Nov 15 |
Archive for 2010RADIO, 11/15 1:00-1:40pmEST: Callie Crossley Show talks gender & race in reality TVQuick hit: I’m going to be on The Callie Crossley Show today, Monday Nov. 15, from 1:00 – 1:40 EST, talking about the issues raised in my book, Reality Bites Back. Knowing Callie (which makes this interview a treat, as she’s smart, politically savvy and funny) we’ll likely focus in particular on gender and race in reality TV, and on the economic factors that drive production and are responsible for regressive representations within the genre. Here’s the description on the show’s WGBH page: Truth may be stranger than fiction, but what if fiction is passing for the truth? From “America’s Next Top Model, to “Flavor of Love”, to “The Bachelor” (and MANY more)- what’s real with hyper-realism? We talk with journalist Jennifer L. Pozner at the top of the hour about her book, Reality Bites Back. Tune in to The Callie Crossley Show, WGHB, at the top of the hour — and call in at 877-301-8970! |
Nov 15 |
Archive for 2010Three chances to catch Reality Bites Back in Bay Area and LAQuick hit (more details when I’m not deadly exhausted): I’m doing two events in San Francisco and one in L.A. this week. Hope to see you there!
More details mid-day Monday |
Nov 13 |
Archive for 2010Denver, CO – 11/13/10
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Nov 13 |
Archive for 2010Saturday, Nov. 13: Reality Bites Back at National Women’s Studies Association conferenceQuick reminder from the events calendar: if you’re at the National Women’s Studies Association conference, there are two chances to catch me and Reality Bites Back on Saturday, Nov. 13 in Denver, CO. I’ll be talking shop, saying hi and signing books at a Seal Press-hosted wine and cheese reception for Reality Bites Back, from 5:10 – 6:10 in the Seal Press booth. Bring your questions, your feedback, your critiques, your love-hate relationship with your favorite guilty pleasure…whatever you’ve got, if you’re at NWSA, I want to hear it! And earlier, at 9:25am, I will be moderating “Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Documentary Filmmaking,” a panel held in the Plaza Concourse Level / Plaza Court 8 AV. Participants and presentations include: Documenting Ourselves: Creative Scholarship on the Margins Iltezam and the Women’s Contingent in Budrus: Documentary Film as Feminist Intervention and Solidarity Praxis Of Rights and Representation: A Transnational Feminist Analysis of “Lakshmi and Me.” Queering the Good Book: Analyzing Itineraries of Emotion in “For the Bible Tells Me So†|
Nov 12 |
Archive for 2010Newsweek reviews Reality Bites Back: “Everything I Learned About Women I Learned From Reality TV” (Plus: my slideshow: “Reality TV’s 9 Worst Stock Characters”)As a long-time media critic, I can tell you that this is not a sentence I’m accustomed to writing: Corporate media gave me a huge gift yesterday. As I traveled to Denver (to moderate a panel and have a wine and cheese reception for my book at the Women’s Studies Association conference), Newsweek’s Jessica Bennett reviewed Reality Bites Back in a lively feature headlined, “Everything I Learned About Women I Learned From Reality TV.” Her subhead that says it all: “Which means I must think they’re all desperate, competitive, plastic-surgery-obsessed bimbos. The problem? Today’s reality entertainment is a lot more like fiction.” I couldn’t be happier with Benett’s take on the book and the issue of representation of women in this genre throughout the last decade. She writes:
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Nov 11 |
Archive for 2010Reality Bites Back excerpt on Jezebel: The Exquisite Sadism Of America’s Next Top ModelOn Tuesday, Jezebel posted (and Gawker cross-posted) an excerpt from the violence against women chapter of Reality Bites Back, focusing on “The Exquisite Sadism Of America’s Next Top Model.” By 9am today, the post had received more than 31,000 views, 315 comments, and 414 “likes” on Facebook. When Jezebel asked to excerpt that particular section, I had a feeling it might strike a chord. In all the press since the book launched on Nov. 1, no media outlets have picked up on my discussion of the way reality TV both normalizes and glamorizes violence against women. (A few have asked me about the many male participants in reality dating and lifestyle series who have had restraining orders, arrest histories and even jail sentences in their past for harassment, battery or sexual assault.) So I was glad to know that their readers would be able to sink their teeth into this analysis of the dangerous messages Tyra Banks sends on America’s Next Top Model, in the name of “empowering” girls. This 800+ word excerpt is just a small taste of a 10,000+ word chapter, but I hope you’ll enjoy it. If “enjoy” is the right word for an essay about girls being instructed that, for |
Nov 10 |
Archive for 2010New York City, NY – 11/10/10
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Nov 10 |
Archive for 2010NYC BOOK LAUNCH PARTY and TWEET-UP TONIGHT!BOOK LAUNCH PARTY TONIGHT!!! NYC TWEET-UP!!! OK, I know, all caps and three exclamation points = excessive. Still, New York City, I’m just that excited to invite you to this celebration, which has been a loooong time coming.
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Nov 10 |
Archive for 2010FINAL VIDEO: Reality Rehab Webisode 7: The Gangster Guy (and series conclusion)Today, at last, I present the thrilling conclusion to the Reality Rehab with Dr. Jenn web series, Webisode 7: The Gangsta Guy! If you’ve been reading the blog recently (or media outlets from The Vancouver Sun to Jezebel to The Frisky), you know I launched a satirical book trailer and webisode series last week, Reality Rehab with Dr. Jenn, which spoofs — and then liberates — reality TV’s stock characters through media literacy therapy. In the final webisode of the series, The Gangsta Guy (actor Brian Moreland)–one of seven Reality Rehab cast members–starts out embodying all the racial stereotypes about men of color in reality TV (“I’ll pimp out every ho in this room! Of course I’ve been arrested. I’m from the hood!”). Yet during the course of media literacy therapy, we learn that he is only pretending to be a “G” because, as an urban planner, if he wins MTV’s “From Gs to Gents” he and his architect wife will be able to use the prize money to build community centers for troubled youth.
Like The Gangsta Guy? Blog him, tweet him, post him to Tumblr, share him on your Facebook wall — let’s make him go viral! |
Nov 09 |
Archive for 2010Philadelphia, PA – 11/09/10
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