ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos

Reality TV: The Evolution of Reality TV 211 Views


Share It!



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 ]

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.

Up Next

What is Shmoop Mythology?
2222 Views

The gods and heroes battle it out with monsters in the best of mythology.

Related Videos

Echo and Narcissus
4243 Views

Today we aren't looking for the most virtuous person, or most likeable, but rather the most disturbing. Will it be Echo, the nymph who is doomed to...

Icarus
5397 Views

Don't fly too close to the sun, Shmoopers.

Perseus
10263 Views

This dude decapitated a creature with snakes for hair and married a beautiful maiden that he saved from a sea monster. Let's see how many of you ca...

Hephaestus (Vulcan)
5842 Views

Would you like to be immortal? We expected as much. But how about ifyou were ugly and your mother tossed you out of your home, giving you a limp fo...