that Canadians do not believe in freedom of speech.
Like it or not, the same freedom which allows for the production of crap like Jersey Shore is the same freedom that allows Mr. Bozell to comment on it. Deal with it, mandrake.
"CONSUMED DEMOCRACY RETURNS A SOCIALIST REGIME" - Slayer, "Fictional Reality", from Divine Intervention (1994)
What an odd thing to say
Submitted by mandrake on Sun, 10/23/2011 - 5:27pm.
I'm not in favour of free speech? Au contraire mon frere. Mr. Bozell can say anything he likes and so can anyone else. I was just saying if you don't like it..DON'T LISTEN.
What an accurate thing to say, you mean?
Submitted by Unsane on Sun, 10/23/2011 - 5:35pm.
You were just saying if you don't like it, SHUT UP, DO NOT SAY ANYTHING, YOU HAVE NO RIGHT TO SAY ANYTHING, YOU HAVE NO RIGHT TO TELL US WHY YOU WON'T LISTEN (watch)...and DON'T LISTEN (watch).
Mr. Bozell, unfortunately for you, does in fact have every right to say why he isn't watching, listening, etc. In so doing he is providing a great service by telling other people why they should or shouldn't watch. Then it's left to others to decide for themselves, based on what Mr. Bozell and MANY OTHERS say, pro or con. To quote a great Newfie, from 10 January 2008 (speaking on an attack on freedom of speech) "That's freedom of speech. That's democracy. That's the messy business we call 'the exchange of ideas and opinions'". Your comment on remote controls and your tired, cliched line "change the channel" tells me that you have a problem with that, since Mr. Bozell is nowhere calling for government censorship.
"CONSUMED DEMOCRACY RETURNS A SOCIALIST REGIME" - Slayer, "Fictional Reality", from Divine Intervention (1994)
So much fun
Submitted by mandrake on Sun, 10/23/2011 - 5:44pm.
"Pleased to meet you
Hope you guess my name
But what's puzzling you
Is the nature of my game"
Mick Jagger
OK...
Submitted by Unsane on Sun, 10/23/2011 - 6:20pm.
So I should just call you Lucifer? And give you some courtesy and some sympathy?
"CONSUMED DEMOCRACY RETURNS A SOCIALIST REGIME" - Slayer, "Fictional Reality", from Divine Intervention (1994)
My two biggest concerns with TV
Submitted by phryingphish on Sat, 10/22/2011 - 12:42pm.
My two biggest concerns with TV "morals" is:
1: Not only in reality shows but in EVERY drama from LA Law to West Wing the first thing any "fat cat" does upon entering their office is to get a drink. According to TV every businessman, corporate lawyer, politician, lobbyist, is an alcoholic.
2: The "Third Date" rule is in effect, if she hasn't gone to bed with him by the third date the relationship is over. Elaine on Seinfeld is a perfect example, and don't forget "2 1/2 Men". Ten minutes from introduction to "You want OJ in the morning?"
"Reality"
Submitted by Unsane on Mon, 10/24/2011 - 7:15am.
Even when I caught a few episodes of The Real World on MTV back in the day, I was dismissive of the concept. As friends of mine at the time and I discussed, reality ends when the cameras are turned on.
"CONSUMED DEMOCRACY RETURNS A SOCIALIST REGIME" - Slayer, "Fictional Reality", from Divine Intervention (1994)