电视转播人才:音乐性、功利和排斥美学

IF 0.2 1区 艺术学 0 MUSIC
Lindsay J. Wright
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引用次数: 0

摘要

纵观电视发展史,美国观众参与节目的传统结构始终如一:业余音乐家和艺人有机会在舞台上展示自己的才华,争夺观众的选票,赢得一等奖和成名的机会。这篇文章为越来越多的关于电视选秀节目意义的文献做出了贡献,证明了这些节目的非凡寿命和代表性是如何源于它们作为一种 "格式 "的配置,即一套结构化和限制每场广播内容的准则--一种基于排斥的审美过程。我认为,通过格式化,这些节目重塑了选秀节目核心的 "才艺 "概念,将多维的、与环境相适应的音乐能力组合转化为一个看似稳定的、能够被识别、评级和排名的对象。音乐选秀是格式化作为训练观众注意力的手段的一个缩影。在这些节目和更广阔的世界中,它们将淘汰任何(或任何人)被认为不值得的东西的做法常态化。通过分析《泰德-麦克与原创业余时间》(1948 年)、《宫》(1978 年)和《好声音》(2017 年)中的例子,文章展示了在被广泛讨论的选手人口统计、评委评论或观众投票结果等内容之下,选秀节目的形式如何掩盖了功利主义残酷乐观主义所依赖的矛盾。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Televising Talent: Musicality, Meritocracy, and the Aesthetics of Exclusion

Throughout the history of television, American audiences have participated in a tradition of programs that follow a consistent structure: Amateur musicians and entertainers are offered an opportunity to display their talent on stage, competing for audience votes to win first prize and a chance at stardom. This article contributes to a growing literature on the significance of televised talent shows, demonstrating how their remarkable longevity and representational power stems from their configuration as a “format,” the set of guidelines that structure and constrain the content of each broadcast—an aesthetic process grounded in exclusion. Through their formatting, I argue, these programs reify the notion of “talent” at the heart of talent shows, transforming a multidimensional and context-contingent assemblage of musical abilities into a seemingly stable object able to be recognized, rated, and ranked. Musical auditions offer a microcosm of formatting's role as a means of training audiences’ attention. They normalize the practice of eliminating whatever (or whomever) is deemed unworthy—on these programs and in the wider world. Through analyzing examples from Ted Mack and the Original Amateur Hour (1948), The Gong Show (1978), and The Voice (2017), the article demonstrates how beneath the widely discussed content of contestant demographics, judge commentary, or audience voting results, the talent show format serves to obscure the contradictions upon which meritocracy's cruel optimism rests.

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CiteScore
0.90
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