As
the writers strike approaches Hollywood like
some Ebola River virus, desperation has set
in. The Rumpelstiltskins of Century City have
been busy spinning out reams of "reality-based" shows
to stave off the coming plot dearth. Weve
had Real World, Road Rules, Survivor, Big
Brother, The Mole, Temptation Island, and
now, I kid you not, Boot Camp. The level
of brutality, stress, and vicious in-fighting
has stepped up exponentially (and we still
have that two-men-chained-to-a-woman show to
look forward to).
A couple of weeks ago someone from Survivor had to be air-lifted out of
the Australian outback after falling into a fire from exhaustion. We were shown
the actual, agonizing scene as the contestant threw himself into the river to
cool his burned hand. On last Wednesdays episode of Boot Camp, Recruit
Thomson had to be medically discharged for fear that he might die on camera of
a tension-induced heart attack. Not for nothing are we constantly shown shots
of menacing crocodiles floating downstream in both Survivor and Boot
Camp. How long before some unfortunate "accident" in which a participant
strays too far from the shore and, amid blood and foam, becomes fast food for
a large scaly reptile?
What next? Gladiator: The Series in which ex-mercenaries try to exterminate
each other with homicidal Soldier of Fortune weapons? How about Fight
or Fry! in which death-row inmates battle to the death for presidential pardons?
Or Say What? in which macho suburban dudes insult each other over their
fiber-glass fences and then try and eliminate each other with turbo-powered garden
equipment?
The set-ups of these "reality" shows have become so similarthe
Kafkaesque rules, the dopey challenges, the voting off of contestantsyou
just knew the networks were going to have to do something to boost ratings.
Actual dismemberment may be a bit much for the American public, but what about
a fake-out? How can the reality-show execs resist faking some catastrophe, or
will they go all the way?
And whadda they mean by "reality-based" shows? Thats a slick
one theyve run past us. Whose idea of reality is this, exactly? Reality
created (and watched) by people whose idea of reality has been formed by Gilligans
Island and game shows. Ive met the type of people who think these things
up and, believe me, reality is not something they know a great deal about. In
their tasseled loafers and Armani suits they step out of their faux French
Chateaux on Pacific Palisades, get into their chauffeur-driven BMWs and are funneled
through their wall-to-wall day, past fawning "associates" and obsequious
maître ds to their air-conditioned offices and their corner tables
at Spago. They live in a bubble. To them, reality is a concept. Reality
is something you pitch at meetingsand about as far from real life as Heideggers
thorny theories about Existenz.
These so-called "reality" shows are hallucinations of thin-air victims,
I assure you. But then, the odd thing is that these people also control the shadowland
reality, the hyperventilated reality of the twilight dream world of the tube.
The hive sucks nightly on this electronic plasma that is both a compensation
for our atrophied lifestyle and demoralizing work habits in the early 21st century,
as well as a sort of federal synapse by which we all unite in ersatz rituals
of sitcoms, manufactured news stories, and game shows. Our Platos cave,
in which the Technicolor shadows become an eerie reality to which both the people
who create these shows and the fantasy-glutted audience that watches them acquiesces.
And, in the somnambulistic world of television, everything is a re-run, a photograph
of a photograph, and that is part of its appeal. Weve seen it all somewhere
before, we cant quite remember where, but when it is regurgitated we feel
reassured.
Hey, youve seen the moviesAn Officer and a Gentleman, G.I. Jane,
Men of Honornow watch in horror as blubbering amateurs try to recreate
the tear-jerking scenes from those movies. Why do these contestants keep insisting
theyre not actors? We believe you, we believe youreally we do. In Boot
Camp, the macho mush is laid on with a trowel. Macho mush, a term invented
by my wife, refers to the part in a male-bonding movie in which the wounded soldier
(mountain climber, etc.) tells his buddy, "Leave me here; go ahead without
me."
And if you thought Richard Gere went a bit over the top in An Officer and
a Gentleman, try Recruit Thomson making his one call home. "Mom, theyre
being mean to Mr. Lemon," the big oaf whines. (Mr. Lemon is not what you
might thinkits Thomsons lemon-shaped stuffed toy. Dont
ask, dont tell.) Then we have to watch Recruit Meyer with tears streaming
down his face when its Thomsons turn to leave the pitiable little
group. This is bathos with hot-and-cold running schmaltz.
On Boot Camp its called Dismissal Hill, but to me it will always
be "getting kicked off the island." Im surprised it hasnt
yet replaced "cashing your check" and "kicking the bucket" as
a euphemism for death.
Ive had enough, I tell you. Im going into the reality-based business
myself. Im setting up shop as a "reality realtor." Here are a
few modest proposals for some real reality shows:
Audit. A group of people with dodgy filing records are thrown together,
they turn each other in, they steal one anothers scaly accountants and
tax dodges. The loser gets thrown to the IRS for a grueling, humiliatingand
televisedaudit in which all their grubby financial deceits are exposed.
Cannibal Island. A plane crashes on a Pacific atoll, and after the survivors
have gone through the complimentary nuts and pretzels they must choose whom to
eat next. What a bonanza for sponsors! Heinz! Helmanns! Paul Newmans All-Natural
Pago-Pago Dressing. Thighs go better with Coke!
Mail Room. In which CEOs of various multi-national corps are put back
where they claim they started out to see if they can claw their way to the top
again. Those that fail must stay where they aremiddle-management hell,
mail elf, or refreshment trolley pusher.
Oscar Night. Using Steve Martins quip, "Were voting someone
out of show business tonight," as the premise, a dozen or so famously lame
actors are forced to perform various demanding roles from Shakespeare and Chekhov
and must agree to leave the profession forever if booed off the stage by a cabal
of snotty, elitist critics from the New York Times and The New Yorker.
My wife has just come back from a week in the Czech Republic and caught an episode
of Big Brother in Prague. Aside from the fact that they show people getting
naked, she describes the show as "extremely kitschy, with San-Remo-festival/name-that-tune
contests and a house-broken, pot-bellied pig." Oh well, in Eastern Europe
theyve probably had enough reality to last them a lifetime.