On Sun, Oct 30, 2011 at 9:34 PM, Karla Robinson
<[email protected]> wrote:
> I beg to differ.
>
> If we, as a culture, spend a large portion of our discretionary time with
> media, shouldn't we study it?  Shouldn't we have symposia where we discuss
> why reality TV is so popular?  What it might be doing to our culture?

You all may or may not have noticed, but since I got my own place and
got out of a home setting where I was subjected to endless hours of
reality TV and televised battles over cupcakes, I've distanced myself
from it. Because I try to speak on things I know about or am
passionate about; if I'm not watching a show, I try not to write about
it one way or the other. To perform an exhaustive analysis of Snooki
and the Situation, someone would have to actually subject themselves
to watching Jersey Shore. And having seen roughly one episode (under
extreme duress), I'm not willing to take seriously the wisdom of
anyone who would do such a thing. Mike Judge deserves a medal for
watching as much as he did to mock it on the new Beavis and Butthead
series.

I only have a BFA in Communications so I guess I can only stand back
and envy your PhD. But too often we want to instantly ascribe whatever
is current with the same sort of reverence we used to hold classical
art, and it just isn't merited. Through time and distance we will see
what actually influenced this generation, but we are too personally
involved to know now.

In short, there is a big difference between waxing philosophical and
talking sh*t. There just isn't enough meat on the Jersey Shore bone to
get any nutrition out of it. I forget who Marc Maron's most recent
guest was on WTF, but I liked his idea that if he could have all the
raw footage from Jersey Shore, he could probably edit it into an
entirely different series in form, texture, and intent. If something
like that were to happen, I'd take an interest. As it stands, it is
just another fad and soon it will be gone, just like so many other
fads.

One other point: I teach at what is essentially a vocational school
(albeit a unique one), but even there I can see the gaping chasm in
our educational system. Studies are revealing an increase in suicide
rates of college students, and professors are complaining that third
and even fourth year students cannot compose a 500 word essay on a
given subject. The course I teach is required for entering students of
all majors, and it is designed to review the basic skills they need to
succeed. And for the first few months our course wasn't taken
seriously by the administration or the students. But now we have hard
data to crunch and it is revealed that students who did poorly in our
course (lacked the basic skills) all dropped or were booted from their
programs. In other words, the basic skills matter, even to people who
enter into specific vocations where they think they do not.

When we waste time out of an academic calendar for Madonna-studies and
Jersey Shore and texting slang, we are losing something as a culture.
Though our pop-culture might be strengthened, what is the prize for
that?. While we are building up that skillset, what are we neglecting?
Every generation will have its escapist fare (I once watched
Gilligan's Island and The Monkees with alarming frequency), but
there's no need to dwell on it. Put simply: It doesn't take a two-week
seminar to determine why we need to escape from our day-to-day lives,
nor does it take an assemblage of learned individuals to determine why
Snooki would want to appear on her own TV show.

But if anyone did want to determine those things, I'd point them to
this message board, where people wiser than me have already discussed
these and other issues in depth and for free, thus allowing
universities to pursue more noble endeavors.

-- 
Kevin M. (RPCV)

-- 
TV or Not TV .... The Smartest (TV) People!
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
Groups "TV or Not TV" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/tvornottv?hl=en

Reply via email to