Lauren Zalaznick: The conscience of television

96,944 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,
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after these incredible speeches
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and ideas that are being spread,
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I am in the awkward position
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of being here to talk to you today
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about television.
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So most everyone watches TV.
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We like it. We like some parts of it.
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Here in America, people actually love TV.
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The average American watches TV
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for almost 5 hours a day.
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Okay?
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Now I happen to make my living these days in television,
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so for me, that's a good thing.
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But a lot of people don't love it so much.
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They, in fact, berate it.
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They call it stupid,
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and worse, believe me.
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My mother, growing up,
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she called it the "idiot box."
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But my idea today is not to debate
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whether there's such a thing as good TV or bad TV;
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my idea today
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is to tell you that I believe
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television has a conscience.
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So why I believe that television has a conscience
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is that I actually believe
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that television directly reflects
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the moral, political,
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social and emotional need states of our nation --
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that television is how we actually disseminate
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our entire value system.
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So all these things are uniquely human,
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and they all add up
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to our idea of conscience.
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Now today, we're not talking about good and bad TV.
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We're talking about popular TV.
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We're talking about top-10 Nielsen-rated shows
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over the course of 50 years.
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How do these Nielsen ratings
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reflect not just what you've heard about,
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which is the idea of our social, collective unconscious,
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but how do these top-10 Nielsen-rated shows
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over 50 years
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reflect the idea
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of our social conscience?
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How does television evolve over time,
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and what does this say about our society?
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Now speaking of evolution,
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from basic biology, you probably remember
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that the animal kingdom, including humans,
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have four basic primal instincts.
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You have hunger; you have sex; you have power;
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and you have the urge for acquisitiveness.
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As humans, what's important to remember
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is that we've developed, we've evolved over time
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to temper, or tame,
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these basic animal instincts.
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We have the capacity to laugh and cry.
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We feel awe, we feel pity.
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That is separate and apart
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from the animal kingdom.
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The other thing about human beings
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is that we love to be entertained.
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We love to watch TV.
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This is something that clearly separates us
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from the animal kingdom.
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Animals might love to play,
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but they don't love to watch.
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So I had an ambition
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to discover what could be understood
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from this uniquely human relationship
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between television programs
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and the human conscious.
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Why has television entertainment evolved the way it has?
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I kind of think of it
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as this cartoon devil or angel
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sitting on our shoulders.
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Is television literally functioning
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as our conscience,
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tempting us and rewarding us at the same time?
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So to begin to answer these questions,
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we did a research study.
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We went back 50 years
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to the 1959/1960 television season.
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We surveyed the top-20 Nielsen shows
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every year for 50 years --
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a thousand shows.
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We talked to over 3,000 individuals --
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almost 3,600 --
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aged 18 to 70,
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and we asked them how they felt emotionally.
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How did you feel
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watching every single one of these shows?
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Did you feel a sense of moral ambiguity?
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Did you feel outrage? Did you laugh?
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04:01
What did this mean for you?
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So to our global TED audiences,
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I want to say that this was a U.S. sample.
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But as you can see,
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these emotional need states are truly universal.
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And on a factual basis,
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over 80 percent of the U.S.'s most popular shows
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are exported around the world.
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So I really hope our global audiences
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can relate.
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Two acknowledgments
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before our first data slide:
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For inspiring me
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to even think about the idea of conscience
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and the tricks that conscience can play on us on a daily basis,
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I thank legendary rabbi, Jack Stern.
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And for the way in which I'm going to present the data,
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I want to thank TED community superstar Hans Rosling,
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who you may have just seen.
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Okay, here we go.
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So here you see,
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from 1960 to 2010,
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the 50 years of our study.
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Two things we're going to start with --
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the inspiration state and the moral ambiguity state,
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which, for this purpose,
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we defined inspiration
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as television shows that uplift me,
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that make me feel much more positive about the world.
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Moral ambiguity are televisions shows
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in which I don't understand
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the difference between right and wrong.
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05:19
As we start, you see in 1960
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inspiration is holding steady.
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That's what we're watching TV for.
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Moral ambiguity starts to climb.
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05:27
Right at the end of the 60s,
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moral ambiguity is going up,
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inspiration is kind of on the wane.
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Why?
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The Cuban Missile Crisis, JFK is shot,
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the Civil Rights movement,
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race riots, the Vietnam War,
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MLK is shot, Bobby Kennedy is shot,
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Watergate.
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Look what happens.
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In 1970, inspiration plummets.
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Moral ambiguity takes off.
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They cross,
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but Ronald Reagan, a telegenic president, is in office.
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It's trying to recover.
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But look, it can't:
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AIDS, Iran-Contra,
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the Challenger disaster, Chernobyl.
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Moral ambiguity becomes the dominant meme in television
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from 1990 for the next 20 years.
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Take a look at this.
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This chart is going to document a very similar trend.
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06:14
But in this case, we have comfort -- the bubble in red --
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social commentary and irreverence
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in blue and green.
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Now this time on TV
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you have "Bonanza," don't forget, you have "Gunsmoke,"
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you have "Andy Griffith,"
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you have domestic shows all about comfort.
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This is rising. Comfort stays whole.
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Irreverence starts to rise.
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Social commentary is all of a sudden spiking up.
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You get to 1969, and look what happens.
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You have comfort, irreverence, and social commentary,
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not only battling it out in our society,
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but you literally have two establishment shows --
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"Gunsmoke" and "Gomer Pyle" --
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in 1969 are the number-two- and number-three-rated television shows.
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What's number one?
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The socially irreverent hippie show,
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"Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In."
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They're all living together, right.
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Viewers had responded dramatically.
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Look at this green spike in 1966
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to a bellwether show.
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When you guys hear this industry term, a breakout hit,
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what does that mean?
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It means in the 1966 television season,
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The "Smothers Brothers" came out of nowhere.
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This was the first show
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that allowed viewers to say,
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"My God,
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I can comment on how I feel about the Vietnam War,
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about the presidency, through television?"
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That's what we mean by a breakout show.
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So then, just like the last chart, look what happens.
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In 1970,
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the dam bursts. The dam bursts.
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Comfort is no longer why we watch television.
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Social commentary and irreverence
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rise throughout the 70s.
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Now look at this.
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The 70s means who? Norman Lear.
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You have "All in the Family," "Sanford and Son,"
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and the dominant show --
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in the top-10 for the entire 70s --
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"MAS*H."
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In the entire 50 years
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of television that we studied,
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seven of 10 shows
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ranked most highly for irreverence
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appeared on air during the Vietnam War,
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five of the top-10 during the Nixon administration.
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Only one generation, 20 years in,
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and we discovered,
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Wow! TV can do that?
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It can make me feel this?
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It can change us?
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So to this very, very savvy crowd,
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I also want to note
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the digital folks did not invent disruptive.
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Archie Bunker was shoved out of his easy chair
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along with the rest of us
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40 years ago.
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This is a quick chart. Here's another attribute:
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fantasy and imagination,
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which are shows defined as,
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"takes me out of my everyday realm"
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and "makes me feel better."
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09:01
That's mapped against the red dot, unemployment,
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which is a simple Bureau of Labor Department statistic.
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You'll see
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that every time fantasy and imagination shows rise,
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it maps to a spike in unemployment.
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Do we want to see shows
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about people saving money and being unemployed?
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09:20
No. In the 70s
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you have the bellwether show "The Bionic Woman"
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that rocketed into the top-10 in 1973,
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followed by the "Six Million-Dollar Man" and "Charlie's Angels."
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Another spike in the 1980s --
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another spike in shows about control and power.
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What were those shows?
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Glamorous and rich.
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"Dallas," "Fantasy Island."
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Incredible mapping of our national psyche
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with some hard and fast facts:
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unemployment.
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So here you are, in my favorite chart,
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because this is our last 20 years.
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Whether or not you're in my business,
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you have surely heard or read
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of the decline of the thing called the three-camera sitcom
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and the rise of reality TV.
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Well, as we say in the business,
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X marks the spot.
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The 90s -- the big bubbles of humor --
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we're watching "Friends," "Frasier," "Cheers" and "Seinfeld."
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10:19
Everything's good, low unemployment.
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10:22
But look: X marks the spot.
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In 2001,
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the September 2001 television season,
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humor succumbs to judgment once and for all.
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Why not?
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We had a 2000 presidential election
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decided by the Supreme Court.
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We had the bursting of the tech bubble.
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We had 9/11.
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Anthrax becomes part of the social lexicon.
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Look what happens when we keep going.
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At the turn of the century, the Internet takes off,
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reality television has taken hold.
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What do people want in their TV then?
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I would have thought revenge
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or nostalgia.
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Give me some comfort; my world is falling apart.
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No, they want judgment.
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I can vote you off the island.
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I can keep Sarah Palin's daughter dancing.
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I can choose the next American Idol. You're fired.
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That's all great, right?
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So as dramatically different as these television shows,
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pure entertainment, have been over the last 50 years --
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what did I start with? --
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one basic instinct remains.
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We're animals, we need our moms.
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There has not been a decade of television
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without a definitive, dominant TV mom.
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The 1950s:
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June Cleever in the original comfort show, "Leave it to Beaver."
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Lucille Ball kept us laughing
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through the rise of social consciousness in the 60s.
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Maude Findlay,
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the epitome of the irreverent 1970s,
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who tackled abortion, divorce,
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even menopause on TV.
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The 1980s,
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our first cougar was given to us
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in the form of Alexis Carrington.
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Murphy Brown took on a vice president
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when she took on the idea of single parenthood.
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This era's mom,
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Bree Van de Kamp.
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Now I don't know if this is the devil or the angel
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sitting on our conscience,
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sitting on television's shoulders,
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but I do know that I absolutely love this image.
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So to you all,
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the women of TEDWomen, the men of TEDWomen,
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the global audiences of TEDWomen,
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thank you for letting me present my idea
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about the conscience of television.
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But let me also thank the incredible creators
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who get up everyday
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to put their ideas on our television screens
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throughout all these ages of television.
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They give it life on television, for sure,
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but it's you as viewers,
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through your collective social consciences,
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that give it life, longevity,
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power or not.
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So thanks very much.
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(Applause)
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