By Andrew Schenker
If we take it as a given that our interaction with mass media fundamentally shapes the way we view the world, then it becomes pretty clear that we can't dismiss any function of that media as harmless escapism. Attempting to justify a dispensable television or cinematic product as some sort of "pure" entertainment becomes, under these circumstances, a rather dubious practice. Quite apart from the fact that this sort of attitude severely limits the opportunities for the distribution of serious work, it reinforces a generalized reduction of our ability to apprehend our own reality and ultimately diminishes our experience of life. From the half-minute television commercial to the latest big-budget action picture, the consumption of mass product deadens our experience in at least three significant ways: through over-simplification, through the promotion of passivity and through de-aestheticization, all of which are significantly linked. Below, I take a brief look at three mass cultural products – a television advertisement, a reality television program, and a film – and show how these products make use of all three strategies in order to deaden our experience of life.
Given the fact that the average television commercial lasts 30 seconds and requires an instant arresting of the viewer's attention, it becomes a practical necessity that the advertising format present a simplified interpretation of life. But what is most harmful about the format is that, since the majority of ads are attempting to sell a lifestyle, they invite the viewer to regard his own life in similarly reductive terms. An ongoing series of ads for Yoplait yogurt, pitched to a certain middle-class, thirty-something female constituency, provides a telling example of this pure demographic definition. The spots feature representative members of the targeted contingent comparing the product favorably to a catalogue of pleasures ("shoe shopping" "foot massage") understood to be held in common esteem by the commercial's intended audience. By linking the product to the designators of a specific lifestyle, the creators of the ad carve out a simplified conception of identity which attempts to diminish the experience of a whole range of people who happen to fit the target demographic. The success of the commercial depends on the viewer's passive acceptance of the self-definition being offered. By eliminating the need for the viewer to take an active role in establishing her own existence, the ad is able to sell a pre-packaged lifestyle that replaces any need to understand one's own life except in the most simplistic terms with a neat equation of personal identity and demographic affiliation.
The popular television program American Idol also serves to simplify our experience of life, in this case by promoting an aesthetic homogenization and a corresponding debasement of artistic standards. The show, which consists of a talent contest between a group of would-be pop stars, perpetuates this homogenization under the guise of democratic plurality. The singers may be divided into several genres of performance – rock, country, R & B – but like the formatting of radio stations, this pretense of diversification hides the sameness inherent in the music, all of which would be better classified under the heading of pop. Far from taking their cue from Chuck Berry, Jimmie Rodgers or Ray Charles (depending on their adherence to a chosen "genre"), the performers seem primarily influenced by the general blandness that has infected popular music in recent years, reducing mainstream radio (all of whose stations are controlled by the interests of a few corporations) to a kind of commercialized Muzak.
The show's slight illusion of diversity is given further expression through the mock democratic process that concludes each season. After the judges have selected a group of finalists, television viewers are invited to vote for their favorite contestant, thus determining which of a handful of interchangeable pop singers is singled out for potential stardom. By providing the viewer with the appearance of choice, the show's producers reinforce the impression that the musical selection offered by the mass media represents the full scope of aesthetic possibility, instead of a narrow range of homogeneous product. The fact that many consumers have come to define themselves by the genre of music they prefer (even though there is little difference between these genres in mainstream culture), shows how programs like American Idol seriously impair the average person's ability to achieve any measure of self-understanding. Rather than asserting his individuality, someone who claims to listen to, for example, exclusively R & B, is buying into the strategies of self-definition designed by the promoters of mass media for their own commercial purposes. American Idol ensures that, by eliminating any question of aesthetic difference in music, the art form can be sold as pure, undifferentiated product.
It is, however, the cinematic medium that arguably exerts the most influence over our understanding of the world and, given that film has become the dominant art form of the early-21st century, bears the most responsibility for enhancing our conception of our own experience. One of the worst pictures of 2007, Neil Jordan's The Brave One, provides an instructive example of the ways in which poor film product betrays this fundamental responsibility. Essentially a typical vigilante film, the picture sets up a neat dialectic between law and order and the personal brand of justice that always seems to win out within the confines of the genre. The film gives the illusion of addressing this dialectic by introducing a running dialogue between the vigilante (Jodie Foster) and a cop (Terence Howard) who stubbornly defends the legal process. But the cards are everywhere stacked in favor of Foster's argument, as Howard's repeated attempts to secure justice through proper legal channels prove ineffectual and only Foster's vigilante actions achieve any measure of success in lessening the threat of urban criminality. The film's conclusion neatly drops the pretense of the dialectic as Howard fully embraces Foster's point-of-view, choosing to shoot rather than arrest a suspect.
The Brave One seems remarkably untroubled by its resolution, which is unsurprising, since it never really gave equal weight to both sides of its debate, Howard's argument serving as little more than a bit of cursory misdirection to obscure the film's unqualified acceptance of vigilantism. By paying lip service to the complexity of its central question, the picture then feels justified in presenting its simplified, one-sided conclusion as an earned, rather than assumed viewpoint. What is most harmful about the film is that it perpetuates in the viewer a way of thinking which looks to reduce complex arguments to their simplest possible formulations. As long as the other side of an argument is briefly acknowledged, the film suggests, there is no need to subject one's own beliefs to any sort of interrogation or to recognize that there may be several ways of looking at a single problem.
The film further reduces our experience of the world with its drab and unimaginative aesthetic presentation. If one of the functions of art is to enrich our conception of life by allowing us to view the world in aesthetic terms, thus endowing daily existence with a new richness (after watching Sátántangó, for example, simply walking down a road can't be viewed in the same light), then the mass of popular culture, despite its superficial resemblance to art, leads to a deadened sensory apprehension of the world. Rather than carve out an aesthetic program that exhibits any kind of visual richness, Neil Jordan limits his strategy to keeping his camera constantly moving, an approach that quickly leads to a cinematographic monotony, since the effect is to capture a series of drab, unrevealing images that disappear just before the viewer can register their banality. In addition, he insists on positioning his camera at a forty-five degree tilt for long stretches of time to suggest the mental imbalance of his heroine, but these sorts of amateurish tricks can't disguise the dullness of what the camera actually captures. By limiting his aesthetic presentation to the hopelessly drab, Jordan invites the viewer to look at his own world (particularly if he lives in an urban environment) in similarly reductive terms.
For Frederic Jameson and other cultural critics attempting to define the conditions of post-modern existence, the transformation of reality into a series of artificially constructed images becomes one of the central facts of late-twentieth century (and early twenty-first century) life, a state of affairs in which, as Jameson puts it, "we seem condemned to seek the historical past" -- and, by extension, the present -- "through our own pop images", the reality "remain[ing] forever out of reach". So, if we are no longer given the possibility of viewing the world in any "pure" sense, but only as a series of simulacra derived from the perpetuation of mass culture, then it follows that exposing ourselves to the images offered by the majority of films and television programs inevitably deadens our powers of perception and causes the world to lose any aesthetic richness with which we are capable of endowing it. We may never be able to view the world as an unmediated entity, but we have the option to choose our mediation. If we fail to choose correctly, we risk having not merely our economic possibilities but our entire self-conception dictated by a few corporations whose interests lie squarely in perpetuating a vast reduction of the entire range of human experience. Only by looking for better models, for works of art that not only heighten our ability to view the world aesthetically, but which present a conception of human experience rich in complexity and demanding an active engagement on the audience's part, can we regain a sense of the fullness of experience.
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Andrew Schenker is a freelance writer based in New York. His work can be accessed at The Cine File.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Reduction of Experience: Why There’s No Such Thing as “Pure” Entertainment
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12 comments:
*claps*
Nicely done.
Isn't your conclusion just the purpose of this site anyways? The posts on great television shows and great movies tend to explicate the ways they can make us look at things differently.
That said, this piece reads, frankly, like an essay for an undergrad film class in which you want to talk about how much you dislike commercials, American Idol, and The Brave One. The erudite language of the post is entirely unecessary for the points being made, and only makes the author look like something of a pretentious snob. :|
Is this really what THND is becoming? A dumping ground for fourth-rate essays left over from 1989 media and mass culture classes at Brown?
Set aside the turgid prose, the unselfconscious assumption that the author knows what counts as aesthetic and meaningful, as opposed to the crude and unthinking taste of the masses. The fundamental problem with this piece is that it attributes far more power to mass media than it has. Schenker writes: "If we fail to choose correctly, we risk having not merely our economic possibilities but our entire self-conception dictated by a few corporations whose interests lie squarely in perpetuating a vast reduction of the entire range of human experience."
No, we don't -- because the vast majority of people don't have their self-conceptions shaped in any meaningful way by the movies or by American Idol. Teenage girls may. And movie critics certainly do. But most people's understanding of themselves, and their experience of the world, comes from their families, their religion, their jobs, and their friends, long before it comes from some TV show they have on in the background while they cook dinner or play with their kids. Maybe if Schenker spent less time consuming media and more time living, he'd understand that.
I suppose it's never a bad idea to point out that "pure entertainment" doesn't exist ... I'd like to think we figured this out some time ago, but I still have students who don't get it, so by all means, make your point.
The problem I have with this particular argument is that it puts the blame in the wrong place. According to Schenker, we need to choose our mass culture "correctly" ... I assume Schenker would be happy to enlighten us as to what is correct and what is not, although I'm not ready to trust anyone who thinks film, and not television, is the dominant art form.
The problem is not in the cultural artifacts. The problem comes when we refuse to engage ourselves with the material. Schenker spends much of his piece analyzing things he considers junk ... when he gets around to film, that dominant art form, he chooses as a topic "one of the worst pictures of 2007." He is not wrong in his choices ... he has plenty of illuminating things to say about that junk. And that's the point: the value lies in Schenker's analysis. The value or lack of same in the cultural artifact is something different.
As a teacher, of popular culture and critical thinking, I choose to foreground analysis over canon creation. I have my personal ideas about "correct," but I recognize them as personal. I try not to waste my time convincing others that Buffy the Vampire Slayer is art ... instead, I concentrate on helping my students understand something like Buffy within a context where, as Schenker notes, there is no such thing as pure entertainment.
*withdraws clap*
I wasn't even so sure the analysis was all that strong. Let's look at the American Idol section for a minute - I'm most familiar with music, so I'll comment on what he says about that.
"The singers may be divided into several genres of performance – rock, country, R & B – but like the formatting of radio stations, this pretense of diversification hides the sameness inherent in the music, all of which would be better classified under the heading of pop."
I think he's trying to say that all pop music is the same, unless it's different enough to not be popular. The argument is circular - he's trying to define "pop music" as something that is removed from r'n'b, country, or rock the way it was at some earlier, supposedly pure time. In fact, all the music he cites as truer examples of these genres (Ray Charles, who may have invented soul but was equally an important figure in jazz and country; Jimmie Rodgers, whose jazz-inflected records may have been influential in creating the country market, but who doesn't get nearly as much respect from the purists as the Carter Family or Hank Williams; and Chuck Berry, who blended the blues with country music to help invent rock'n'roll) was created in an atmosphere of extreme commercialism. These guys wanted to sell records, and they fit their individuality into the popular mainstream of their time. If Schenker had lived 50 or 80 years ago, he would be deriding them as not being pure enough genre examples.
". . .the performers seem primarily influenced by the general blandness that has infected popular music in recent years, reducing mainstream radio (all of whose stations are controlled by the interests of a few corporations) to a kind of commercialized Muzak.'
Yes, radio sucks. Popular music doesn't. Though there was a long period wherein the two were intertwined, you can sell hundreds of thousands of records without getting airplay anymore. How many stations play Radiohead, a band enormously popular and critically respected? American Idol has not exactly controlled the record marketplace as it expected to - some winners have sold a lot, some haven't, some losers have sold a lot, some have not. To me, it's far more interesting to try to figure out why Carrie Underwood is more popular than Ruben Studdard, or why Kelly Clarkson was on top of the world and now is on the bottom. I don't think we gain any real understanding if we just assign a blanket condemnation to all corporate-produced art.
"The fact that many consumers have come to define themselves by the genre of music they prefer (even though there is little difference between these genres in mainstream culture), shows how programs like American Idol seriously impair the average person's ability to achieve any measure of self-understanding."
I think a cursory look at cultural history will show that genre choice started out following cultural parameters, not the other way around. Rural whites listened to country music in the 30s; urban African-Americans listened to soul in the 60s: teenagers listened to rock'n'roll in the 50s. It was a side-effect of punk rock in the 70s, I think, that made genre identification a first principle of personal identity. Punks and metal kids didn't get along, and then the splits kept coming. Meanwhile, hip hop tried to define and create an entirely new community of young African-Americans.
At any rate, I suspect an actual discussion with American Idol viewers would find a far greater range of sophistication than Schenker credits them. It's not always taken literally as a battle for the soul of American music. Many people who don't even care about music at all watch the show for the fun of picking a winner. And, I'm sure there could be a lot of insight gained into analyzing the varieties of use viewers make of the show.
"American Idol ensures that, by eliminating any question of aesthetic difference in music, the art form can be sold as pure, undifferentiated product."
The dream of the gigantic record labels has been that this could be done, but it never ever works. For every success, there are a dozen or more failures. I don't always understand the aesthetic choices of average music listeners, but I definitely believe they are real ones, based on their own experiences, and not imposed artificially by any corporate agendas. The machine tries to spit out nothing but giant hits, but it doesn't work. Something in living human beings causes them to be ornery enough to make their own choices.
Well said, Steve. If, in fact, "American Idol" were as powerful at selling "pure, undifferentiated product" as Schenker suggests, then winning or coming close in the competition would be an automatic ticket to success. But as the recent experience of Taylor Hicks and Katharine McPhee -- both of whose records bombed -- suggests, it isn't. And that tells us that, as you argue, the aesthetic choices of average listeners, "are real ones, based on their own experiences," even if we don't always understand or agree with them.
I don't know whether his points were valid or not, I just had a damn hard time reading it.
'The spots feature representative members of the targeted contingent comparing the product favorably to a catalogue of pleasures ("shoe shopping" "foot massage") understood to be held in common esteem by the commercial's intended audience.'
representative members of the targeted contingent? Can't you just say women? Maybe I should just start reading the dictionary more often I don't know.
though the post raises some interesting and valid points, it seems overall unnecessarily arrogant and reductive. perhaps instead of saying there is no such thing as 'pure entertainment,' it might be better to point out that the distinctions made between so called high art and low art are bogus. the fact is, the nature, style and content of entertainment and advertising products (and is it really valid to compare television commercials to television series and films?) are more or less dictated by their consumers. furthermore, as another reader suggested, most consumers do not engage their choices of entertainment products to a degree which might allow them to make more informed choices. i also agree with the reader who called bullshit on the notion of some mythical time before when popular music and culture was of a higher quality. ray charles is still with us because his music was distinctive and not disposable. many of his contemporaries are not. i pay more attention to movies than any of these other categories of entertainment product and can say that although there were, as in other plastic arts, periods during which there seemed to be a greater concentration of great talents, most of the popular entertainment product was drivel.
"It was a side-effect of punk rock in the 70s, I think, that made genre identification a first principle of personal identity. Punks and metal kids didn't get along, and then the splits kept coming."
I have a disagreement with this analysis, while punk rock may have been the first example of genre identification within rock in America(although hippies and The Grateful Dead ethos had already appeared by the late 60s), Britain had already seen such division with the Mods and Rockers in the early 60s. In many ways these divisions were based on class and economics, as opposed to taste and art.
I do agree the splits kept on coming, as people continue to rebel against the Mass Market Mainstream and the Demographic....
Anonymous, what I meant by my punk rock statement was not that it was the first time people identified themselves most strongly as members of a particular musical sub-culture. I meant that a side-effect of the punk movement, one that I don't believe was ever specifically intended by any of its early practioners, was that from that moment in pop cultural history, we started expecting people to define themselves by their musical taste.
Before that, if you were young, you were expected to be a part of the monolithic youthful musical culture, divided by race or class in the case of soul or country, but otherwise held together. After punk, subdivisions based on taste became common to the point of absurdity in the U.S. at least.
also lol at the pretension of throwing in Satantango as an aesthetic trump card.
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