Saturday, May 22, 2010

Mike Teavee, Move Over

I watch an inordinate amount of television; in the context of being GenY, it's another facet of my overwhelming consumption of media, and looking at myself, it's kind of freaky and slightly ridiculous how much I watch. Ironically, for my Communications class, our professor is constantly urging us to watch more TV.

Here is, in a roundabout table, a compilation of my TV schedule from the last year:

Yeah, I know.

Intersperse with various filler episodes of Law & Order: Special Victims' Unit, beginning to watch many of the shows halfway through Season 3 and lots of catching up, pretty regular catch-ups of The Daily Show and The Colbert Report, the occasional disgusted/fascinated screening of Jersey Shore and watching through two seasons of Dirty Sexy Money in half a hectic week, and the hours of television I've consumed over the last nine months is probably well into the hundreds.

Left, Stephen Colbert of The Colbert Report (e.g. favorite newscaster ever), and right, Dirty Sexy Money, favorite now-defunct/cancelled-TV-show-that's-got-both-Billy-Baldwin-and-Donald-Sutherland-squee!!!!-yay. Images via IMDB.

One genre of television that you don't see in my schedule, however, is the game show; I've got nothing against game shows--Jeopardy ftw!--but being narcissistic and thinking better of myself than the people who are on these shows, I don't like to 'waste' my time failing (or kicking ass) on questions I ace at home.

Running home in the afternoons between classes to have a swift lunch, there's only one program my television receives that isn't an infomercial, a shopping channel, a soap opera or episode of Sesame Street--'Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader?'

ARE YOU? HUNH? ARE YOU? Image via Fox.

This show is really, really well done production-wise, but what about the basic premise of this show?

Are you smarter than a fifth grader? Are you smarter than a prepubescent elementary schooler who still has recess breaks? Are you smarter than a child whose hairline is barely past your pelvis? Are you smarter than a kid who has spent the last ten years of their life sleeping, eating, crying, and occasionally flipping through picture books and scrawling through arithmetic worksheets?

True, the questions on this show are sometimes extremely specific, giving an unfair advantage to the pint-sied "assistants" of fifth-graders who are featured on the show, but there's still a large number of basic questions that are common knowledge and are relatively easy to answer. Take a quick peek below:


To the contestants on this show--are you proud that you're smarter than a fifth grader? Really? Does the fact that you're proud you're smarter than a ten-year old make you feel awkward? Or are you ashamed that you're not 'smarter than a fifth grader'? Or do you even care?

I understand why people go on this show--$$$.

But what does this television show say about America, the good ol' US of A, that this show is not only on the air, but (somewhat) popular and that people clamor to compete on air to claim that, yes, they are middle-aged, balding, fatting but still 'smart'?

5 comments:

  1. OMG the video was hilarious haha. I feel like a dumbass cuz i forgot 3 ft = 1 yard, even though i had 12 and 36 floating in my head LOL.. and i love the big bang theory too!! did u know that sheldon cooper's 37 in RL? its crazy


    anyway
    what kind of professor encourages his/her students to watch more TV. geez.. but TV shows are awesome, why not :)

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  2. I'll admit it...I love game shows. I spent an ungodly amount of time watching the Game Show Network last summer and even looked up the audition dates for Who Wants to be a Millionaire? (It's probably a good thing I don't live in New York...my impulsive tendencies would get me into trouble.)

    But even as a game showaholic, I've never watched Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader? For me, game shows are alllll about the hosts - Mike O'Malley on GUTS, Marc Summers on What Would You Do?, Kirk Fogg/OLMEC!! on Legends of the Hidden Temple (sooo obvs 90's Nickelodeon game shows were the best). Then there's Jeff Foxworthy. Ugh.

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  3. I really enjoy watching game shows, especially The Price is Right. However some of the questions on Are you Smarter than a 5th grader, make me really question whether I learned so of the material haha. Presently I don't watch many game shows as I once did but I do find myself every now and then watching the GSN and all of its shows. My question to you is how do you balance all the tv shows that you watch?

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  4. In India they did a version of Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader that was very, very popular. I watched it and couldn't get many of the answers because they were often about important Indian historical figures and such--it actually inspired me to take a class on Indian colonial history!

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  5. To Ren:
    I LOVE Jim Parsons, the actor who plays Sheldon. I'm most outraged by the fact that he hasn't been nominated for an Emmy yet--he's a wonderful actor!! My Communications professor is the one who keeps telling us to watch more TV; it's pretty awesome. =)

    To Claire:
    I agree, Jeff Foxworthy is not the greatest host... who would your ideal game show host be?

    To Ronye:
    Background noise! During the weekday, I'll wait to cook dinner and have my TV shows on in the background, or when I'm just reading through Google Reader or clicking around on Twitter, I'll have Hulu open in a corner of the screen.

    To Apoorvaa:
    I love that the show inspired you to educate yourself further--THAT's what I believe any great medium should do, to entertain and to inspire further exploration, and in the case of focus on a (for me) foreign education system, I think it wouldn't be as shameable to not be 'smarter than a 5th grader.' If there was a Chinese 'Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?' I would watch and fail and try to learn more.

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