doversoul
I do find it all rather a surprise - http://www.brunel.ac.uk/cbass/social...logy/kimposium
I was about to comment on TV in the lives of "real" people - and then reread the heading in the "flyer" - Reality Television—Life, Death, and Genre.
A few years ago I was on a train, and a woman and her husband (I presume) got on. The woman was desperately interested in soap operas, and I think she either had a magazine about soap operas, or maybe even a more specific one - Eastenders Daily, or Neighbours Weekly or some such. The way she was talking really gave the impression that she thought the people in the programmes were "real". Her companion largely ignored her comments, however, but she did seem totally wrapped up in these "unreal" worlds, and was speculating about what would happen, and what would happen "if".
Reality TV however does use real people, but puts them into fake situations. Maybe sometimes it is entertaining, and perhaps sometimes it is worthy of study. What might be more interesting is how and why so many people get drawn into these programes - either reality TV or soap operas - and how such behaviour is exploited by "the media" and commercialisation.
Mind you, let's not knock soap operas and "youth culture" too hard - there are still many older people who listen to the Archers!
Re Kimposium, I suppose some academics have to make significant efforts to justify their positions.
I do find it all rather a surprise - http://www.brunel.ac.uk/cbass/social...logy/kimposium
I was about to comment on TV in the lives of "real" people - and then reread the heading in the "flyer" - Reality Television—Life, Death, and Genre.
A few years ago I was on a train, and a woman and her husband (I presume) got on. The woman was desperately interested in soap operas, and I think she either had a magazine about soap operas, or maybe even a more specific one - Eastenders Daily, or Neighbours Weekly or some such. The way she was talking really gave the impression that she thought the people in the programmes were "real". Her companion largely ignored her comments, however, but she did seem totally wrapped up in these "unreal" worlds, and was speculating about what would happen, and what would happen "if".
Reality TV however does use real people, but puts them into fake situations. Maybe sometimes it is entertaining, and perhaps sometimes it is worthy of study. What might be more interesting is how and why so many people get drawn into these programes - either reality TV or soap operas - and how such behaviour is exploited by "the media" and commercialisation.
Mind you, let's not knock soap operas and "youth culture" too hard - there are still many older people who listen to the Archers!
Re Kimposium, I suppose some academics have to make significant efforts to justify their positions.
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