Lauren Zalaznick: The conscience of television

96,215 views ・ 2011-09-16

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:15
I want to say that really and truly,
0
15260
2000
00:17
after these incredible speeches
1
17260
2000
00:19
and ideas that are being spread,
2
19260
2000
00:21
I am in the awkward position
3
21260
2000
00:23
of being here to talk to you today
4
23260
2000
00:25
about television.
5
25260
3000
00:28
So most everyone watches TV.
6
28260
2000
00:30
We like it. We like some parts of it.
7
30260
3000
00:33
Here in America, people actually love TV.
8
33260
3000
00:36
The average American watches TV
9
36260
3000
00:39
for almost 5 hours a day.
10
39260
3000
00:42
Okay?
11
42260
2000
00:44
Now I happen to make my living these days in television,
12
44260
3000
00:47
so for me, that's a good thing.
13
47260
2000
00:49
But a lot of people don't love it so much.
14
49260
3000
00:52
They, in fact, berate it.
15
52260
2000
00:54
They call it stupid,
16
54260
2000
00:56
and worse, believe me.
17
56260
2000
00:58
My mother, growing up,
18
58260
2000
01:00
she called it the "idiot box."
19
60260
2000
01:02
But my idea today is not to debate
20
62260
2000
01:04
whether there's such a thing as good TV or bad TV;
21
64260
3000
01:07
my idea today
22
67260
2000
01:09
is to tell you that I believe
23
69260
2000
01:11
television has a conscience.
24
71260
3000
01:14
So why I believe that television has a conscience
25
74260
3000
01:17
is that I actually believe
26
77260
2000
01:19
that television directly reflects
27
79260
3000
01:22
the moral, political,
28
82260
2000
01:24
social and emotional need states of our nation --
29
84260
3000
01:27
that television is how we actually disseminate
30
87260
3000
01:30
our entire value system.
31
90260
2000
01:32
So all these things are uniquely human,
32
92260
3000
01:35
and they all add up
33
95260
2000
01:37
to our idea of conscience.
34
97260
2000
01:39
Now today, we're not talking about good and bad TV.
35
99260
2000
01:41
We're talking about popular TV.
36
101260
3000
01:44
We're talking about top-10 Nielsen-rated shows
37
104260
3000
01:47
over the course of 50 years.
38
107260
2000
01:49
How do these Nielsen ratings
39
109260
2000
01:51
reflect not just what you've heard about,
40
111260
3000
01:54
which is the idea of our social, collective unconscious,
41
114260
4000
01:58
but how do these top-10 Nielsen-rated shows
42
118260
2000
02:00
over 50 years
43
120260
2000
02:02
reflect the idea
44
122260
2000
02:04
of our social conscience?
45
124260
2000
02:06
How does television evolve over time,
46
126260
2000
02:08
and what does this say about our society?
47
128260
2000
02:10
Now speaking of evolution,
48
130260
2000
02:12
from basic biology, you probably remember
49
132260
3000
02:15
that the animal kingdom, including humans,
50
135260
3000
02:18
have four basic primal instincts.
51
138260
2000
02:20
You have hunger; you have sex; you have power;
52
140260
3000
02:23
and you have the urge for acquisitiveness.
53
143260
4000
02:27
As humans, what's important to remember
54
147260
2000
02:29
is that we've developed, we've evolved over time
55
149260
3000
02:32
to temper, or tame,
56
152260
2000
02:34
these basic animal instincts.
57
154260
3000
02:37
We have the capacity to laugh and cry.
58
157260
3000
02:40
We feel awe, we feel pity.
59
160260
2000
02:42
That is separate and apart
60
162260
2000
02:44
from the animal kingdom.
61
164260
2000
02:46
The other thing about human beings
62
166260
2000
02:48
is that we love to be entertained.
63
168260
3000
02:51
We love to watch TV.
64
171260
2000
02:53
This is something that clearly separates us
65
173260
2000
02:55
from the animal kingdom.
66
175260
2000
02:57
Animals might love to play,
67
177260
2000
02:59
but they don't love to watch.
68
179260
3000
03:02
So I had an ambition
69
182260
2000
03:04
to discover what could be understood
70
184260
2000
03:06
from this uniquely human relationship
71
186260
2000
03:08
between television programs
72
188260
2000
03:10
and the human conscious.
73
190260
2000
03:12
Why has television entertainment evolved the way it has?
74
192260
3000
03:15
I kind of think of it
75
195260
2000
03:17
as this cartoon devil or angel
76
197260
2000
03:19
sitting on our shoulders.
77
199260
2000
03:21
Is television literally functioning
78
201260
2000
03:23
as our conscience,
79
203260
2000
03:25
tempting us and rewarding us at the same time?
80
205260
3000
03:28
So to begin to answer these questions,
81
208260
2000
03:30
we did a research study.
82
210260
2000
03:32
We went back 50 years
83
212260
2000
03:34
to the 1959/1960 television season.
84
214260
3000
03:37
We surveyed the top-20 Nielsen shows
85
217260
2000
03:39
every year for 50 years --
86
219260
2000
03:41
a thousand shows.
87
221260
2000
03:43
We talked to over 3,000 individuals --
88
223260
2000
03:45
almost 3,600 --
89
225260
2000
03:47
aged 18 to 70,
90
227260
2000
03:49
and we asked them how they felt emotionally.
91
229260
2000
03:51
How did you feel
92
231260
2000
03:53
watching every single one of these shows?
93
233260
3000
03:56
Did you feel a sense of moral ambiguity?
94
236260
2000
03:58
Did you feel outrage? Did you laugh?
95
238260
3000
04:01
What did this mean for you?
96
241260
2000
04:03
So to our global TED audiences,
97
243260
2000
04:05
I want to say that this was a U.S. sample.
98
245260
2000
04:07
But as you can see,
99
247260
2000
04:09
these emotional need states are truly universal.
100
249260
3000
04:12
And on a factual basis,
101
252260
2000
04:14
over 80 percent of the U.S.'s most popular shows
102
254260
3000
04:17
are exported around the world.
103
257260
2000
04:19
So I really hope our global audiences
104
259260
2000
04:21
can relate.
105
261260
2000
04:23
Two acknowledgments
106
263260
2000
04:25
before our first data slide:
107
265260
2000
04:27
For inspiring me
108
267260
2000
04:29
to even think about the idea of conscience
109
269260
3000
04:32
and the tricks that conscience can play on us on a daily basis,
110
272260
4000
04:36
I thank legendary rabbi, Jack Stern.
111
276260
4000
04:40
And for the way in which I'm going to present the data,
112
280260
3000
04:43
I want to thank TED community superstar Hans Rosling,
113
283260
3000
04:46
who you may have just seen.
114
286260
2000
04:48
Okay, here we go.
115
288260
2000
04:50
So here you see,
116
290260
2000
04:52
from 1960 to 2010,
117
292260
2000
04:54
the 50 years of our study.
118
294260
3000
04:57
Two things we're going to start with --
119
297260
2000
04:59
the inspiration state and the moral ambiguity state,
120
299260
3000
05:02
which, for this purpose,
121
302260
2000
05:04
we defined inspiration
122
304260
2000
05:06
as television shows that uplift me,
123
306260
2000
05:08
that make me feel much more positive about the world.
124
308260
3000
05:11
Moral ambiguity are televisions shows
125
311260
3000
05:14
in which I don't understand
126
314260
2000
05:16
the difference between right and wrong.
127
316260
3000
05:19
As we start, you see in 1960
128
319260
2000
05:21
inspiration is holding steady.
129
321260
2000
05:23
That's what we're watching TV for.
130
323260
2000
05:25
Moral ambiguity starts to climb.
131
325260
2000
05:27
Right at the end of the 60s,
132
327260
2000
05:29
moral ambiguity is going up,
133
329260
2000
05:31
inspiration is kind of on the wane.
134
331260
2000
05:33
Why?
135
333260
2000
05:35
The Cuban Missile Crisis, JFK is shot,
136
335260
2000
05:37
the Civil Rights movement,
137
337260
2000
05:39
race riots, the Vietnam War,
138
339260
2000
05:41
MLK is shot, Bobby Kennedy is shot,
139
341260
2000
05:43
Watergate.
140
343260
2000
05:45
Look what happens.
141
345260
2000
05:47
In 1970, inspiration plummets.
142
347260
2000
05:49
Moral ambiguity takes off.
143
349260
2000
05:51
They cross,
144
351260
2000
05:53
but Ronald Reagan, a telegenic president, is in office.
145
353260
2000
05:55
It's trying to recover.
146
355260
2000
05:57
But look, it can't:
147
357260
2000
05:59
AIDS, Iran-Contra,
148
359260
2000
06:01
the Challenger disaster, Chernobyl.
149
361260
2000
06:03
Moral ambiguity becomes the dominant meme in television
150
363260
4000
06:07
from 1990 for the next 20 years.
151
367260
2000
06:09
Take a look at this.
152
369260
2000
06:11
This chart is going to document a very similar trend.
153
371260
3000
06:14
But in this case, we have comfort -- the bubble in red --
154
374260
3000
06:17
social commentary and irreverence
155
377260
2000
06:19
in blue and green.
156
379260
3000
06:22
Now this time on TV
157
382260
2000
06:24
you have "Bonanza," don't forget, you have "Gunsmoke,"
158
384260
3000
06:27
you have "Andy Griffith,"
159
387260
2000
06:29
you have domestic shows all about comfort.
160
389260
3000
06:32
This is rising. Comfort stays whole.
161
392260
3000
06:35
Irreverence starts to rise.
162
395260
2000
06:37
Social commentary is all of a sudden spiking up.
163
397260
3000
06:40
You get to 1969, and look what happens.
164
400260
3000
06:43
You have comfort, irreverence, and social commentary,
165
403260
3000
06:46
not only battling it out in our society,
166
406260
3000
06:49
but you literally have two establishment shows --
167
409260
4000
06:53
"Gunsmoke" and "Gomer Pyle" --
168
413260
2000
06:55
in 1969 are the number-two- and number-three-rated television shows.
169
415260
3000
06:58
What's number one?
170
418260
2000
07:00
The socially irreverent hippie show,
171
420260
3000
07:03
"Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In."
172
423260
2000
07:05
They're all living together, right.
173
425260
2000
07:07
Viewers had responded dramatically.
174
427260
2000
07:09
Look at this green spike in 1966
175
429260
3000
07:12
to a bellwether show.
176
432260
2000
07:14
When you guys hear this industry term, a breakout hit,
177
434260
2000
07:16
what does that mean?
178
436260
2000
07:18
It means in the 1966 television season,
179
438260
3000
07:21
The "Smothers Brothers" came out of nowhere.
180
441260
4000
07:25
This was the first show
181
445260
2000
07:27
that allowed viewers to say,
182
447260
2000
07:29
"My God,
183
449260
2000
07:31
I can comment on how I feel about the Vietnam War,
184
451260
3000
07:34
about the presidency, through television?"
185
454260
2000
07:36
That's what we mean by a breakout show.
186
456260
3000
07:39
So then, just like the last chart, look what happens.
187
459260
3000
07:42
In 1970,
188
462260
2000
07:44
the dam bursts. The dam bursts.
189
464260
2000
07:46
Comfort is no longer why we watch television.
190
466260
3000
07:49
Social commentary and irreverence
191
469260
2000
07:51
rise throughout the 70s.
192
471260
2000
07:53
Now look at this.
193
473260
2000
07:55
The 70s means who? Norman Lear.
194
475260
3000
07:58
You have "All in the Family," "Sanford and Son,"
195
478260
2000
08:00
and the dominant show --
196
480260
2000
08:02
in the top-10 for the entire 70s --
197
482260
2000
08:04
"MAS*H."
198
484260
2000
08:06
In the entire 50 years
199
486260
2000
08:08
of television that we studied,
200
488260
3000
08:11
seven of 10 shows
201
491260
3000
08:14
ranked most highly for irreverence
202
494260
3000
08:17
appeared on air during the Vietnam War,
203
497260
2000
08:19
five of the top-10 during the Nixon administration.
204
499260
4000
08:23
Only one generation, 20 years in,
205
503260
3000
08:26
and we discovered,
206
506260
2000
08:28
Wow! TV can do that?
207
508260
3000
08:31
It can make me feel this?
208
511260
2000
08:33
It can change us?
209
513260
3000
08:36
So to this very, very savvy crowd,
210
516260
2000
08:38
I also want to note
211
518260
3000
08:41
the digital folks did not invent disruptive.
212
521260
3000
08:44
Archie Bunker was shoved out of his easy chair
213
524260
2000
08:46
along with the rest of us
214
526260
2000
08:48
40 years ago.
215
528260
2000
08:50
This is a quick chart. Here's another attribute:
216
530260
2000
08:52
fantasy and imagination,
217
532260
2000
08:54
which are shows defined as,
218
534260
2000
08:56
"takes me out of my everyday realm"
219
536260
3000
08:59
and "makes me feel better."
220
539260
2000
09:01
That's mapped against the red dot, unemployment,
221
541260
2000
09:03
which is a simple Bureau of Labor Department statistic.
222
543260
4000
09:07
You'll see
223
547260
2000
09:09
that every time fantasy and imagination shows rise,
224
549260
3000
09:12
it maps to a spike in unemployment.
225
552260
3000
09:15
Do we want to see shows
226
555260
2000
09:17
about people saving money and being unemployed?
227
557260
3000
09:20
No. In the 70s
228
560260
2000
09:22
you have the bellwether show "The Bionic Woman"
229
562260
3000
09:25
that rocketed into the top-10 in 1973,
230
565260
3000
09:28
followed by the "Six Million-Dollar Man" and "Charlie's Angels."
231
568260
3000
09:31
Another spike in the 1980s --
232
571260
3000
09:34
another spike in shows about control and power.
233
574260
4000
09:38
What were those shows?
234
578260
2000
09:40
Glamorous and rich.
235
580260
2000
09:42
"Dallas," "Fantasy Island."
236
582260
3000
09:45
Incredible mapping of our national psyche
237
585260
3000
09:48
with some hard and fast facts:
238
588260
2000
09:50
unemployment.
239
590260
3000
09:53
So here you are, in my favorite chart,
240
593260
3000
09:56
because this is our last 20 years.
241
596260
2000
09:58
Whether or not you're in my business,
242
598260
2000
10:00
you have surely heard or read
243
600260
3000
10:03
of the decline of the thing called the three-camera sitcom
244
603260
3000
10:06
and the rise of reality TV.
245
606260
4000
10:10
Well, as we say in the business,
246
610260
2000
10:12
X marks the spot.
247
612260
2000
10:14
The 90s -- the big bubbles of humor --
248
614260
2000
10:16
we're watching "Friends," "Frasier," "Cheers" and "Seinfeld."
249
616260
3000
10:19
Everything's good, low unemployment.
250
619260
3000
10:22
But look: X marks the spot.
251
622260
3000
10:25
In 2001,
252
625260
2000
10:27
the September 2001 television season,
253
627260
3000
10:30
humor succumbs to judgment once and for all.
254
630260
4000
10:34
Why not?
255
634260
2000
10:36
We had a 2000 presidential election
256
636260
2000
10:38
decided by the Supreme Court.
257
638260
2000
10:40
We had the bursting of the tech bubble.
258
640260
2000
10:42
We had 9/11.
259
642260
2000
10:44
Anthrax becomes part of the social lexicon.
260
644260
3000
10:47
Look what happens when we keep going.
261
647260
2000
10:49
At the turn of the century, the Internet takes off,
262
649260
3000
10:52
reality television has taken hold.
263
652260
3000
10:55
What do people want in their TV then?
264
655260
2000
10:57
I would have thought revenge
265
657260
3000
11:00
or nostalgia.
266
660260
2000
11:02
Give me some comfort; my world is falling apart.
267
662260
2000
11:04
No, they want judgment.
268
664260
2000
11:06
I can vote you off the island.
269
666260
2000
11:08
I can keep Sarah Palin's daughter dancing.
270
668260
3000
11:11
I can choose the next American Idol. You're fired.
271
671260
3000
11:14
That's all great, right?
272
674260
3000
11:17
So as dramatically different as these television shows,
273
677260
4000
11:21
pure entertainment, have been over the last 50 years --
274
681260
3000
11:24
what did I start with? --
275
684260
2000
11:26
one basic instinct remains.
276
686260
2000
11:28
We're animals, we need our moms.
277
688260
3000
11:31
There has not been a decade of television
278
691260
2000
11:33
without a definitive, dominant TV mom.
279
693260
4000
11:37
The 1950s:
280
697260
2000
11:39
June Cleever in the original comfort show, "Leave it to Beaver."
281
699260
3000
11:42
Lucille Ball kept us laughing
282
702260
3000
11:45
through the rise of social consciousness in the 60s.
283
705260
3000
11:48
Maude Findlay,
284
708260
2000
11:50
the epitome of the irreverent 1970s,
285
710260
3000
11:53
who tackled abortion, divorce,
286
713260
2000
11:55
even menopause on TV.
287
715260
2000
11:57
The 1980s,
288
717260
2000
11:59
our first cougar was given to us
289
719260
3000
12:02
in the form of Alexis Carrington.
290
722260
3000
12:05
Murphy Brown took on a vice president
291
725260
2000
12:07
when she took on the idea of single parenthood.
292
727260
5000
12:12
This era's mom,
293
732260
2000
12:14
Bree Van de Kamp.
294
734260
3000
12:17
Now I don't know if this is the devil or the angel
295
737260
3000
12:20
sitting on our conscience,
296
740260
2000
12:22
sitting on television's shoulders,
297
742260
2000
12:24
but I do know that I absolutely love this image.
298
744260
4000
12:29
So to you all,
299
749260
2000
12:31
the women of TEDWomen, the men of TEDWomen,
300
751260
2000
12:33
the global audiences of TEDWomen,
301
753260
3000
12:36
thank you for letting me present my idea
302
756260
2000
12:38
about the conscience of television.
303
758260
2000
12:40
But let me also thank the incredible creators
304
760260
3000
12:43
who get up everyday
305
763260
2000
12:45
to put their ideas on our television screens
306
765260
3000
12:48
throughout all these ages of television.
307
768260
2000
12:50
They give it life on television, for sure,
308
770260
3000
12:53
but it's you as viewers,
309
773260
2000
12:55
through your collective social consciences,
310
775260
3000
12:58
that give it life, longevity,
311
778260
2000
13:00
power or not.
312
780260
2000
13:02
So thanks very much.
313
782260
2000
13:04
(Applause)
314
784260
2000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7