Monday, January 28, 2008

you're not anybody in america unless you're on tv

Today, two quotes to serve as a jumping-off point:
“Before I was shot, I always thought that I was more half-there than all-there—I always suspected that I was watching TV instead of living life. People sometimes say that it's the way things happen to you in life that's unreal. The movies make emotions look so strong and real, whereas when things really do happen to you, it's like watching television--you don't feel anything. Right when I was being shot and ever since, I knew that I was watching television. The channels switch, but it’s all television.”
~ Andy Warhol, The Philosophy of Andy Warhol

“You're not anybody in America unless you're on TV. On TV is where we learn about who we really are. Because what's the point of doing anything worthwhile if nobody's watching? And if people are watching, it makes you a better person.”
~ Suzanne Stone Maretto (Nicole Kidman), To Die For, 1995

On Monday, June 3, 1968, Valerie Solanas—the troubled, feminist anti-hero responsible for the S.C.U.M. (Society for Cutting Up Men) Manifesto—traveled up the elevator at the Factory in clothes suspiciously bulky for the summer weather and shot Andy Warhol. He didn’t die (not until many years after), and she confessed readily, but the incident forever changed the way Warhol thought about himself, his work and his relationship to other people. The shooting also made both Solanas and Warhol more famous than they ever would have been on their own (though Warhol had clearly already made a name for himself, without him, Solanas would have certainly faded into complete obscurity).

Warhol had a curious relationship to fame. With fame came money and influence and renown in the art world, but his fame is probably also what got him shot. By all accounts, he was one of those amazing creatures who both courted and eschewed their own cult of celebrity in equal measure, and often those around him—like the tragic Edie Sedgwick or, of course, Solanas herself—were briefly subsumed in his aura of cultural capital. As for television, Warhol loved it for all the “wrong” reasons: the comforting repetition of watching the same show over and over again, the blankness of the screen, the pleasure of boredom, the lack of affect in the medium as compared to film. For example, Warhol writes about his relationship to television that “…most people love watching the same basic thing, as long as the details are different. But I’m just the opposite: if I’m going to sit and watch the same thing I saw the night before, I don’t want it to be essentially the same—I want it to be exactly the same. Because the more you look at the same exact thing, the more the meaning goes away, and the better and emptier you feel” (POPism: The Warhol '60s). When he writes, as in the epigraph above, that real life is like watching television because “you don’t feel anything,” it’s as if he’s suddenly realized that either his life is like television—unreal—or that television is like life in general, never more than “half-there.” And that’s the way he likes it.

The second quote, while spoken by a fictional character—from a 1995 Gus Van Sant film starring a then 28-year-old Nicole Kidman (a role for which she won a Golden Globe)—asks a similar question about the price of fame and the relationship of television to reality, life, and death. In To Die For, Suzanne’s greatest desire is to become a television celebrity, and what she lacks in experience, she makes up for with cunning, determination, confidence, sex appeal and an all-but obsessive faith in television’s power as a medium and her rightful place on the small screen. She connives her way into a career at a local television station, first as an assistant, then a programmer, and finally as a weather anchor. And when her sweet, but contentedly-non-famous husband gets in the way of her plans, she courts three teenagers and—just as cunningly—persuades them to take care of the limits set by her marriage once and for all.

Two things drive Suzanne’s all-consuming lust for the televisual. The first is, of course, the quest for fame. And the second? For all her posturing and scheming, Suzanne honestly believes that life isn’t worth living if no one’s watching (in this sense, television is us bearing witness to ourselves—the digital age’s answer to the God question: someone is always watching). As much as she puts herself into television, it puts itself into her: she derives her power to influence everyone around her from television’s cultural authority. Her measly job as a small-town weather anchor would never lend her enough cache to pull off all the machinations of the film’s plot, but her proximity to television, her willful embodiment of its ideology of fame and celebrity, does.

Both Warhol and Suzanne’s narratives indicate, whether in real-life or fictional terms, the ways in which fame can beget fame and how a mere association with mass media can render life seemingly unreal. To bring us to a more germane association with contemporary culture: how far removed is Suzanne’s observation, “what’s the point of doing anything worthwhile if nobody's watching?” from the inexplicable celebrity of someone like Paris Hilton—merely famous for being famous—or the notoriety of former tween pop idol Britney Spears (famous for being famously reckless) or, indeed, the fifteen minutes of wacky/stupid/haphazard fame sought by most reality show contestants? And how many times have we seen celebrity overwhelm celebrities? In the past few years, this has happened most notably with young stars (Lindsey Lohan, the Olsen twins, Nicole Richie, etc.), but it’s not a new phenomenon by any means.

But is there more than just the siren’s lure of glimmering cameras (later crushed under the heavy burden of scrutiny and paparazzi shutter-clicks) permeating our collective subconscious that inspires this vicious cycle of fame/infamy? Could it be that perhaps, as life becomes more and more televisual—that is, as reality becomes increasingly codified by how it can be expressed in images (rather than words or thoughts)—we rely on mass media to “learn about who we really are”? After being shot, Warhol suddenly realized that he was watching television, that “it’s all television.” Likewise, under the auspices of celebrity culture, “who I am” quickly becomes “I am who everyone is watching.” If the visual image supersedes the “real,” then the actor, she who is watched, morphs seamlessly into the celebrity, she who watches herself being watched.

After all, what’s the point of being famous if nobody’s watching?

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

(Next Week: “Television Delivers People,” in which I consider Richard Serra and Carolta Fay Schoolman’s 1973 video, Television Delivers People, alongside commercialism, spectatorship and the pleasures of mass media consumption.)


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Monday, January 21, 2008

the pilot (an introduction)

There are probably several ways to do this: by “this” I mean explaining the impetus for this blog, introducing myself, defining my frame of reference and the scope of my interest in television. The quick and dirty way is to lay things out point for point. I am compelled to write about television because it is one of the quintessential mediums of the 21st century. I am a child of the information age. Television fascinates me because of its ubiquity, its seamless insinuation into American visual culture; in America (and many other places), television is, like it or not, de rigueur.

That’s one way, laying things out succinctly. To wit, in this blog, I intend to assay the implications of contemporary televisual experience in its many forms. But this is a blog about television, and so I’d rather introduce myself televisually; I’d rather introduce myself over time, protractedly, because three explanatory sentences cannot convey why I want to think about television or what in fact there is to think about television.

So, let’s start again. Let’s imagine the screen is blank. A blue screen or a test pattern. But let’s watch closely, or we might miss something. You never know.

In the pilot episode of the eminent Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970-77), we are met with a rapid-fire progression of information. In the first five minutes, viewers know that Mary has moved to Minneapolis to escape a commitment-phobic boyfriend and that she’s in the market for a new apartment and a new job and a new life. By the end of the first fifteen minutes, we know all the major characters, introduced and encapsulated in brief moments of dialogue: Phyllis, the meddling friend and landlady; Rhoda, the zany upstairs neighbor; Mr. Grant, the gruff boss with a hidden soft side; Murray, the sarcastic news-writer; and Ted, the vain, charmingly-dimwitted anchor. In a mere twenty-five minutes, The Mary Tyler Moore Show pilot offers us all we need to know while simultaneously revealing a narrative field ripe with further possibilities. This give and take of what’s offered to us versus what’s left to discover is the modus operandi of a good pilot.

True, some shows—ABC Network’s Lost (2004-present), for instance—may begin with an extraordinary event that sets the narrative in motion. And most pilots begin with some sort of upheaval, big or small: a new job, a new city, a new relationship, a plane crash, a jail sentence, a death. However, pilots are not about world-making. Like television itself, always “on” even when we’re not watching, a good pilot does not create a new world but welcomes its viewers into an already-existing one. To sell a show, pilots need to make us believe that the characters have been going about their daily business and we are only now, suddenly, voyeuristically privy to their lives. Naturally, this format varies from show to show, genre to genre. Sitcoms like Mary Tyler Moore introduce viewers to the world of the series through the eyes of a character who is also new to her surroundings or whose surroundings have suddenly changed. Dramas like Lost are often predicated on a life-changing (sometimes life-threatening) upheaval. Perhaps ironically, crime procedurals follow the in situ staging methods, if not the content, of sitcoms, setting the stage for their weekly repetition of similar scenario in which only the details change. Certain shows immediately break the fourth wall and address the viewer with a protagonist’s voice-over or conspicuously lay out a conflict that must be addressed through the run of the show. Dead Like Me (2003-2004) and Grey’s Anatomy (2005-present) come immediately to mind as examples of the former, and The Fugitive (1963-1967) and Quantum Leap (1989-1993) are two examples, chosen randomly from a vast sea of possibilities, of the latter. Still, through all these variations, the most important element remains the same. A pilot must, in order to succeed, engage in a tenuous balancing act between giving the viewer enough information to understand what’s going on and leaving enough out to compel the viewer to come back for more.

So, what is this blog? Not an out-and-out drama, as no major event preceded its inception (I could say my impetus was the writer’s strike, but that would be a lie). Certainly, this is no sci-fi show, nor is it a soap opera or a domestic tragicomedy. It’s also not a sitcom, even though I am perhaps a new character in the televisual universe; networks and alliances already drawn, I can only observe and offer my interpretation of what I see. In that sense, this is my voice-over. Hello.

No, this blog is a procedural, an endless repetition of similar-yet-different, a persistent attempt to find answers for questions that may or may not even exist—a detective narrative. However, whether or not it is a crime procedural remains to be seen (what death might merit investigation? The death of television? I hope not, though the threat is on the horizon—in the form of bit torrent sites, the inevitable fallout of the writer’s strike, and reality tv).

I, like many viewers, watch television because I am looking for pleasure, a moment to relax, a break, but I always come away with so much more: the good, the bad, the ugly, and the indefinable.

Through and in the medium of television, we (viewers) are always looking—for pleasure, for entertainment, for intellectual engagement, for titillation, for meaning, for someone with whom to identify, for escape, for love, for money, for amusement, for information, for companionship, for validation—but what do we find?

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

(Next Week, Fame, Reality and the Philosophy of Andy Warhol: “Before I was shot, I always thought that I was more half-there then all-there—I always suspected that I was watching TV instead of living life. […]Right when I was being shot and ever since, I knew that I was watching television. The channels switch, but it’s all television.”)


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