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Producing "Reality"Branded Content, Branded Selves,
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As economic conditions worsen around the globe, one in three workers are noweither unemployed or poor (International Labour Organization, 2012). Youthunemployment, specifically, has reached unprecedented new levels, and over 50percent of youth who are working are consigned to part-time, short-term-contract,and low-wage precarious employment (Estanque and Costa, 2012,p.264). As theInternational Labour Organization warns of a "lost generation" (Saltmarsh, 2010)of young people who have little faith in the value of traditional forms of work,young and old people alike are taking to streets and squares from Egypt to Montreal,demonstrating against political priorities and capitalist economic values that are
clearly flawed and failing. In the midst of this economic and political turmoil,however, transnational media corporations and television networks in developedcountries, specifically the United States, continue to accumulate record profitsdriven in large part by the success of reality television.
CBS, home to reality television pioneer Survivor, which had its 26th cycle in theUnited States in 2013, posted an I percent increase in advertising sales in the firstquarter of 2012 (James, 2012), rvhile Viacom's profits grew by 33 percent in 2011,propelled by MTV's breakaway "semi-scripted" hit, Jersey Shore (Chozick, 2011a).
Bravo's popular Real Housewives docusoap franchise was valued at half a billiondollars as of 2012 (Hollywood Reporter,2012) and Bravo, along with sister cable
company Oxygen, is credited for the financial resurrection of its parent companyNBC-Universal, whose earnings rose by over 38 percent in 20i0 (Friedman, 2011).Fox's American ldol,which had its 12th season in early 2013, is routinely within thetop-three-rated shows on US television and has made Fox the lumber one networkamong L849-year-olds for eight years in a row (Gorman, 2011); the show garnersat least $800 million in advertising every season (Flint, 2010), and it made an
A Companion to Reality klevision, First Edition. Edited by Laurie Ouellette.O 2014 }ohn Wiley & Sons, Inc. Published 20l4by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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all-time high of s903 million in 2009 (wyatt, 2009a). Horv is the astounding profit-
abiiity of reality television connected to the current global economic crisis?
This chapter will argue that reality television's innovative production and busi-
ness model have made it a powerful site of ideological and material production,
situated squarely at the intersection of culture, economics, politics, and technology
in the trventy-first century. Far more than banal or degraded television texts, I argue
that reality ielevision shows stand at the forefront of new modes of capitalist value
generatiori and, as such, both exemplifi and help to constitute current economic
and social crises. As reality television s mode of production bypasses unionized
actors and writers, it creates a new production model in which workers are required
to have flexible skills, work long hours for little pay, and have no employtnent secu-
rity; workers can easily be fired because there are always other keen young people
to take their place. Reality television has generated new marketing arrangements,
intensiffing tle role of advertisers in the creation of "branded" television content,
and has led efforts to create new branded entertainment formats that are exchanged
on media markets around the globe, online, and across new media and mobile
platforms. ',Reality" has inspired new ways to monetize online user-generated'content,
including"reality advertising" (Shalv, 2010), and has worked to produce a
wide variety of "brand extensions": goods and services, such as live events, DVDs,
music, boois, and fashion lines, developed in and through show narratives go on
to generate lucrative franchising fees.
Reality television not only produces branded content, show formats, and branded
goods and services, however; it also produces branded selves. Lured by the glittering
f.ornise of temporary celebrity, participants offer themselves up to the cameras for
little remuneration, model ideal iorms of subjectivity and life in a "work-free world"
for viewers, and produce public personas that might be traded for cash down the
line. This "monetization of being," best characterized by reality television personas
such as Snooki or Kim Kardashian, is now generalized across new forms of social
media. Individuals' online self-presentation and sociality have become fodder for
the extraction of monetary value by Internet social rnedia entrepreneurs, advertis-
ers, reputation managers, and other corporate interests. Iust as capitalism's crisis
has iniensified and work has become increasingly precarious, rnany people have
sought monetary and social value by accruing visibility and reputation online and
on television.The real story behind reality television, then, cannot be disentangled from the
story of its political-economic origins and methods of production, and involves
the productiol urrd dispersal of Hollywood television's economic and political
imperatives, codes of visibility, and promotional values throughout society at large'
tn ihis sense, realit,v teler.ision's texts, audiences, and modes of production are all
bound up together, effectively working to narrate, propagate' and advance the
broader ltgics of conte,rporary capiralist production and accumulation. So, while
reality television may claim to document the lived reality of its participants, the
truth is that its proliferation effectively helps to palliate, legitimate, and produce a
a
Producirtg "Reality" 439
nerv reality for the West. In u,hat follorvs, I rl,ill trace and further explore thesedevelopments, focusing specificallv on the n avs reaiity television mythologizes andrnaterially enacts ihe production of branded, monetized selves.
Producing the Industry: The Genesis of "Reality Television"and Its Low-Cost Production Model
In the simplest sense, "realit), telei,ision" nafftes a sei of cost-cutting measrires inmainstream television production enacted by management as a response to theeconomic Pressures faced by the television industry transnationallf in the late 1980s
and 1990s. Sot-ne of these pressures included increased cornpetition ir-r mediamarkets and growing audience fragrnentation as a result of cabie and nervmedia technologl., legislative deregulation, the rveakening of public broadcasting,and, specifically in the US, spiraiing costs associated r,vith the inflated deraands ofexisting media celebrities (Magder, 2004; Raphael,2004). The no-brainer soiutioninvoived lowering production costs by producing programming "just in time" -quickly, cheaply, and avoiding unionized actors and rvriters in favor of flexible,lou-paid, multitasking r.vorkers. Reality programming producers also worked tocapitalize on the m),ths and fantasies of unlirnited wealth and porver akeady associ-ated rvith celebrity culture in order to entice "reguiar people" to offer up their iaborfor free as participants.
This approach is in keeping n ith the broader economic processes of post-Fordistcapitalism, described by David Harvey as "flexible accumulation," rvhich includepermanent innovation, mobility and change, subcontracting, and just-in-time,decentralized production (Harvey, 1990). The post-Fordist mode of production isnorv dominant, albeit crisis-ridden, and is heavily dependent on cornnlunicationnetn'orks and on lateral f-lorvs of information and production. It tends to emphasizethe production and consumption o{ klowledge and symbolic products - includingpackaging, image design, branding, and rrarketing - over concrete material produc-tion ( Harvey, 1990; Goldman and Papson, 2006). As Harvey notes, "investment inimage-building . . . becomes as irnportant as investment in ne'lv piar-rts and machin-ery" (Harvey, 1990, p. 288). French socioiogists Luc Boltanski and Eve Chiapello(2005) describe work under the netrvorked conditions of post-Fordism and flexibleaccumulation as increasingly precarious and unstable; jobs are marked by flexibiiity,casualization, segrnentation, intensit;., and increased competition. These processeshave led to the formation of a "dual market," composed of a stable, high-wagedrvorkforce of professionals and rvorkers on one side and precariously employed,underpaid, and unprotected rvorkers on the other (Boltanksi and chiappello,2005).
The trends associated with processes of flexible accumulation and flexible pre-carious ivorkers are clearly in evidence in reality television production practices.Due to the gron ing dernand by networks and cable broadcasters for compelling,cheap, and quickly produced shon s, production cornpanies are regularly competing
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440 Subjects ofRealitY
with, and undercutting, each other; as a former reality television editor who has
chosen to remain anonymous states, "Everyone is pinching pennies everywhere. It's
very diffrcult to score contracts with the networks, so producers are under constant
pr.rrrrr. to deliver top-quality product under ever-shrinking budgets and delivery
tim.fra-es" (personal communication, April 1, 2008). While reality television pro-
ducers and marketers insist that the shows are unscripted and do not involve writers
or srory editors, in fact they rely on editors to build the story in the editing bay,
simply renaming writers "segment or field producers" (Writers Guild of America,
west,'2007; Elisberg, 2008) and paying on-air participants a minimal "apPearance
fee,, (Podlas, 2007,p.147). workers, such as production assistants, drivers, segment
producers, assistani editors, and loggers, are often asked to work 18-hour days' seven
duy, u week, and to go without lunch and dinner breaks, healthcare, benefits, pen-
sions, or overtime pay (Elisberg, 2008; Laist,2008). These exploitative conditions
threaten the safety of all involved in the productions. For example, the nonunion
drivers often work l8-hour days and do not receive alcohol or drug testing (Elisberg'
2008).Nonunionized reality television workers are also forced to accept precarious
short-term contracts, which can easily be terminated without cause' A former
American ldol production assistant reports that, when he averaged his wage over the
hours he was forced to work, it came to $4.50 an hour. He goes on to state that
"when I even mentioned the possibility of getting a raise I was threatened with
losing my job, told that I was replaceable, and that I'd be blacklisted from working
on ,riy oiher show if I spoke out" (Writers Guild of America, West, 2008). An assist-
ant editor who worked inThe Hills andhas chosen to remain anonymous describes
the situation:
These reality houses are making a lot of money, but the person who o\{ns the company
is making the money, whereas the production company people aren't getting health
insurance and they're working their asses off. They're willing to do it because it's a
norm. MTY especially, if they see a problem coming where they have to spend money
they'll just cancel a show. (personal communication, March 25' 2008)
In effect, the production practices of reality television function to destabilize the
labor relations of the television industry as a whole by instituting a whole new
bottom tier of worker who sees the industry as glamorous and is willing to put up
with the abuse to get a foot in the door. As a result of strict nondisclosure agree-
ments, the lack of any traditional job protections, and a very informal economy of
job distribution based on word of mouth, executive producers are able to pressure
ih.r. yo.rng people into silence and simultaneousiy demand they do "whatever it
tak"s io g", th" lob done" (Writers Guild of America, West,2008). At the same time,
prodr."is can avoid having to provide industry-standard wages, benefits, and
appropriate working conditions. The phrase "reality televisioni'then, simply names
irr"rpensiv", just-in-time production practices that avoid unionization and attempt
to extract as much unregulated labor as possible from workers'
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Business MakeoverrM: Reality Television, Branded content,Branded Formats, and Brand Extensions
Reality television has also signihcantlv alteretl the traditional business practices
of the television industrl, escie*'i,]g the older busir.ress .rodel rvhereby netlvorks
rvould pay licensing fees to iirdependent shorv producers and then collect revenue
for selling spot adrrertising aro,rnd the sirorvs thev licensed (Carter, 2002; Magder'
2004). Fo:llo;ving the leaiof the producer of SLrrt'i,or, r\'lark Burnett, r'ho found
SponsorsfortheprogramdirectlyandsplittheprofitswithCBs,advertisersnowbuy the rights to spollsor an entire Program or to have their product centrally
integrated |r the shorv itself, in addition to spot advertisements' What differentiates
the furrent sponsorship model from the one used i, the early days of tele"'isio'r -where a corporation ,"ould sponsor the entire ruu of a series - is that the sponsoring
products and s.ruices ur" fui more deepiy embedded in the narratives of the shorvs
themselves; indeed, they often become central characters in the stories (Manly, 2005;
Bauder,2ol2).Onstn.yivor,starvingContestantsendureintensecompetitionforone mouth-rvatering package of Doritos or some Mountain Dew. The friendly folks
on Extrente Makeover: Hotie Edition take shopping trips to Home Depot or Sears,
wlrose "reaI" employees often pla)' a part in the makeover' Or' in the case of Jersey
Sltore, acorporate brand, Abeicrombie and Fitch' and a personal brand' The Situ-
ation, create synergistic real-rvorld news stories together to their mutual benefit'
Abercrombie and Fitch publicly offered to pay The Situation to stop rvearing their
clothes on the p,og.u*, ..,.n as it simultaneously produced a T-shirt that read..The
Fitchuation" (ilifforcl, 201 1 ).
Due to their lorv production costs - often less than one-third the cost of scripted
drama(Podlas,2007,p.146)-andthespeedrvithlvlrichtheycouldbeproduced,reality programs lnitiatl,v made excellent and affordable off-season replacements'
fn"i. groriing poprloritt' a'd prohtability' however' succeeded in convinci,g
*etworl borre, and producers that shows could be introduced throughout the year'
Continuous programrning, \\,here shorvs debut all year long, sometimes compieting
two l4-rveek ".|.i.r" ,'iit ln a year, facilitates greater development of "branded
content,,- shorvs explicitly designed to market a specific product or service becaltse
broadcasters are able to "accommodate clients by their fiscal year" (Elliott, 2008b'
p. 1). As deregulation has allorved net'tvorks to become producers and prodttcers to
directly solicit corporate sponsors and advertisers for their sirolvs, intensified forms
of product integration and branded content have become the core raison d'etre for
reality television Production.Indeed, reality television business n-rodels have introduced a "rew paradigrn"
in television production, in rvhich shorvs are deveioped with "multiple sources of
financing - includlr.g foreign production companies and advertisers" (Carter, 2002)'
As former NBC Entertainment chairman Ben Silverman describes, networks are
now directly dedicated to "building programming assets in partnership" rvith adyer-
tisers (quoted in Elliott, 2008a, p. 3). Increasingly, sho$'sponsors and marketers are
442 Subjects of ReatitY
on board with show development from the very beginning, often devising show
concepts, sitting in the write;s'room' and developi"g 1it"^tll:,::n*ttt"'tties and
storylines.Inadditiontothesekindsofcoproduction,Weareseeingmoreandmore"advertiser-producedcontent"-realityshows'shortvideos'andfi1ms-developedand produced directly Uf to'potut" brands to showcase products and services' For
example, recently, ro,ip*#"red a reality-show titled Escape Routes built around
the Ford "Escape" .u, iBt"', 2a0);on the Food Network' Loblaws Supermarket in
CanadapremieredRecipestoRiches'acompetitionrecipeshowthatpromisestoturn the winner into orie of its products lEiliott, 2012); and Office Max produced
a reality show for tft" AgC fumlty channel about preteens getting ready for a new
school year, titled s,n.ooua (Story, 2006). Advertisers insist that..brands have the
potentialtobegoodcharacters"(Story'2005)'ancladvertiser-producedcontentisseen as a win-win situation for everyone lnvolved; advertisers are willing to offer
shorvs to networks fo' f'"t, and netrvorks' in return' can fllI air time and control
their licensing and production costs (Story' 2006)' This conflation between show
design and marketing works both ways as networks have become more and more
expert at marketing and advertising; MTV has been so successfui at targeting "mil-
lenials,,(viewersagedbetweenl0and28)thatitrecentlylaunchedafree-standingmarketingdepartment,calledMTVScratch,toworkindependentlywithcorporatebrand clients (Gelles, 2010)'
Thismovetowardbrandedandadvertiser-producedcontentandtheriseintheimportance of branding and marketitg *o'" generally are symptomatic of what
Andrew Wernick ."ffr::ir"*otional cul"ture." Piomotion is a mode of communica-
tion, a ..species of rhetiri.,, more notable for what it does than what it says. Pro-
motionaldiscourseisthoroughlyinstrumental;itsfunctionistobringaboutsomeform of "se1f-advantagi'g t"tf"i'ge" (Wernick' l99l' p' 181)' Wernick argues that'
throughout the twentjeti t"t""ty' goods came to be designed less for their direct
usefurness and more io, tt " *"urilrg, and my,ths they were able to mobilize and
represent. ,.f,. mt"nJn.ation and gln"ruliraiion of the processes of promotion
and marketing ln ,..t"t decades hal produced what Wernick ( 1991) terms a "pro-
motional culture,, and an era of ..spin,,, where what matters most is not ..meaning,,
per se, or "truth" "r;;;;f b't
""i"t'i"g" .- attention' emotional allegiance' and
market share. Goods, services, corporatlons' and' most centtally'people are all impli-
cated in these developments (p' 192)'
Branding and bru'nds ur"'."n,rul marketing practices within a promotional
culture. lnitially intended to link products aJd -r".ric"s
with resonant cultural
meanings through 'it "t of narratives and images' a brand now refers to an entire
..virtual context,, for consumption; brands wo,k to conslruct a particular ambience,
comprisingsensibilitiesandvalues'whichmaythenconditionconsumerbehavior(Arvidsson, 2005, p. 244)'In a world marked by increasing flexibility and flux'
brands work to fi-x, albeit temporarily ond t"ntaiirely, cultural meanings around
consumption,producingaestheticizedmodesofjustificationforlifeundercapital(Goldman and Papson, iooe ) e brand is also a value-generating form of property
in its own right, recogJoa u' "tf' by trademark licensing law and' since the 1980s'
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bycorporateaccountingpractices,rvhichconsiderthebrandasadistinct'albeitirrtorrgiUl., comrnerciai
"asset. Brands generate value b,v monetizing the symbolic
*.u'rfrg-*uking activities of consumers' As flerible accumr'rlation has come to rely
hea,ily In the ptduction of knor{edge and slmboiic products, emphasizing pack-
aging, image, desig,-,, and marketing o\'er Col.tcrete nrateria} production, brarrding
has become an ..i,stitutionalized method of practicallr' materializing the political
economy of signs"(Goldn-rzrn and Papson,2006' p' -118]' As stich' it is now"a core
activity of capitiriisnr" (Holt, 2006, p' 300)'
As we have seen, the iogics of promotion and brar-rding llo1r dominate reality
television production. ln udditiol} to intensilied product placement and branded
content, manv reality shorvs are now "branded" ibrmats - tbrms of intellectual
property bought ancl solcl around the globe. Big Brother, ldol, Real Horrscrl,lr,es, and
Tlrc x Factor are jusi a ferv of the reality formats norv available for licensing by
televisiolr production colrpanies. Like a recipe for a program, a format cau.r include
u p,og,u* bible, production guideiines, requisite soundtracks, set.design irrstrtrc.
tions,"and graphii elernents that are then filled r'ith local content' The *-rarket in
television shor,v formats has gro"vn steadily frorn almost zero in the 1990s to 259
in 2002 2004 and 445 in 2008 (Esser, 2010' p' 272)' Overull' the growth of globally
traded show formats spe;rks to the need to fincl new ways to cut costs and avoid risk
in tele,ision production; formats have been tried and proven in other markets and
reduce the time ar-rd costs associated r,r,ith progr:am deYelopment' They serYe as a
perfect schedule-fil1er rvhen original progran-rming or "canued" progralnming is not
available, ancl, whel a tbrmat hits internationalll', its returns in licensing fees far
outstrip anything a fuil.v fleciged shon, sale might earn (Esser, 2010, p. 288). \\4ri1e
teiet ision formats can includJ scriptecl or unscripted sho'vs, reality atld game-show
formats ha'e lecl the pack in the establishment of this trelld. The Biggest Loser' fot
examp}e, has been proclr:ced irr 25 countries ancl shown in more than 90 (Chozick,
201 1b).
With the er.er-i*creasing promotior.ral orientation of reality television, it has
become very clear that theiirphasis is no longer on television content per se but
on horv that content ca, firnctiln as a clearing house for products and services and
as a source of diverse revellue streams beyond the shows thetnselves' As lvlark
Bnrnett himself has stated rvith reference lo Survivor:
It is as rnuch a marketing vehicle as it is a television shot'. lvly sho\vs create an interest'
ar'rdpeoplelvilllookatthem,buttheerrdgamehereissellirrgproductsinstclres_acar, deodorant, running shoes' It's the futr'rre of television' (Sager and Burnett' 2001)
Individual shon s serve as brand portais through r,vhich any number of other com-
modities can be generated. A mericafi klol,for example, has extended its brand across
a plethora of products from ice cream to trading cards to summer camps (wyatt,
zoosa). NBC,s The Biggest Loser is another example of the polver of a brand-exten-
sion model; it "u..r.d
6jO0 million in 2009 from its brand franchises, including cook
books, fitness videos, diet drinks, and gym equipment (Sauer' 2009; Wyatt' 2009a'
444 Subjects of RealitY
2009b).Inadditiontoproducts,realitytelevisionalsoworkstogenerate..para-shows," such as American Idol Rewincl or MTV's The After Show' which comment
on and deconstruct the original shows or air previously unaired footage' The cable
network Bravo is often citeias exemplary of the brand-extension model; it routinely
spins new reality series from the thematic components of previous shows' For
example, its first hft, a;r;; Eye for the Straight Guy'wlsspun into lfverat
new series'
such as Top Chef and. iop i"ig''Bravo a;o. explicitly positions itsetf as a lifestyle
"brand," selling .oot uooi' ut'j 'tylt
guides b'anded with its own logo (Dominus'
2008).As}amesNgo,aproducerofAmericanldol,states,it\all..abouttheproduct,and the potential r", ,t" pr"arct to live beyond the tele,ision sho'" (quoted in
Elliott, Zll2).The goal of reality programming' then' is to generate more promo-
tional opportunities ut'i *o'* p'od'ittu in the form of shows' goods' or services'
perhaps the most lucrative revenue stream generated in and through reality televi-
sion productlon, f,o*.,"i comes in the lorm of the shows' branded peoplei
participants.
Producing "Selves": Reality Television and
tlie Monetization of Being
As reality television becomes a marketing vehicle for various corporate brands, the
stories it tells will, inevitabiy, reflect those same processes of marketing and selling'
No matter what their ;;#; content is - home or wardrobe renovation' ice road
truckers, or parties at the |ersey Shore - reality television shows also work to
promotetheculturalvalueoficonicvisibilityandfame(Hearn,2009).Showssuchas American ldol and America's Next Top Model explicitly narrate the hard work
involved in becoming u ttftUtity brand' while makeover shows such as What Not
to wear or Ten Vrrrl vorngn tell stories about the construction of a rhetorically
persuasive body u.corii"gio ttt" dltt:l"t-:l'he television industry and its celebrity
culrure. other shows,r"lfr ", MTV,s The Hillsor Bravo's Real Housewives franchises,
areportraitsofalifefreeofwork;richandprivileged,t.hestarsoftheseshowseffectively model what it is like to "live on teGvision'and make money doing it'
The overarchirg ,rur.;iir. line of much reality television, then, involves promoting
the value of high visibility and the authorizing power of the.television cametis gaze'
As one pleased .orr*iur,, on what Not to war states: "I should always live as
thoughthereweretelevisioncamerasoutsidemyhouse!,,Towhichthehostsreply,"Noiu bad ideal" (quoted in Hearn' 2008)'
But,aswehave,.t','"utitytelevisiondoesnotjusttellstoriesaboutprocessesoflucrativeself-production;itmateriallyenactsprocessesofcommodificationandpromotion Uy *urt
"ii,tg goods, services' and' *t't significantly' people' The indi-
viduals featured o, ,ttoiJ"' ch as The Hills' Jersey Shore' and -Real
House'wives' for
example, ura ,i,,,rttu,,"o"ty "people" u"d'lutto""'or hybrid "person-characters"
(Bellafante,2009).Asthey*o'ttu"at*infrontofthecameras'theirworkllives4fp ,nnarentlv. one seamless flow of value generation. Here, "being" is labor and
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Producing "Reality" 445
produces value, both for the individual person-characters and for their producers
and networks, such as MT\z or Bravo. Bv appearing on reality television, then,
contestants can become saleable image commodities - or branded seives.
The rvork performed b,v participants on realitv shorvs is exemplary of the nerv
forms of immaterial labor no'r, common under contemporary capitalism. Autono-mous Marxist critics, such as Antonio Negri, N'Iichael Hardt, and MauricioLazzarato, oppose economically deterministic forms of I{arxist criticism and see
r,vorkers' struggles against the constraints of capitalism as the driving force ofhistory. In their vierr, the rvorker is paramount and is "the active subject of produc-tion, the 'ivell-spring of the skilis, innovation and cooperation upon rvhich capital
must drarv" (Dver-Witheford, 1994, p.89).As these critics rvork to define a "new
revolutionar,v subject that might succeed the craft rvorker and the rnass rvorker"(Dyer-\Vitheford, 2001, p. 70), they argue that flexible accumulation's demand forimmaterial commodities such as images, design, symbols, and knowledge has given
rise to nen, forms of iabor that involve creativity, innovation, and the manipuiationof emotion and affect. This "immaterial labor" demands that the rvorker put his orher orvn life experience, communicative competency, personality, and sense of self
into the job (Neilsen and Rossiter, 2005). More and rnore, for example, retail u'orkers
are required to represent the brand of the store they rvork for by wearing the clothes
and embodying the correct "attitude;'and service and call-center workers mustfollorv a set script so as to alivays offer "service rvith a smile" (see Pettinger, 2004;
Dou,ling,2007). Immaterial laborers can include everyone from software designers
to rvaitresses and sex-trade lvorkers to academics. Information, computer, and
knorvledge rvorkers; performers and artists; technicians and service rvorkers;
and even those n,l-ro do not receive a wage, such as caregivers lvithin and outside
families, are immaterial laborers. Because it draws on the subjective attributes oflvorkers, in-rrnaterial labor produces distinct communities and relationships, social
neh.r,orks, social meanings, subjectivities, "and ultimately sociai life itself" (Hardt
and Negri, 2004, p. 109); it blurs the lines betrveen the economic, the social, the
political, and the cultural. As the boundaries betrveen working and nonrvorking life
erode due to ne\\, communication and computer technologies that rnake tts alr,vays
available to work and always publicly accessible for corporations, governments, and
advertisers to track, measure, and monetize, we can argue that human creative
capacities and social relationsl-rips increasingly are conditioned by, and subsumed
in, new modes of capitalist accurnulation (Lazzaralo, 1996; Hardt and Negri, 2000).
Paolo Virno, in his book A Grammar of the Mthitude (2004), names these key
components of immaterial labor, rvhich include creative, communicative, and lin-guistic capacities, "virtuosity." He claims that all working people are now required
to be "virtuosos" in some form or other; employees are expected to represent theiremployer's brand, to socialize and build relationships with customers, to contribute
their thoughts and insights to the workplace, and to build social networks rvith other
workers. In other rvords, we are expected to perform an employer-approved version
of ourselves in order to succeed at work. Under current post-Fordist conditions,
then, Virno argues, "productive labor, in its totality, appropriates the special
446 Subjects of Reality
characteristics of the performing artist"(2004, pp. 54-55), and, in turn, the culture
industries, including reality television, become centrally important - indeed, they
becorne pirradigmatic of the dominant mode of production (Lazzarato , 1996, p. 142;
Virno, 2004, p. 28). As more and more individuais are required to create their
olvn profit-producing self-brand or purblic persona, the culture ir-rdustries provide
the templates for forms of profit-generating seif-performance in all sectors of the
economy.
Elsewhere I have defined the "branded self" as an entity that rvorks and, at the
same time, points to itself working, striving to ernbody the values of its rvorking
environment. Andrerv Wernick describes the process this lvay: "a subject tirat pro-
motes itself, constructs itself for others in line with the competitive imaging needs
of the market. Just like any other artificiall1, imaged cornmodity, then, the resultant
construct is a persona produced for public consumption"(Wernick, 1991, p. 192).
The self as commodity for sale on the labor market must also generate its orvn
rhetorically persuasive packaging, its olvn promotional skin, within the confines
of the don-rinant corporate imaginnry Self-branding may be considered a form ofaffective, immaterial labor that is purposefull1, r,rndertaken by individuals in order
to garner trttention, reputirtion, and, potentiall1,, profit. Self-branding is a function
of an image economy, where attention is monetized and notoriety, or fatne, is capital
(Hearn, 2008) and reality television is ground zero for the production of lucrative
branded selves.
As the performance of personality and job-appropriate selfhood becotnes a forinof cornmodity labor power, immateriai rvorkers are encouraged to see themselves
as inrage entrepreneurs (Heam, 2006). h-rdeed, many reality sholvs have provided
previously unknorvu people u,ith rnonetizabie self-brands, rvhich they parlay into
iucrative endorsement deals and branded goods and sert'ices. Every mernber of the
Jersey Shore cast, for example, has nutnerous personai brand extensions and can
norv demand appea]:ance fees in the tens of thousands of dollars (Galloway, 201 1).
The Sittration, rvho arguably arrir.ed on lersey Slnre prebranded, notl'has nutnerous
branded products, including rvorkout videos, diet supplen-rents, exercise eqtripnrent,
a tell-all book, a rap single, a clothing line, an iPhone app, lip ba1m, a lirundrl'
bag, a water bottle, flipflops, baseball caps, cooler bags, torvels, t-shirts, hand sani-
tizer, and lollipops, to llante only a ferv. He is estimated to have earued over $5
million in brand deals and endorsements in 2010 (Brr,tce,2010). Similarll',5,rooUt
has a signature line of slippers, a best-selling tlovel, a perfttme', and a diet supple-
ment, among 1tllli-terotls other brand extensious, and lvirs recently paid S32 000
to give a coml-nencement speech at Rutgers Universit,v (Hedegazrrd,201l). The
Kardashian tamili,, of Keeping tJp tvith tlrc Kardashinrts, is estimated tt.r have made
565 ruillion in 2010 as a result of the shou', pirid endorsements, appearance fees,
and branded products. In addition, the familv l-ras ir total 13 million T\vitter follorv-
ers (Newman ar-rd Bruce,2011), nhich enhances their monetizable influeuce, Cast
members of the Renl Houseryit,es iianchise have published over a dozen books com-
binecl and have endorsed er.erlthing frorn jenelry to sex to)'s (Hollywood Reporter,
2012). Irrdeed, llllZarin, one of the original cast members of the Real Hottsev'ives
of Ne*, \1trl
by f'ellorv frthe shorv ar
l\4ost of tor distriburcome at a s1
lermented tl"break out'television pdorvn a perr
channel El,
2004 by cr
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sion, then,producers, i
and via bin,over their p
Realitl, tbecanse eyt
required toing airy ir-rlthemseives
and lif'e stoi
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l€ cultureieed, ther')6. p. i.12r
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: resultant
1. p. 192).
.r its orvn
: conhnes
;r lirm oi
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: provieledrarlar. iutorber of the
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tar'. 101 1 i.
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a lar-rndr',-
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rlr', Snooki
iet sr-rppie-
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ttcr lbllort-rence. C.r>i
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,ri Rettr.-rirr.
Hoti,.ull'il';r
Producing "Reality"
of New York City, recently argued that she should get a cut of anything developed
by fellorv former castmate Bethenny Frankel, because she helped bring Frankel to
the shorv and, thereby, aided in the development of her self-brand (Bruce, 2012).
Most of these image entrepreneurs, horvever, do not fuily control the construction
or distribution of their self-brand; indeed, in many cases, these personal brands
come at a steep price. While in 2005 pioneer reality producer iV1ark Burnett publicly
lamented the fact that he did not "have access to the future value" of The Apprentice
"break out" participant Omarosa (Carter, 2005), nou', almost 10 years later, reality
television producers actively rvork to cultivate mini-celebrities "in house" and lock
dor.vn a percentage of reality participants' future money-making potential. The cable
channel El, for example, has increased its advertising revenue by 50 percent since
2004 by creilting "an alternative universe of reality-based celebrities n'ho have
become just as ftrmous as the sitcom and dratna stars in netlvork prime-time"
(Hampp, 2010); rhe most valuable of these are the Kardashians. Anrcrican ldol
producers 19 Entertainment sign potentially valuable contestants to management
contracts that entitle the producers to 1 5 percent of ali of the contestants' earnings,
including endorsements and appearance fees (Wyatt, 2010). MTV generated over
half a billion dollars in profits in 2010, a significant portion of which came from
franchising ler-se1t 511ory merchandise, but provides cast rnen-rbers with only a srnall
percentage (Bruce, 20i0). The branded selves that emerge from most reality televi-
sion, ther-r, are not freely chosen or expressed btlt are strictly controlled by shorv
proclucers, both in the editing room, rvhere personas and storylines are constructed,
and via bincling contracts, lvhich effectively strip the participant of any legal control
over their person-character.
Reality television contracts are notoriously difficult to track dorvn, partially
because elreryone rvho rvorks on reality sholvs, from the star to the lorvly driver, is
required to sign a strict nondisclosure agreement that Prohibits them from disclos-
ing any information about the shorn, or its productiou practices. The contracts
thenselves often require participants to sign au'ay control of their voices, iurages,
ancl life stories. A sectior.r af an American ldol contract reads: "other parties ' . .lnay
reveal andlor reiate information about me of a personal, private, intimate, surpris-
ing, defamatory, disparaging, embarrassing or unfavorable nature, that may be
factttal anrl/or fction c/" (quoted in C)lsen, 2002, emphasis added). A recently leaked
MTV Real l4rorld contract stipulates that participation in the program "carries rvith
it the poteltial for death, serious phy5i.ol injun, extreme emotional distress, mental
or physical illness or property loss"(Dodero, 20 i 1). It grants the shorv producers all
rights to the participants'life stoly, voice, iurage, and likeness and to any sound
recordings, photographs, emails, or web sites created in relation to the prograrn. It
also aliorvs the producers access to the participant's credit history, school records,
and any government forms and requires that the participant agree to be humiliated,
or "portrayed in a fhlse light," during the program. Cast members are required to
participate in all producer-arranged press and are forbidden from engaging in any
non-producer-endorsed media, including Internet exchanges, for one year after the
program airs. They are also required to take part in any assigned book or ','ideo
447
j
i$:
Subjecrs of RealitY
projectsfortwoyearsaftertheshowends,andmustbeavailableforreunionspecialsfor up to five years (Dodero,2011)' Ultimately, a reality television participant,s
public persona, or ..right to publicity,,, is considered a form of property under the
law and, as such, is fully alienable and appropriable by others (Madow' 1993)' As
these contractual requirements shorv, urrd u, entertainment labor larrtyer Jonathan
Hander describes,,.th";;;;.r has all the reverage and the participant has none"
(personal communication, May 7' 2010)'
Inaddition,thelaborofrealityparticipantsisnotasfree,unfettered,or..real,'aswemightbeledtobelievebythenarrativesoftheshowsthemselves.Whilethereisnodoubtthatthelaborofrealityparticipantsiscreativeanddrawsfromtheirlifeenergy or personality, ii *n b" argo"a that these emotional responses and behavior
are also disciplined br;;;'"t"";e of the television camera and the instrumental'
aesthetic, and economic interests of the television producers and networks' Former
Real Housewivu of Orange CountyParticipant Peggy Tanous quit the show because
she "started getting u,,*i?'y thinkirig about all the forced drama that does happen
on occasion" (Holtywood Reporter,zllz)'And Audrina' from The Hills' has stated'
"because it's for TV y;; fo'n yo""tlf to do things that you normally wouldr't"
(Gay, 2008, P. 46).Alother anonymous reality television editor who has worked on
The Hilkinsists that, insofar as "the act of observation influences the result ' ' ' Ithe
participants]become,L*ptt'otutheshowcreatesforthem"(personalcommunica-tion, APril 14, 2008).
Given reality television,s conditions of production, then, it is fair to argue that
"the exercise of 'personality' is closer to the futfillment of a task specification than
a process of "tpr"rsi-"i
iO"r, 2007 'p'320)' Reality participants learn to "perform
to a format"; their pttfo"rrJ"t"s of selfhood are completely conditioned by the
shows, narrative conceits, aesthetic concerns, production exigencies, and sponsor-
ship imperati.r"r. rn".r.utive immaterial laboi of reality participants "is the creativ-
ity of capital. tirls .reaiivity is free insofar as it has introjected the needs of capital,
the objective constraints of the market and its laws" (Aufeheben,20a6' p' 35)' Any
affect,emotio,,,o,p".,o,alityondisplayarrivesalreadyhighlydisciplined,antici-patingthedemandsu,,d",p".tutionsofitsproducersandaudienceandexistingindialectical tension rvith its conditions of possibiliiy. So, no matter how rich a reality
participantlikeSnookimightgetfromherbrand'aslongassheisundercontractto MTV ,h" i, ,r.r., "'ttitJly
iI control of rvhat that brand will be exactly' or how
it will be developed or distributed'
Itiscrucialtorememberthat'asrealityparticipantsotrerl|rSirlivesupweekafterweek to the MTV cameras, working to become piofitable self-brands and modeling
how effective self-branding might be done, their apparently "free labor" is under-
girded and made porriUfJ by-extremely exploitaiive^labor practices behind the
scenes. Assistant editors and loggers, for example, are often locked in rooms for over
12hoursatatime,reviervingandloggingthousandsofhoursoftapeofthebrandedlives of reality p*;;;;. so, -h".".."I the narratives of reality shows and their
profit-producingperson.characterspromotethevalueofbeing..ontelevision,,,theolernorrr of immaterial work, and the promise of labor-free celebritS producerr
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Producing "Reality,, 44g
extract as much labor time as possible from the workers who make the show. Realitytelevision's branded selves and its precariously employed production workers areinextricably bound together in a capitalist logic that actively extracts value whereverit can in rvhatever way possible. And, ironically, as the shorvt narratiyes celebratethe promise of successful self-branding by showing off the glamorous lives ofits wealthy, successful participants and telling stori.l about tieir efforts at self-promotion, show producers rely on these myths to summon into being endlessnumbers of young peopie wiliing to work for nothing to get closer to the dream.These practices recapitulate a rvell-established truth t"hat io u*o.r.,, of dramatic"reveals" or designer duds can change: "capital needs a class of people r,r.ho materi_ally benefit from the daily alienation of others,, (Aufuheben,200e , p. 33).
Reality Television, Sociar Media, and the Reputation Economy
The processes of self-branding and self-promotion entrenched and formalized byreality television have only intensified as they have been generalized across theonline population with the rise of social media. Indeed, the plpularity and ubiquityof social media seem to confirm the centrality of socialized proiuction and immate-rial labor, and have been heralded by some as initiating a wholesale change in thenature of capitalism (e.g., see Bauwens, 2005; Benkre r, 2-006). on sites such as Face_book, Twitter, Tumbir, and youTirbe, individuals can craft a public presentation ofself that is ostensibly a reflection of their "reality" - no need ftr television netrvorksor brand sponsors - and can "monetize" themserves by working to deverop legionsof followers or subscribers. For example,youTube contributors .lun b".o-" partnersand monetize their offerings via a range of advertising options.r The number ofyour Twitter or Tumblr followers, or Facebook o. coogl.i friends, can be trackedand aggregated and transformed into a digital reputatiJn, such as a Klout score, byonline reputation managers or social media inteiigence experts. your online Kloutcan then be traded for free stuff, or, eventually, a prych.ck., In a world marked byincreasing economic and social precariousnes urrd insecurity, it is easy to see howthese opportunities to develop and invest in a potentially lucrative r.rr fruJ.orraappear enticing to many.
But the rumors of a pubric sphere regenerated via social media, where everyonehas a shot at fame and fortune, are greatry exaggerated. while there are any numberof venues where people can communicate, jlay, create, rate, rank, and entertainthemselves, the logic of accumulation we have traced in the production of realitytelevision also obtains here; the packaging, distribution, *"urur.*.rrt, valorization,and control of these expressions of seli remain in the hands of a very few, andusually not the "self" doing the expressing. In the wake of web 2.0, as mentionedabove, a whole raft of marketing ug"rr.i"q technology firms, social media interi-gence experts, and other brand managers have arisen to mine and find the value inthe data contained in an individualt social networks and affective expressions. Forexample, Mark Burnett has tearped up with a technology company to find new ways
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450 Subjects of Reality
to monetize vie.vvers as they watch Burnett's reality shows. Viewers can interact and
socialize with their friends as they watch the shows in real time, but the socializing
is organized on this platform around a "host of program enhancements, line exten-
sions, quizzes, trivia, gaming and sales experiences" (Grotticelli, 2011)- Of course,
as the platform works to integrate viewers and their social networks into the show
brand and its afftliated sponsors, it also tracks and generates lucrative behavioral
metadata for marketers. In another example, Canadian Internet start-up Empire
Avenue works as an online reputational stock exchange, where companies and
individuals can track their reputations and influence and invest in the potential
influence of others. The reasoning runs as follows:
I invest in you based on the degree to which you actively participate in online
social media sites and your social capital could pay me dividends. Indeed, I can actually
earn online currency for making the right investments in other people's influence or
by maximizing my own share price by extending my social netn'ork, posting regularly
on Twitter or Facebook, and offering comments, ratings, and feedback wherever pos-
sible - in other words, by actively developing a "self-brand'"
The eventual goal for the site's developers is to sell the data about personal influence
accumulated on the site to advertisers. In yet another example, "social-media adver-
torial clearinghouse" Adly pairs up brands rvith celebrities on social media; Kim
Kardashian receives $10000 for every promotional tweet she makes' Of course'
Kardashian doesn't really compose those tweets; the role of "Kim Kardashian" on
TWitter is played by a "hungry young tr,veet ghostwritet" (Piazza,2012), most likely
someone working at the lower rungs of her management team' In the age of social
media and perpetual publicness, celebrities outsource themselves to marketing
firms who, like reality television production companies, are staffed by invisible,
precariously employed, badly paid young workers. It is crucial to remember that'
while the labor of the Twitter ghostrvriter or the reality television logger might be
immaterial, thousands of these rvorkers are required to support every one "Kim
Kardashian"; they form the exploited underbelly of the current promotional,
celebrity-fueled, crisis-ridden capitalist economy'
Producing Reality
In the 12 years since its formal arrival on the scene in North America, reality pro-
gramming has remade the television industry profoundly. Once seen as a cheap,
iow-rent version of television, "reality" now has its own Emmy Award category and
its producers and innovators, such as Mark Burnett and Ben Silverman, have gone
orrio become titans of the industry. This chapter has argued that reality television
is a representational exPression, and ideological legitimation, of television's orqn
economic rationalizations. lts production practices extend post-Fordist capitalism's
desire to externalize, make fiexibilize, download, or, indeed, entirely escape its labor
costs, and many of its texts serYe to promote television's own codes of visibility and
prorrsignitalso r
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Producing "Reality" 451
promotional values, and the dream of a rvork-free l{orld. Reality programming is a
significant site of production, generating lralue not only through advertising butalso via program franchises, formats, and brand extensions; reality shorvs are veri-
tabie cyclones of synergistic marketing across commodities, platforms, and global
markets. Finaliy, via the logic of the brand extension, reality television progranrs
help to generate branded "seh'es," normalizing the monetization of being, rvhereby
an individuai's specific "personalit1"' is processed and standatdized by television
editors, producers, and netu-orks in order to be rendered functional, transferable,
and ultimately profitable.In spite of the high leveis of unemployment and precarious employment around
the globe caused b,v the innumerable and opaque sins of virtual finance capital,
the logics of promotionalism and ilexible accumulation continue to dominate; like
zombies, the1, are "ugly, persistent and dangerous" (Harvie and Milburn,2011)'There can be little doubt that the varieties of outer-directed promotional selfhood,
or self-branding, introduced bl'reality television production and generalized across
social media such as Facebook and YouTube are connected to a profound, albeit
inchoate, sense on tl're part of manv that processes of capital valorization are failing.
Indeed, it only makes sense that individuals rvould turn to the promotional peda-
gogy and aesthetic codes of comnercial media, technology, and social net\'t'orks inorder to reassure themseh'es that they exist and are worth something - indeed, to
valorize themselves.
But it is also crucial Io remember that personal ir-rsecurity is a symptom not a
cause; currentlv it is a highll. productive symptom upon rvhich a coliapsing capitalist
system, searching zombie-like for new forms of value, feeds. Reality television and
its branded content, tbrmats, products, services, and monetized self-brands are
paradigrnatic ol these ns11r proc€sSes of capitalist valorization and accumulation.
Reality shorvs are predicated on individuals' anxieties and insecurities at the same
time as they actively rvork to exacerbate material insecurity and rvorkers'precarious-
ness via their "just-in-time" production models and endless promotional appeals.
So, as large quantities of interchangeable peopie churn through realiti'televisionstudios keeping the profits rolling, in 2012 a new social and econotlic "reality" has
indeed been produced; processes of individual self-production have becorne central
sites for the extraction of economic value.
Notes
See details at 1vw1\,.youtube.com/ytlcreators/partner.html.See details at http://klout.com.
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