第14章。我的一代:周期,品牌,和更新在E4的皮肤

Faye Woods
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在受众碎片化、观看平台多样化的时代,青少年电视需要快速移动,制造大量噪音,才能抓住并保持青少年观众的注意力。英国青年合演剧《皮皮》(2007-2013)以其高剂量的毒品、混乱的派对和对性的随意态度引起了人们的关注。它的发展速度也很快,每两季就有一批演员从学校毕业,然后又有一批16岁的新角色,总共三季。本文将探讨在每个周期重置叙事时钟的同时保持受众联系的挑战。我认为《皮囊》品牌的发展是该节目成功的关键。对于越来越多地在广播流量之外消费电视的观众群体来说,品牌尤为重要,对于每两年更新一次演员阵容的节目来说,品牌也至关重要。《皮囊》品牌作为一个框架来运作,作为核心观众的吸引力,当它在每个周期结束时“毕业”他们认同的角色,并从头开始时,它有能力保持观众的联系。本文将探讨Skins品牌如何在其多代人之间构建一个有凝聚力的身份,同时也考虑循环形式如何对节目的表现和叙述提出挑战。这种循环形式让《皮囊》不断接触到新一代的新观众,并反映了英国青年文化的变化。因此,《皮囊》一直保持年轻,试图保持一种有时令人痛苦的时髦身份。然而,这部剧有一种精神分裂的身份,它的根源是英国现实主义戏剧和超现实主义喜剧,而逃避现实的抱负魅力则显示出美国青少年电视的影响。这种组合导致了一种高度夸张的情节剧倾向,这与《皮囊》所标榜的真实性——其自吹自擂的青少年顾问和年轻作家——不一致,循环结构放大了节目的过度倾向。每一个周期都在与对连续性和熟悉度的需求——部分通过品牌、美学和背景来维持——以及对新鲜感和原创性的渴望进行角力,以坚持与以往的不同。我认为,每个周期都不可避免地需要“超越”之前的内容,这导致了从以角色为基础的亲密关系和日常生活转向高风险的戏剧和暴力,这在英国青少年电视中是不舒服的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Chapter 14. My Generation(s): Cycles, Branding, and Renewal in E4’s Skins
In an era of fragmenting audience and diversified viewing platforms, youth television needs to move fast and make a lot of noise in order to capture and maintain the attention of the teenage viewer. British ensemble youth drama Skins (E4, 2007-2013) calls attention to itself with its high doses of drugs, chaotic parties and casual attitudes towards sexuality. It also moves quickly, shedding its cast every two seasons as they graduate from school, then renewing itself with a fresh generation of 16 year old characters - three cycles in total. This essay will explore the challenges of maintaining audience connections whilst resetting the narrative clock with each cycle. I suggest that the development of the Skins brand was key to the programme’s success. Branding is particularly important for an audience demographic who increasingly consume their television outside of broadcast flow and essential for a programme which renews its cast every two years. The Skins brand operate as a framework, as the central audience draw, have the strength to maintain audience connections when it ‘graduates’ those characters they identify with at the close of each cycle and starts again from scratch. This essay will explore how the Skins brand constructs a cohesive identity across its multiple generations, yet also consider how the cyclic form poses challenges for the programme’s representations and narratives. This cyclic form allows Skins to repeatedly reach out to a new audience who comes of age alongside each new generation and to reflect shifts in British youth culture. Thus Skins remains ever-youthful, seeking to maintain an at times painfully hip identity. Yet the programme has a somewhat schizophrenic identity, torn between its roots in British realist drama and surrealist comedy and an escapist aspirational glamour that shows the influence of US Teen TV. This combination results in a tendency towards a heightened melodrama at odds with Skins claims for authenticity - its much vaunted teenage advisors and young writers - with the cyclic structure serving to amplify the programme’s excessive tendencies. Each cycle wrestles with a need for continuity and familiarity - partly maintained through brand, aesthetic and setting - yet a desire for freshness and originality, to assert difference from what has gone before. I suggest that the inevitable need for each cycle to ‘top’ what has gone before results in a move away from character-based intimacy and the everyday to high-stakes drama and violence which sits uncomfortably within British youth television.
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