Reality Or Not
Essay by 24 • April 10, 2011 • 814 Words (4 Pages) • 923 Views
Reality Or Not
Whether we watch a group of people live together in a house (big brother), or watch them build the house in extreme makeover home edition reality television exposes that little peeping tom is all of us. Reality TV satisfies that instinct of peering into others lives, and the reality of reality television is that as humans we enjoy this. Reality TV is not much different from normal programs, like any program, reality television has the essentials, it has a mix of characters, it puts those characters in situation, and the result is usually a failure or success. But the catch of reality television is that the characters are real people, the story is not scripted, and with any failure or successes comes emotion. But does this reality TV revolution present the viewers with real life? Or does it present what the TV producers want the viewers to see? Reality television is sending the wrong message to todays society.
Reality TV is built on the foundations of exposing and exciting human emotions. In this aspect reality TV has successfully portrayed human emotions. The cameras have captured all features of being humans. For example, Survivor consists mainly of emotions associated with survival, leadership, the failure and success as co-operating as a team. The cameras have successfully conveyed to the audience all these emotions, and the stories connected with these emotions. There is no doubt that reality TV presents the viewers with small aspects of real life. Reality TV provides the viewers with true conflicts and emotions that have been felt. However, in the attempt to portray all traits of real life, I believe reality TV often fails. There are many contributing factors to this failure.
There is the reality that like any show, reality TV's goal is to obtain and keep viewers. With only an approximate hour of television each week it is difficult to include all stories. Therefore storylines and parts are often cut out, edited or deleted. This not only helps by keeping the show to the hour, it also is used to obtain the most interesting show. Kyoung-Lae Kang author of Journal of Popular Film and Television who found reality programs tended to cluster along the middle of the fiction-real dimension, which suggested not only that the genre seems to include programs that are not seen as particularly real but that clear distinctions among types of reality programs are not apparent(94).
By doing this TV stations secure viewers and can get more advertising money. The result is we don't always hear the absolute truth to any story. Some aspects of reality TV are cut because they threaten our idea about a character. For example in Big Brother there may be a character that is disliked and is receiving many phone votes. Big brother would not like to show a good side of this character because it may sabotage the phone votes; therefore to secure money Big Brother will only show footage making the character seem bad.
There may be a major dilemma in a situation, this may cause the cameras to neglect other parts of the situation, and therefore we are not receiving the full story.
With many barriers forbidding the truthful
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