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Tabloid talk show

A tabloid talk show is a subgenre of the talk show genre that emphasizes controversial and sensationalistic topical subject matter.[1] The subgenre originated in the United States and achieved peak viewership from the mid-1980s through the end of the 1990s.[2][3] Airing mostly during the day and distributed mostly through television syndication, tabloid talk shows originated in the 1960s and early 1970s with series hosted by Joe Pyne, Les Crane, and Phil Donahue; the format was popularized by personal confession-filled The Oprah Winfrey Show, which debuted nationally in 1986.[4][5] The format has since been emulated outside the United States, with the United Kingdom, Latin America and the Philippines all having popular shows that fit the format.

Tabloid talk shows have sometimes been described as the "freak shows" of the late 20th century, since most of their guests were outside the mainstream. The host invites a group of guests to discuss an emotional or provocative topic and the guests are encouraged to make public confessions and resolve their problems with on-camera "group therapy".[6] Similar shows are popular throughout Europe.

Tabloid talk shows are sometimes described using the pejorative slang term "trash TV", particularly when producers appear to design their shows to create controversy or confrontation, as in the case of Geraldo (such as when a 1988 show featuring Ku Klux Klan and Neo-Nazism members, anti-racism activists and Jewish activists led to an on-camera brawl)[7] and Jerry Springer, which focused on lurid trysts – often between family members.[8] Vicki Abt, a professor of sociology and American studies, criticized tabloid TV shows, claiming that they have blurred the lines between normal and deviant behavior.[9] The genre experienced a particular spike during the 1990s, when a large number of such shows were on the air, but which gradually gave way during the 2000s to a more universally appealing form of talk show.[2][10]

History

 
Scenes from The Les Crane Show

The Les Crane Show, a network talk show that aired on ABC as part of its late-night schedule from August 1964 to February 1965, was the first talk show to follow the format. Host Les Crane would bring on controversial guests, interview them in an aggressive but fair style, and take questions from the audience. Crane was the first to interview an openly gay man on-air and frequently interviewed black celebrities, folk singers and other taboo guests; Crane was rebuffed in his efforts to interview lesbian on one of his shows. The format was designed as competition to NBC's long-running franchise, Tonight, and its hard style contrasted with Tonight's more comedic format. The show generated significant controversy and was canceled after six months, later being retooled into a lighter talk show in an effort to boost ratings. Joe Pyne, a Los Angeles-based host, also hosted a similar talk show in syndication, although the focus was more on his confrontations with guests and less on audience participation.[11] The early years of NBC's late-night series Tomorrow with Tom Snyder covered similar tabloid topics without a studio audience (as Tom Snyder did not believed he provided anything an audience would want to see in-person), before the show took on a more celebrity-driven format when Snyder moved to New York City in 1975. In Chicago, Lee Phillip Bell occasionally addressed controversial topics within the context of her long-running talk show as early as the late 1950s, but her show did not have a studio audience.[12]

Trash TV

The subgenre is sometimes described in pejorative slang as "trash TV", particularly when the show hosts appear to design their shows to create controversy or confrontation.[13][14][15][16] One of the earliest of the post-Oprah shows was Geraldo, which was oriented toward controversial guests and theatricality. As an example, one of the early show topics was titled "Men in Lace Panties and the Women Who Love Them". One 1988 episode featuring white power skinheads ended in a brawl that left host Geraldo Rivera with a broken nose.[7][17] This incident led to Newsweek's characterization of his show as "Trash TV". The term was subsequently applied to tabloid talk shows at their most extreme; some hosts, such as Jerry Springer, have proudly accepted the label, while other hosts, such as Jenny Jones, resent it.

Jerry Springer would gain a reputation as the most confrontational and sexually explicit, with stories of lurid trysts – often between family members, and with stripping guests and audience members.[18] Although the show started as a politically oriented talk show, the search for higher ratings in an extremely competitive market led Springer to topics often described as tawdry and provocative, increasing its viewership in the process. Common topics included: partners admitting their adultery to each other; women or men admitting to their partners that they were transvestites who had convinced their partners that they were a different sex, or revealing that they were pre- or post-op transsexuals; paternity tests; numerous features on the Ku Klux Klan and racism; and an exposé of shock rock featuring appearances from Eldon Hoke and Gwar. Violence and fights between guests became almost ritual, with head of security Steve Wilkos separating the combatants before fights escalated into something more serious. Though frequently criticized, Springer claimed that he had no creative control over the guests.[19]

Maury would go on to become one of the most enduring examples of the format. Debuting the same season as Springer and likewise initially having a more serious focus, host Maury Povich over time developed a largely formulaic series that carved out a niche: by the 2010s, Maury had become almost synonymous with adversarial DNA paternity testing and polygraph. A typical episode of Maury features a poor woman, often with a checkered sexual background, accusing a past sexual partner of being the father of her child, which the man will categorically deny. At the end of the segment, Povich dramatically reveals the results of the paternity test; if the test proves that the man is not the father, he will celebrate boisterously, sometimes infamously in dance or by running into the audience to high-five audience members, as the mother runs backstage sobbing, while if he is determined to be the father, the mother will strut in triumph, sometimes holding a copy of the results and shoving the results into the now-proven father's face.[original research] By the 21st century, Maury had already earned a reputation as being "miles further down the commode" than Springer, and the name of the show would become a proverb for dysfunctional parental situations.[20] Maury would continue until Povich, at age 83, announced his retirement in 2022; the basic format is to be continued in a follow-up show hosted by Karamo Brown.[21]

Controversy

On an episode of The Jenny Jones Show titled "Same-Sex Secret Crushes", taped on March 6, 1995, a gay man named Scott Amedure confessed his love for his friend, Jonathan Schmitz.[22] Schmitz reacted with laughter while on the show, but became disturbed by the incident later.[23] He had a history of mental disorder and alcoholism/substance abuse. Three days after the show's initial airing, Schmitz killed Amedure. Schmitz was later convicted of murder and was sentenced to 25 to 50 years in prison.[24] Schmitz was released on parole on August 21, 2017.[25]

Amedure's family filed a lawsuit against the producers of The Jenny Jones Show.[26] In interviews, Jones said that her producers told Schmitz that his admirer could be a male, but Schmitz maintained they misled him into thinking it would be a woman. While under oath, Jones admitted that the show did not want Schmitz to know that his admirer was a man. Amedure's family won the initial ruling, and the show was ordered to pay them $25 million.[27] However, that decision was later overturned[28] by the Michigan appellate court which ruled that the producers were not responsible for what happened to the guests after their appearance on the show.

Decline and resurgence

By the early 2000s, the genre began to decline in popularity with viewers, and certain hosts either saw their shows cancelled due to low ratings (such as Jenny Jones and Sally Jessy Raphaël), died (such as Wally George) or voluntarily ended their shows to pursue other interests (such as Ricki Lake). Many media analysts have attributed the decline in popularity of tabloid talk shows and daytime talk in general to competition from cable television and satellite television, and an increased number of women in the workforce (resulting in a corresponding decline in potential viewers for daytime television, a phenomenon that had also mostly killed off the tabloid talk show's predecessor in daytime lineups, the daytime game show, and would later force cutbacks in soap operas, another daytime staple, as well). Common presumptions indicated that viewers were tiring of the constant recycling of subjects that are often shown on such programs.[29] Another explanation would be that the same audience shifted directly over to the new reality television and court show genre that rose to prominence at around the same time; most reality television and many court shows featured conflicts and raunchy material that would be normally seen in a tabloid talk show. (When Springer's show was canceled in 2018, it was replaced with a court show hosted by Springer.)[30] As early as the late 1990s, hosts such as Oprah Winfrey, and to a lesser extent Montel Williams, began to distance their programs from the genre by refocusing them to incorporate more serious subject matter or staying on stage in the manner of more traditional talk shows. Another example of this trend was Geraldo Rivera ending his show in 1998 to focus on his CNBC talk show Rivera Live full-time. New talk shows also followed the trend of emphasizing less bawdy themes; The Ananda Lewis Show (which ran from 2001 to 2002) made a point of being an alternative to the tabloid style talk shows still airing at the time.

The Phil Donahue Show, seen by many as originating the genre, was cancelled in 1996 as it could not compete with the new crop of shows. Donahue and Rivera would attempt to re-establish their journalistic credentials on cable television: Donahue with a short-lived talk show on MSNBC, and Rivera going back to his "roving reporter" roots, filing reports on CNBC, NBC and Fox News. Maury Povich began hosting a weekend news show in 2006 with wife Connie Chung on MSNBC while still hosting his daytime show. Weekends with Maury and Connie was cancelled after six months due to low ratings, and received harsh reviews by many of the same critics who criticized his daytime talk show. Jerry Springer, while continuing to host his televised "freak show", also hosted Springer on the Radio on Air America in the mid-2000s. The syndicated Judge Hatchett dealt with many of the topics of tabloid talk shows, but was set within the framework of a court show and was more direct in its efforts to intervene in the participants' lives.

Only a handful of the shows from the tabloid talk era remained in production as of 2011, and only one new tabloid talk show premiered between 2000 and that time: The Tyra Banks Show, which ran from 2005 to 2010, was a replacement for Ricki Lake after Lake quit her show. Tyra's format was more contemporary in the style of Oprah and Dr. Phil, but had gone over the limits of her show by having her audience members appear in their underwear along with her and most famously, pretending to suffer the effects from rabies to a shocked reaction.

Tabloid shows made a slight comeback in the late 2000s and early 2010s, although with a greater emphasis on self-help than their predecessors (owing to the popularity of shows such as Dr. Phil). Steve Wilkos eventually left Jerry Springer and received his own syndicated talk show, The Steve Wilkos Show, which debuted in 2007. The once-defunct Tribune Entertainment ordered new pilots for tabloid-style talk shows hosted by radio shock jock Bubba the Love Sponge and conservative talk radio host Bill Cunningham, for a possible fall 2011 debut; while Bubba's show was not picked up, The Bill Cunningham Show debuted in limited syndication in September 2011 before moving to The CW (becoming the only talk show on U.S. network television not to be lifestyle- or celebrity interview-oriented) in September 2012; Cunningham continued to host the show until he decided to leave in 2016, at which point Robert Irvine took Cunningham's place.[31] An American version of the British tabloid talk show The Jeremy Kyle Show also launched in September 2011. Ricki Lake and The Queen Latifah Show were both slated to return in September 2012, but with revamped, more mature formats (Latifah's as a more celebrity and lifestyle-focused program and Lake's focusing more on lifestyle and self-help topics) to reflect the hosts' increased age; also set to debut was a show hosted by Trisha Goddard, who hosted a tabloid show in the United Kingdom for several years. Lake's new show lasted only a year, and Queen Latifah's was delayed until September 2013 and was cancelled after two years. Goddard and Kyle also failed to gain traction with their U.S. talk show efforts, and both were canceled after two seasons.

Face the Truth, a half-hour series which debuted in the fall of 2018, attempted to cross the tabloid format with the panel show with host Vivica A. Fox.[32] The program failed however, and was cancelled after one season.

Influence

In the scholarly text Freaks Talk Back,[33] Yale University sociology professor Joshua Gamson credits the tabloid talk show genre with providing much needed high impact media visibility for gay, bisexual, transsexual and transgender people, and doing more to make them mainstream and socially acceptable than any other development of the 20th century. In the book's editorial review Michael Bronski wrote "In the recent past, lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, and transgendered [sic] people had almost no presence on television. With the invention and propagation of tabloid talk shows such as Jerry Springer, Jenny Jones, Jane Whitney, and Geraldo, people outside the sexual mainstream now appear in living rooms across America almost every day of the week."[34]

Gamson credits the tabloid talk show fad with making alternative sexual orientations and identities more acceptable in mainstream society. Examples include a recent Time magazine article describing early 21st century gays coming out of the closet younger and younger, and the decline of suicide rates among gays and lesbians. Gamson also believes that tabloid talk shows caused homosexuals to be embraced in more traditional media. Examples include sitcoms like Will & Grace, primetime shows like Queer Eye and feature films like the Academy Award-winning Brokeback Mountain.

While having changed with the times from her tabloid talk show roots, Winfrey continued to include gay guests by using her show and to promote openly gay personalities like her hairdresser, makeup artist, and decorator Nate Berkus, who inspired an outpouring of sympathy from middle America after grieving the loss of his partner in the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami on The Oprah Winfrey Show. Winfrey's "therapeutic" hosting style and the tabloid talk show genre have been both praised and blamed for leading the media counterculture of the 1980s and 1990s, which some believe broke 20th century taboos, led to America's self-help obsession and created confession culture. The Wall Street Journal coined the term "Oprahfication" to refer to the concept of public confession as a form of therapy and Time magazine named Winfrey one of the "100 Most Influential People" of the 20th century.

Sociologist Vicki Abt criticised tabloid talk shows for redefining social norms. In her book Coming After Oprah: Cultural Fallout in the Age of the TV Talk Show, Abt warned that the media revolution that followed Oprah's success was blurring the lines between normal and deviant behavior. Television critic Jeff Jarvis agreed, saying "Oprah was the one that trashed daytime TV. She took the Donahue format and then brought on the whiny misfits and losers and screamers and shouters, and then everyone, including Donahue, followed her, until it went overboard. Then finally she came back and recanted and said, no, no, now I'm the queen of quality on TV."[35]

Talk shows were often spoofed in mainstream media, with Night Stand with Dick Dietrick being one of the full-length spoofs of the medium (complete with fake guests and audience members asking questions).

Oprah talks to Phil Donahue

In the September 2002 issue of O, The Oprah Magazine, Oprah Winfrey interviewed Phil Donahue at his Manhattan penthouse apartment in what she described as a "full-circle" moment. She wrote in the article's introduction, "If there had been no Phil Donahue show, there would be no Oprah Winfrey show. He was the first to acknowledge that women are interested in more than mascara tips and cake recipes – that we're intelligent, we're concerned about the world around us, and we want the best possible lives for ourselves."

In the interview, Donahue explained that "the show became a place where women discussed issues that didn't naturally come up, and certainly not in mixed company. Much of what we talked about on the air is what women had been talking about in ladies' rooms." Donahue recalled that he finally had to do a show about doctors who hated him because, for the first time, women were challenging their physicians. He also discussed how hosting the show helped him overcome his own taboos. "I put a gay guy on in 1968 – a real live homosexual sitting right next to me. I was terrified ... I'm from University of Notre Dame. And believe me that's the one thing you didn't want to be doing at Notre Dame was hangin' with gay people ... If you don't understand those feelings then you don't understand homophobia. There's a reason for the closet. As the years went by after that show, I got involved in gay politics, and through my activism, I began to realize what it must be like to be born, to live, and to die in the closet."

Donahue also commented on the new crop of tabloid talk shows, such as Jenny Jones – "One-Night Stand Reunions". When Winfrey reminded him "You started all this," he replied, "If that's what you think, I'm proud. What I'm most proud of is that we involved the audience more than anybody else in the game. People who owned the airwaves got to use them in this wild thing called democracy." While both Winfrey and Donahue admitted to having done shows that were "naughty", both wondered if newer shows like Jerry Springer had crossed over into a whole different territory. Reflecting on the genre as a whole Donahue added, "If you want to know about America's culture in the last half of the 20th century, watch some of these programs."

Europe

In Greece

Annita Pania is the longest living representative of the tabloid talk genre in Greece, which reached its peak during the mid-1990s.

In the United Kingdom

American tabloid talk is widely viewed in the United Kingdom.[36] First-run tabloid chat shows are also produced in the United Kingdom, which are largely similar to their American counterparts, albeit more tame in style. Most hosts get more involved with their guests, rather than taking an apathetic attitude in a fashion similar to Jerry Springer and usually the audience is not as involved. Jeremy Kyle, for example, was known for his confrontational attitude towards those on his programme, The Jeremy Kyle Show, while others like Trisha Goddard are more pacifist. Springer himself hosted a series on ITV as Jerry Springer. Vanessa Feltz's programme The Vanessa Show was cancelled by the BBC in 1999, as a result of the discovery that some participants were actually actors cast from a talent agency, although it was known previously for outlandish stories similar to the American shows.[37]

Examples of tabloid talk shows

Current shows


Past shows

See also

References

  1. ^ Handy, Bruce (January 15, 1996). "Television: Out with the Sleaze". Time.
  2. ^ a b William Grimes (December 10, 1995). "Word for Word/Television Sociology; The Deconstruction of Jenny And Jerry, Maury and Montel". The New York Times.
  3. ^ "Trash TV: Insightful and in touch with America". Baltimore Sun. Tribune Publishing. April 4, 1996. Retrieved October 30, 2010.
  4. ^ . Penn State University. Archived from the original on June 25, 2003. Retrieved November 19, 2012.
  5. ^ Paul McFedries (January 21, 2002). "Oprahization". Word Spy. Retrieved November 19, 2012.
  6. ^ Wendy Hundley (January 5, 1995). "Baring All on a Talk Show Is No Way To Solve Problems". Chicago Tribune. Tribune Publishing.
  7. ^ a b "Geraldo Rivera suffered a broken nose in a chair-throwing..." UPI. Retrieved June 6, 2021.
  8. ^ "Truth Behind Jerry Springer | Jerry Springer Awful Truths Shocking fact from the "Springer" set: Some people love flying chairs. Some people love Jerry. And trash TV wouldn't exist without you". Baltimore Sun. Tribune Publishing. May 24, 1998. Retrieved October 7, 2013.
  9. ^ "How TV Talkshows Deconstruct Society | Penn State University". Retrieved August 10, 2016.
  10. ^ Elizabeth Kolbert (June 11, 1995). "TELEVISION; Wages of Deceit: Untrue Confessions". The New York Times.
  11. ^ "Inside the Depths of Talk TV". Los Angeles Times. October 6, 1996.
  12. ^ CBS 2 Vault: A Salute To Lee Phillip – CBS Chicago on YouTube
  13. ^ Bill Carter (March 14, 1995). "Killing Poses Hard Questions About Talk TV". The New York Times.
  14. ^ Greg Braxton (April 5, 1998). "Them's Fightin' Words". Los Angeles Times.
  15. ^ Kristin Hohenadel (October 31, 1999). "The Talk of the Town?". Los Angeles Times.
  16. ^ Ginia Bellafante (June 24, 1996). . Time. Time Inc. Archived from the original on April 17, 2009. Retrieved October 7, 2013.
  17. ^ "24 × 7". Factmonster.com. Retrieved November 19, 2012.
  18. ^ Lawrie Mifflin (October 28, 1995). "Aim Higher, Forum Urges Talk Shows". The New York Times. Retrieved December 6, 2010.
  19. ^ Albaniak, Paige (June 13, 2018). "'Jerry Springer' Moving to The CW This Fall". Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved June 14, 2018.
  20. ^ Matheson, Whitney (December 3, 2002). "There shouldn't be a next time, America". USA Today. Retrieved December 23, 2009.
  21. ^ Albiniak, Paige (March 14, 2022). "Syndication: Pieces Falling Into Place for 2022-23 TV Season". Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved March 19, 2022.
  22. ^ Trial by Media Review: Netflix's True Crime Series Compelling But Uneven – Collider
  23. ^ Scott Amedure – The Story of "Gay Panic", Daytime TV and Murder|Trial by Murder by Netflix UK & Ireland on YouTube
  24. ^ Trial By Media Netflix: True story of Jenny Jones, Scott Amedure, Jonathan Schmitz – Radio Times
  25. ^ "Man who killed after Jenny Jones Show leaves prison". Lansing State Journal. August 23, 2017.
  26. ^ 'Trial by Media' Explores the 'Jenny Jones' Trial with Director Tony Yaccenda – Awardsdaily
  27. ^ 'Trial by Media' review: Netflix revisits 6 heavily hyped court cases – Chicago Sun-Times
  28. ^ A Look Back at 1995 'Jenny Jones Show' Murder as Killer Is Granted Parole - Inside Edition on YouTube
  29. ^ Lawrie Mifflin (December 20, 1995). "Falling Ratings Threaten All Except Top Talk Shows". The New York Times.
  30. ^ "'Judge Jerry' Springer is coming to your TV next fall". New York Post. October 23, 2018. Retrieved November 26, 2018.
  31. ^ . Radio & Television Business Report. TPR. June 3, 2010. Archived from the original on June 5, 2010. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
  32. ^ "CTD's 'Face the Truth' Firm Go for Fall". March 28, 2018. Retrieved November 23, 2018.
  33. ^ "Joshua Gamson, Freaks Talk Back: Tabloid Talk Shows and Sexual Nonconformity, excerpt and interview". University of Chicago Press. Retrieved November 19, 2012.
  34. ^ Gamson, Joshua (May 15, 1999). Freaks Talk Back: Tabloid Talk Shows and Sexual Nonconformity: Joshua Gamson: 9780226280653: Amazon.com: Books. ISBN 0226280659.
  35. ^ "CNN.com – Transcripts". CNN.com. January 29, 2006. Retrieved November 19, 2012.
  36. ^ "TELEVISION; Stiff Upper Lips on British Talk Shows (Lower, Too)". The New York Times. May 7, 1995. Retrieved November 20, 2012.
  37. ^ Paul McCann (June 10, 1999). "'Vanessa Show' is axed by BBC". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on May 26, 2022.

External links

  • Trash TV Arrives in Finland – by Anne-Riitta Isohella (Helsingin Sanomat – April 9, 2002)
  • Trash TV by Graham Keeley, a report on telebasura in Spain
  • Trash TV in Germany
  • Trash TV blog in Greece

tabloid, talk, show, other, uses, talk, show, disambiguation, tabloid, talk, show, subgenre, talk, show, genre, that, emphasizes, controversial, sensationalistic, topical, subject, matter, subgenre, originated, united, states, achieved, peak, viewership, from,. For other uses see Talk show disambiguation A tabloid talk show is a subgenre of the talk show genre that emphasizes controversial and sensationalistic topical subject matter 1 The subgenre originated in the United States and achieved peak viewership from the mid 1980s through the end of the 1990s 2 3 Airing mostly during the day and distributed mostly through television syndication tabloid talk shows originated in the 1960s and early 1970s with series hosted by Joe Pyne Les Crane and Phil Donahue the format was popularized by personal confession filled The Oprah Winfrey Show which debuted nationally in 1986 4 5 The format has since been emulated outside the United States with the United Kingdom Latin America and the Philippines all having popular shows that fit the format Tabloid talk shows have sometimes been described as the freak shows of the late 20th century since most of their guests were outside the mainstream The host invites a group of guests to discuss an emotional or provocative topic and the guests are encouraged to make public confessions and resolve their problems with on camera group therapy 6 Similar shows are popular throughout Europe Tabloid talk shows are sometimes described using the pejorative slang term trash TV particularly when producers appear to design their shows to create controversy or confrontation as in the case of Geraldo such as when a 1988 show featuring Ku Klux Klan and Neo Nazism members anti racism activists and Jewish activists led to an on camera brawl 7 and Jerry Springer which focused on lurid trysts often between family members 8 Vicki Abt a professor of sociology and American studies criticized tabloid TV shows claiming that they have blurred the lines between normal and deviant behavior 9 The genre experienced a particular spike during the 1990s when a large number of such shows were on the air but which gradually gave way during the 2000s to a more universally appealing form of talk show 2 10 Contents 1 History 1 1 Trash TV 1 2 Controversy 1 3 Decline and resurgence 2 Influence 2 1 Oprah talks to Phil Donahue 3 Europe 3 1 In Greece 3 2 In the United Kingdom 4 Examples of tabloid talk shows 4 1 Current shows 4 2 Past shows 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit Scenes from The Les Crane Show The Les Crane Show a network talk show that aired on ABC as part of its late night schedule from August 1964 to February 1965 was the first talk show to follow the format Host Les Crane would bring on controversial guests interview them in an aggressive but fair style and take questions from the audience Crane was the first to interview an openly gay man on air and frequently interviewed black celebrities folk singers and other taboo guests Crane was rebuffed in his efforts to interview lesbian on one of his shows The format was designed as competition to NBC s long running franchise Tonight and its hard style contrasted with Tonight s more comedic format The show generated significant controversy and was canceled after six months later being retooled into a lighter talk show in an effort to boost ratings Joe Pyne a Los Angeles based host also hosted a similar talk show in syndication although the focus was more on his confrontations with guests and less on audience participation 11 The early years of NBC s late night series Tomorrow with Tom Snyder covered similar tabloid topics without a studio audience as Tom Snyder did not believed he provided anything an audience would want to see in person before the show took on a more celebrity driven format when Snyder moved to New York City in 1975 In Chicago Lee Phillip Bell occasionally addressed controversial topics within the context of her long running talk show as early as the late 1950s but her show did not have a studio audience 12 Trash TV Edit The subgenre is sometimes described in pejorative slang as trash TV particularly when the show hosts appear to design their shows to create controversy or confrontation 13 14 15 16 One of the earliest of the post Oprah shows was Geraldo which was oriented toward controversial guests and theatricality As an example one of the early show topics was titled Men in Lace Panties and the Women Who Love Them One 1988 episode featuring white power skinheads ended in a brawl that left host Geraldo Rivera with a broken nose 7 17 This incident led to Newsweek s characterization of his show as Trash TV The term was subsequently applied to tabloid talk shows at their most extreme some hosts such as Jerry Springer have proudly accepted the label while other hosts such as Jenny Jones resent it Jerry Springer would gain a reputation as the most confrontational and sexually explicit with stories of lurid trysts often between family members and with stripping guests and audience members 18 Although the show started as a politically oriented talk show the search for higher ratings in an extremely competitive market led Springer to topics often described as tawdry and provocative increasing its viewership in the process Common topics included partners admitting their adultery to each other women or men admitting to their partners that they were transvestites who had convinced their partners that they were a different sex or revealing that they were pre or post op transsexuals paternity tests numerous features on the Ku Klux Klan and racism and an expose of shock rock featuring appearances from Eldon Hoke and Gwar Violence and fights between guests became almost ritual with head of security Steve Wilkos separating the combatants before fights escalated into something more serious Though frequently criticized Springer claimed that he had no creative control over the guests 19 Maury would go on to become one of the most enduring examples of the format Debuting the same season as Springer and likewise initially having a more serious focus host Maury Povich over time developed a largely formulaic series that carved out a niche by the 2010s Maury had become almost synonymous with adversarial DNA paternity testing and polygraph A typical episode of Maury features a poor woman often with a checkered sexual background accusing a past sexual partner of being the father of her child which the man will categorically deny At the end of the segment Povich dramatically reveals the results of the paternity test if the test proves that the man is not the father he will celebrate boisterously sometimes infamously in dance or by running into the audience to high five audience members as the mother runs backstage sobbing while if he is determined to be the father the mother will strut in triumph sometimes holding a copy of the results and shoving the results into the now proven father s face original research By the 21st century Maury had already earned a reputation as being miles further down the commode than Springer and the name of the show would become a proverb for dysfunctional parental situations 20 Maury would continue until Povich at age 83 announced his retirement in 2022 the basic format is to be continued in a follow up show hosted by Karamo Brown 21 Controversy Edit On an episode of The Jenny Jones Show titled Same Sex Secret Crushes taped on March 6 1995 a gay man named Scott Amedure confessed his love for his friend Jonathan Schmitz 22 Schmitz reacted with laughter while on the show but became disturbed by the incident later 23 He had a history of mental disorder and alcoholism substance abuse Three days after the show s initial airing Schmitz killed Amedure Schmitz was later convicted of murder and was sentenced to 25 to 50 years in prison 24 Schmitz was released on parole on August 21 2017 25 Amedure s family filed a lawsuit against the producers of The Jenny Jones Show 26 In interviews Jones said that her producers told Schmitz that his admirer could be a male but Schmitz maintained they misled him into thinking it would be a woman While under oath Jones admitted that the show did not want Schmitz to know that his admirer was a man Amedure s family won the initial ruling and the show was ordered to pay them 25 million 27 However that decision was later overturned 28 by the Michigan appellate court which ruled that the producers were not responsible for what happened to the guests after their appearance on the show Decline and resurgence Edit By the early 2000s the genre began to decline in popularity with viewers and certain hosts either saw their shows cancelled due to low ratings such as Jenny Jones and Sally Jessy Raphael died such as Wally George or voluntarily ended their shows to pursue other interests such as Ricki Lake Many media analysts have attributed the decline in popularity of tabloid talk shows and daytime talk in general to competition from cable television and satellite television and an increased number of women in the workforce resulting in a corresponding decline in potential viewers for daytime television a phenomenon that had also mostly killed off the tabloid talk show s predecessor in daytime lineups the daytime game show and would later force cutbacks in soap operas another daytime staple as well Common presumptions indicated that viewers were tiring of the constant recycling of subjects that are often shown on such programs 29 Another explanation would be that the same audience shifted directly over to the new reality television and court show genre that rose to prominence at around the same time most reality television and many court shows featured conflicts and raunchy material that would be normally seen in a tabloid talk show When Springer s show was canceled in 2018 it was replaced with a court show hosted by Springer 30 As early as the late 1990s hosts such as Oprah Winfrey and to a lesser extent Montel Williams began to distance their programs from the genre by refocusing them to incorporate more serious subject matter or staying on stage in the manner of more traditional talk shows Another example of this trend was Geraldo Rivera ending his show in 1998 to focus on his CNBC talk show Rivera Live full time New talk shows also followed the trend of emphasizing less bawdy themes The Ananda Lewis Show which ran from 2001 to 2002 made a point of being an alternative to the tabloid style talk shows still airing at the time The Phil Donahue Show seen by many as originating the genre was cancelled in 1996 as it could not compete with the new crop of shows Donahue and Rivera would attempt to re establish their journalistic credentials on cable television Donahue with a short lived talk show on MSNBC and Rivera going back to his roving reporter roots filing reports on CNBC NBC and Fox News Maury Povich began hosting a weekend news show in 2006 with wife Connie Chung on MSNBC while still hosting his daytime show Weekends with Maury and Connie was cancelled after six months due to low ratings and received harsh reviews by many of the same critics who criticized his daytime talk show Jerry Springer while continuing to host his televised freak show also hosted Springer on the Radio on Air America in the mid 2000s The syndicated Judge Hatchett dealt with many of the topics of tabloid talk shows but was set within the framework of a court show and was more direct in its efforts to intervene in the participants lives Only a handful of the shows from the tabloid talk era remained in production as of 2011 and only one new tabloid talk show premiered between 2000 and that time The Tyra Banks Show which ran from 2005 to 2010 was a replacement for Ricki Lake after Lake quit her show Tyra s format was more contemporary in the style of Oprah and Dr Phil but had gone over the limits of her show by having her audience members appear in their underwear along with her and most famously pretending to suffer the effects from rabies to a shocked reaction Tabloid shows made a slight comeback in the late 2000s and early 2010s although with a greater emphasis on self help than their predecessors owing to the popularity of shows such as Dr Phil Steve Wilkos eventually left Jerry Springer and received his own syndicated talk show The Steve Wilkos Show which debuted in 2007 The once defunct Tribune Entertainment ordered new pilots for tabloid style talk shows hosted by radio shock jock Bubba the Love Sponge and conservative talk radio host Bill Cunningham for a possible fall 2011 debut while Bubba s show was not picked up The Bill Cunningham Show debuted in limited syndication in September 2011 before moving to The CW becoming the only talk show on U S network television not to be lifestyle or celebrity interview oriented in September 2012 Cunningham continued to host the show until he decided to leave in 2016 at which point Robert Irvine took Cunningham s place 31 An American version of the British tabloid talk show The Jeremy Kyle Show also launched in September 2011 Ricki Lake and The Queen Latifah Show were both slated to return in September 2012 but with revamped more mature formats Latifah s as a more celebrity and lifestyle focused program and Lake s focusing more on lifestyle and self help topics to reflect the hosts increased age also set to debut was a show hosted by Trisha Goddard who hosted a tabloid show in the United Kingdom for several years Lake s new show lasted only a year and Queen Latifah s was delayed until September 2013 and was cancelled after two years Goddard and Kyle also failed to gain traction with their U S talk show efforts and both were canceled after two seasons Face the Truth a half hour series which debuted in the fall of 2018 attempted to cross the tabloid format with the panel show with host Vivica A Fox 32 The program failed however and was cancelled after one season Influence EditIn the scholarly text Freaks Talk Back 33 Yale University sociology professor Joshua Gamson credits the tabloid talk show genre with providing much needed high impact media visibility for gay bisexual transsexual and transgender people and doing more to make them mainstream and socially acceptable than any other development of the 20th century In the book s editorial review Michael Bronski wrote In the recent past lesbians gay men bisexuals and transgendered sic people had almost no presence on television With the invention and propagation of tabloid talk shows such as Jerry Springer Jenny Jones Jane Whitney and Geraldo people outside the sexual mainstream now appear in living rooms across America almost every day of the week 34 Gamson credits the tabloid talk show fad with making alternative sexual orientations and identities more acceptable in mainstream society Examples include a recent Time magazine article describing early 21st century gays coming out of the closet younger and younger and the decline of suicide rates among gays and lesbians Gamson also believes that tabloid talk shows caused homosexuals to be embraced in more traditional media Examples include sitcoms like Will amp Grace primetime shows like Queer Eye and feature films like the Academy Award winning Brokeback Mountain While having changed with the times from her tabloid talk show roots Winfrey continued to include gay guests by using her show and to promote openly gay personalities like her hairdresser makeup artist and decorator Nate Berkus who inspired an outpouring of sympathy from middle America after grieving the loss of his partner in the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami on The Oprah Winfrey Show Winfrey s therapeutic hosting style and the tabloid talk show genre have been both praised and blamed for leading the media counterculture of the 1980s and 1990s which some believe broke 20th century taboos led to America s self help obsession and created confession culture The Wall Street Journal coined the term Oprahfication to refer to the concept of public confession as a form of therapy and Time magazine named Winfrey one of the 100 Most Influential People of the 20th century Sociologist Vicki Abt criticised tabloid talk shows for redefining social norms In her book Coming After Oprah Cultural Fallout in the Age of the TV Talk Show Abt warned that the media revolution that followed Oprah s success was blurring the lines between normal and deviant behavior Television critic Jeff Jarvis agreed saying Oprah was the one that trashed daytime TV She took the Donahue format and then brought on the whiny misfits and losers and screamers and shouters and then everyone including Donahue followed her until it went overboard Then finally she came back and recanted and said no no now I m the queen of quality on TV 35 Talk shows were often spoofed in mainstream media with Night Stand with Dick Dietrick being one of the full length spoofs of the medium complete with fake guests and audience members asking questions Oprah talks to Phil Donahue Edit In the September 2002 issue of O The Oprah Magazine Oprah Winfrey interviewed Phil Donahue at his Manhattan penthouse apartment in what she described as a full circle moment She wrote in the article s introduction If there had been no Phil Donahue show there would be no Oprah Winfrey show He was the first to acknowledge that women are interested in more than mascara tips and cake recipes that we re intelligent we re concerned about the world around us and we want the best possible lives for ourselves In the interview Donahue explained that the show became a place where women discussed issues that didn t naturally come up and certainly not in mixed company Much of what we talked about on the air is what women had been talking about in ladies rooms Donahue recalled that he finally had to do a show about doctors who hated him because for the first time women were challenging their physicians He also discussed how hosting the show helped him overcome his own taboos I put a gay guy on in 1968 a real live homosexual sitting right next to me I was terrified I m from University of Notre Dame And believe me that s the one thing you didn t want to be doing at Notre Dame was hangin with gay people If you don t understand those feelings then you don t understand homophobia There s a reason for the closet As the years went by after that show I got involved in gay politics and through my activism I began to realize what it must be like to be born to live and to die in the closet Donahue also commented on the new crop of tabloid talk shows such as Jenny Jones One Night Stand Reunions When Winfrey reminded him You started all this he replied If that s what you think I m proud What I m most proud of is that we involved the audience more than anybody else in the game People who owned the airwaves got to use them in this wild thing called democracy While both Winfrey and Donahue admitted to having done shows that were naughty both wondered if newer shows like Jerry Springer had crossed over into a whole different territory Reflecting on the genre as a whole Donahue added If you want to know about America s culture in the last half of the 20th century watch some of these programs Europe EditIn Greece Edit Annita Pania is the longest living representative of the tabloid talk genre in Greece which reached its peak during the mid 1990s In the United Kingdom Edit American tabloid talk is widely viewed in the United Kingdom 36 First run tabloid chat shows are also produced in the United Kingdom which are largely similar to their American counterparts albeit more tame in style Most hosts get more involved with their guests rather than taking an apathetic attitude in a fashion similar to Jerry Springer and usually the audience is not as involved Jeremy Kyle for example was known for his confrontational attitude towards those on his programme The Jeremy Kyle Show while others like Trisha Goddard are more pacifist Springer himself hosted a series on ITV as Jerry Springer Vanessa Feltz s programme The Vanessa Show was cancelled by the BBC in 1999 as a result of the discovery that some participants were actually actors cast from a talent agency although it was known previously for outlandish stories similar to the American shows 37 Examples of tabloid talk shows EditCurrent shows Edit Karamo 2022 present hosted by Karamo Brown The Steve Wilkos Show 2007 present hosted by Steve Wilkos Past shows Edit The Ananda Lewis Show 2001 2002 hosted by Ananda Lewis The Bill Cunningham Show 2011 2016 hosted by Bill Cunningham Carnie 1995 1996 hosted by Carnie Wilson The Charles Perez Show 1994 1996 hosted by Charles Perez A Closer Look with Faith Daniels 1991 1993 hosted by Faith Daniels Danny 1995 1996 hosted by Danny Bonaduce Face the Truth 2018 2019 hosted by Vivica A Fox Forgive or Forget 1998 2000 hosted for most of its run by Mother Love Gabrielle 1995 1996 hosted by Gabrielle Carteris Geraldo 1987 1998 hosted by Geraldo Rivera The Gordon Elliott Show 1994 1997 hosted by Gordon Elliott The Greg Behrendt Show 2006 2007 hosted by Greg Behrendt In Person with Maureen O Boyle 1996 1997 hosted by Maureen O Boyle Iyanla 2001 2002 hosted by Iyanla Vanzant The Jane Pauley Show 2004 2005 hosted by Jane Pauley The Jane Whitney Show 1992 1994 hosted by Jane Whitney The Jenny Jones Show 1991 2003 hosted by Jenny Jones The Jeremy Kyle Show U S 2011 2013 hosted by Jeremy Kyle Jerry Springer 1991 2018 hosted by Jerry Springer continues in reruns The Joan Rivers Show 1989 1993 hosted by Joan Rivers The John Walsh Show 2002 2004 hosted by John Walsh Dr Joy Browne 1999 2000 hosted by Joy Browne Katie 2012 2014 hosted by Katie Couric The Dr Keith Ablow Show 2006 2007 hosted by Keith Ablow The Larry Elder Show 2004 2005 hosted by Larry Elder Dr Laura 2000 2001 hosted by Laura Schlesinger Leeza 1994 2000 hosted by Leeza Gibbons The Mark Walberg Show 1995 1996 hosted by Mark L Walberg The Marsha Warfield Show 1990 1991 hosted by Marsha Warfield Maury 1991 2022 hosted by Maury Povich continues in reruns The Meredith Vieira Show 2014 2016 hosted by Meredith Vieira The Montel Williams Show 1991 2008 hosted by Montel Williams dropped the tabloid format by 2006 The Morton Downey Jr Show 1988 1989 hosted by Morton Downey Jr The Oprah Winfrey Show 1986 2011 hosted by Oprah Winfrey The Phil Donahue Show 1970 1996 hosted by Phil Donahue The Queen Latifah Show 1999 2001 hosted by Queen Latifah The Real talk show 2013 2022 The Richard Bey Show 1995 1996 hosted by Richard Bey Ricki Lake 1993 2004 hosted by Ricki Lake The Ricki Lake Show 2012 2013 hosted by Ricki Lake The Robert Irvine Show 2016 2018 hosted by Robert Irvine The Rob Nelson Show 2002 2003 hosted by Rob Nelson Rolonda 1994 1997 hosted by Rolonda Watts Sally 1985 2002 hosted by Sally Jessy Raphael The Shirley Show 1989 1995 hosted by Shirley Solomon Steve Harvey 2012 2017 hosted by Steve Harvey Talk or Walk 2001 2002 hosted by Myreah Moore Steve Turner and Liliya Czarina The T D Jakes Show 2016 2017 hosted by T D Jakes The Tempestt Bledsoe Show 1995 1996 hosted by Tempestt Bledsoe The Test 2013 2014 hosted by Kirk Fox Trisha 2012 2014 hosted by Trisha Goddard The Tyra Banks Show 2005 2010 hosted by Tyra Banks The Wendy Williams Show 2008 2022 hosted by Wendy WilliamsSee also EditQuality television Tabloid television Trial by MediaReferences Edit Handy Bruce January 15 1996 Television Out with the Sleaze Time a b William Grimes December 10 1995 Word for Word Television Sociology The Deconstruction of Jenny And Jerry Maury and Montel The New York Times Trash TV Insightful and in touch with America Baltimore Sun Tribune Publishing April 4 1996 Retrieved October 30 2010 Coming After Oprah Penn State University Archived from the original on June 25 2003 Retrieved November 19 2012 Paul McFedries January 21 2002 Oprahization Word Spy Retrieved November 19 2012 Wendy Hundley January 5 1995 Baring All on a Talk Show Is No Way To Solve Problems Chicago Tribune Tribune Publishing a b Geraldo Rivera suffered a broken nose in a chair throwing UPI Retrieved June 6 2021 Truth Behind Jerry Springer Jerry Springer Awful Truths Shocking fact from the Springer set Some people love flying chairs Some people love Jerry And trash TV wouldn t exist without you Baltimore Sun Tribune Publishing May 24 1998 Retrieved October 7 2013 How TV Talkshows Deconstruct Society Penn State University Retrieved August 10 2016 Elizabeth Kolbert June 11 1995 TELEVISION Wages of Deceit Untrue Confessions The New York Times Inside the Depths of Talk TV Los Angeles Times October 6 1996 CBS 2 Vault A Salute To Lee Phillip CBS Chicago on YouTube Bill Carter March 14 1995 Killing Poses Hard Questions About Talk TV The New York Times Greg Braxton April 5 1998 Them s Fightin Words Los Angeles Times Kristin Hohenadel October 31 1999 The Talk of the Town Los Angeles Times Ginia Bellafante June 24 1996 Television A League Of Her Own Time Time Inc Archived from the original on April 17 2009 Retrieved October 7 2013 24 7 Factmonster com Retrieved November 19 2012 Lawrie Mifflin October 28 1995 Aim Higher Forum Urges Talk Shows The New York Times Retrieved December 6 2010 Albaniak Paige June 13 2018 Jerry Springer Moving to The CW This Fall Broadcasting amp Cable Retrieved June 14 2018 Matheson Whitney December 3 2002 There shouldn t be a next time America USA Today Retrieved December 23 2009 Albiniak Paige March 14 2022 Syndication Pieces Falling Into Place for 2022 23 TV Season Broadcasting amp Cable Retrieved March 19 2022 Trial by Media Review Netflix s True Crime Series Compelling But Uneven Collider Scott Amedure The Story of Gay Panic Daytime TV and Murder Trial by Murder by Netflix UK amp Ireland on YouTube Trial By Media Netflix True story of Jenny Jones Scott Amedure Jonathan Schmitz Radio Times Man who killed after Jenny Jones Show leaves prison Lansing State Journal August 23 2017 Trial by Media Explores the Jenny Jones Trial with Director Tony Yaccenda Awardsdaily Trial by Media review Netflix revisits 6 heavily hyped court cases Chicago Sun Times A Look Back at 1995 Jenny Jones Show Murder as Killer Is Granted Parole Inside Edition on YouTube Lawrie Mifflin December 20 1995 Falling Ratings Threaten All Except Top Talk Shows The New York Times Judge Jerry Springer is coming to your TV next fall New York Post October 23 2018 Retrieved November 26 2018 Tribune looking to get back into syndication Radio amp Television Business Report TPR June 3 2010 Archived from the original on June 5 2010 Retrieved July 9 2010 CTD s Face the Truth Firm Go for Fall March 28 2018 Retrieved November 23 2018 Joshua Gamson Freaks Talk Back Tabloid Talk Shows and Sexual Nonconformity excerpt and interview University of Chicago Press Retrieved November 19 2012 Gamson Joshua May 15 1999 Freaks Talk Back Tabloid Talk Shows and Sexual Nonconformity Joshua Gamson 9780226280653 Amazon com Books ISBN 0226280659 CNN com Transcripts CNN com January 29 2006 Retrieved November 19 2012 TELEVISION Stiff Upper Lips on British Talk Shows Lower Too The New York Times May 7 1995 Retrieved November 20 2012 Paul McCann June 10 1999 Vanessa Show is axed by BBC The Independent London Archived from the original on May 26 2022 External links EditTrash TV Arrives in Finland by Anne Riitta Isohella Helsingin Sanomat April 9 2002 Trash TV by Graham Keeley a report on telebasura in Spain Trash TV in Germany Trash TV blog in Greece Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tabloid talk show amp oldid 1134025312, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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