A pop culture that I consume weekly is CBS Survivor. Survivor is a game show featuring a group of castaways on a remote island competing in the form of physical and mental games in order to be the soul Survivor. I don't know if any of you watch this show but this is one of my favorite seasons! What makes this season so different is the competitors themselves. Each season, they are split into tribes who compete against each other. This season the tribes consist of brawns, brains, and beauty (three qualities that are detrimental to survival in the game). These are all positive qualities and could be harmless names if you take it lightly. But obviously there is some stereotyping going on. Three themes that assist in portraying these labels are repetition, recurrence, and forcefulness. These themes also play a big part in the stereotyping that is going on by blatantly naming these teams brawns, brains, and beauty. By repeating these tribe names it just places emphasis on all of the characters individually. The recurrence of these names places a label on these people even more because the names are used so forcefully. It is interesting because some of the beauty team members could also be on the brawn team. Some of the brain team members could also be on the brawn team as well and visa-versa.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iflx6x5QJ38
Martin, J.N., & Nakayama, T.K. (2013). Intercultural communication in contexts (6th ed.). New York, NY: McGraw Hill.
I haven't watched Survivor before, and I didn't know it was so complex! Thanks for the educations!
ReplyDeleteI think the three themes you picked seemed to depict the television series well. It has so many seasons that people must enjoy the concept, the competition, and the manipulation. In previous seasons, the brains, beauty, and brawn are three concepts that drive the show and contestants use different percentages of each one to try and beat the other participants. Having the straightforward team names also drives home the point of this season and how the different stereotypes interact.
ReplyDeleteThis is very true. I never thought about the way that reality shows can often label people especially when teaming them up and looking for ratings. Many reality shows seem to take one piece of people's personality and try to play it up for good television this can result in a lot of stereotyping and labels in order to make for good television. However this is now so common that is has become popular culture.
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