Last year, The Smoking Gun, a Web site owned by the Court TV network,
procured and published an internal memorandum from the producers of
the reality show Extreme Makeover: Home Edition. It outlined in shocking
detail the kinds of contestants the program hoped to attract: people
bravely living with rare and incurable diseases, victims of hate crime and
vandalism, and parents grieving children killed in drunk driving fatalities,
among others.1 Somewhat disingenuously, given the sensationalist program
content associated with its parent company, the Web site expressed
sneering outrage at this ghoulish wish list and at ABC's naked and callous
exploitation of suffering for profit. Such outrage is understandable. But
it does not really articulate the historical specificity -- nor, indeed, the
political saliency -- of the reality-television format as a kind of social text.
As Laurie Ouellette noted in a seminal 2004 essay, dismissive or outraged
reactions should not obscure the fact that reality television "gained cultural
presence . . . alongside the neoliberal policies and discourses of the
1990s."2 Putting into circulation certain "idealized citizen subjectivities,"
the genre's growth is not so much evidence of television's "subversion" of
democratic ideals as it is an arena for their active transformation via new
"templates for citizenship that complement the privatization of public
life."3 In short, to see reality television as merely trivial entertainment is
to avoid recognizing the degree to which the genre is preoccupied with
the government of the self, and how, in that capacity, it demarcates a
zone for the production of everyday discourses of citizenship. If, as Lisa
Duggan persuasively argues, neoliberalism in the United States is a rightwing
project mobilized around "versions of identity politics and cultural
policies [that are] inextricably connected to economic goals for upward
distribution of resources,"4 then the reality program -- produced (unlike
fiction TV) without union labor and proposing the makeover (rather than
state assistance) as the key to social mobility, stability, and civic empowerment
-- is an important arena in which to observe the vernacular diffusion
of neoliberal common sense.
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