Friday, 11 January 2008

First Paragraph

Winning the Golden Globe for best comedy [1], ‘Ugly Betty’ has become a huge successful hit attracting 1.8 million people in the U.K [2] and 16.1 million in America [3]. ‘Ugly Betty’ starring America Ferrera is actually an Americanized adaptation of a wildly popular Colombian telenovela, [4] which is about the life of a young unattractive Latino woman in America. Becoming Daniel Meade’s assistant at ‘Mode Magazines’, Betty tries to ‘fit in’ the fashion world as well as dealing with her home life. The protagonist being female engages with predominantly a female audience and although ‘Ugly Betty’ is a sitcom, it is a hybrid of various genres in terms of the issues and complex narrative, demonstrating how much the genre has evolved in comparison to ‘Our Miss Brooks’ (1952-1956), an office sitcom where the character of Connie Brooks has been described as the first independent woman in radio and she naturally became the first independent woman in television [5]. The humor in ‘Ugly Betty’ is underpinned by serious issues and this sitcom incorporates many themes and ideas which reflect the zeitgeist, for instance, beauty, capitalism, celebrification etc. A major change shown is the representation of females, which is shown via the diverse female characters. Gone are the days where ‘men act and women appear’ [6] as ‘Ugly Betty’ is a portrayal of a modern society.

http://vivirlatino.com/2007/01/16/ugly-betty-takes-home-two-golden-globes.php [1]
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2007/nov/26/tvratings.television2 [2]
http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/20060930/tv-ugly-betty-ratings.htm [3]
http://www.pluggedinonline.com/thisweekonly/a0002958.cfm [4]
-Moore,Barbara , Bensman, Marvin R. ,Dyker,Jim Van: Prime-Time Television: A Concise History, 2006, praeger publishers [5]
-Lawson,Tony, Jones,Marsha,Moores,Ruth (2000): Advanced Sociology through diagrams ,Great Clarendon street,Oxford, Oxford university press [6]
One of the ideas challenged by ‘Ugly Betty’ is the idea of beauty. Dating back to the 1950’s ‘Our Miss Brooks’, the media’s portrayal of the female protagonist has always been attractive. Connie Brooks (played by Eve Arden) was no exception to this norm and the show on television being black and white, many a woman identified with an unattached but still attractive heroine [7]. Similarly, in the 1970’s sitcom, ‘The Mary Tyler Show’, the protagonist Mary Richards is shown to be attractive although she is a slight difference from Connie Brooks due to her hair being darker in comparison to brooks who is blonde. This is significant as although Connie Brooks may be a conventional beauty due to her blonde hair, the stereotypical view associated with blonde heads is negative hence Mary Richards may have had dark hair so her role of an independent woman who was determined to ‘make it on her own’[8] would be taken seriously.
This image of the female protagonists being young, slim and pretty still exists today as shown in ‘Desperate Housewives’. The fact that all the females are shown this way promotes the idea that females should be feminine and places importance on self-image. The female audiences have been and still are encouraged to identify with an attractive protagonist, which supports and challenges Mulvey who claims that the protagonist usually tends to be male. In ‘Our Miss Brooks’, ‘The Mary Tyler Show’ and ‘Desperate Housewives’, the main protagonists are attractive females, and the mainly female audience are positioned to identify and idealize the female heroine, as they see a perfect version of themselves which generates narcissism, as the idealized version of the female audience is reflected via the heroine [9]. Therefore, the female protagonists’ image has a major impact on the audience, as the image promotes values of being feminine etc which a passive audience will easily believe whereas a more active audience will view the high standards unrealistic.
From a feminist perspective, Wolf wrote: 'Beauty is a currency like the gold standard. Like any economy, it is determined by politics and in the modern age in the West, it is the last, best belief system that keeps male domination intact' [10]. This statement is true as being concerned about our image means more consumption which results in greater profit for males reflecting our patriarchal society. A multi-billion-dollar global industry exists that centers on appearance (the fitness industry, the cosmetic industry, the fashion industry). These industries are all built on notions of attractiveness [11]. This also demonstrates how image supports capitalism.
-James, Edward T. : Notable American Women , 1971, Harvard university press [7]
-Bennett,Peter ,Slater,Jerry and Wall,Peter:A2 Media Studies: The Essential Introduction,2006,Routledge [10]
In Ugly Betty, the protagonist Betty Suarez is unattractive and is shown to be in a fashion industry where image is vital. Betty is presented as a short average weight female with thick spectacles, thick frizzy hair and to top it of shiny braces. Her costume is equally shocking, on her first day at work she wears a ridiculously lumpy, red and yellow ‘Guadalajara’ poncho [12]. This process of ‘Bettification’ [13] perhaps being the most flamboyant side of Betty is a stereotypical image of a geek so the audience already forms an opinion on Betty’s character. She is viewed as a geek so the audience expects her to be hardworking, unsociable and to an extent an outcast, which she is as she stands out. However, although Betty stands out, via the high angle shots and the fact that she is usually shown tagging along behind her boss and people at work demonstrates her insignificance and connotes she is inferior. This can be viewed as ironic, as she stands out yet is hardly acknowledged. Betty herself is a contrast to the fashion world and she makes a statement as she is surrounded by slim models and other slim characters such as Amanda. As Betty is viewed as an outcast, this promotes the idea of females being slim and relates to society where image obsession is at its highest peak. The models are shown to be dieting which is a true portrayal of the fashion industry. However, the seriousness of the matter is dismissed, for instance the death of Ana Carolina Reston, a Brazilian model aged 21 who lived on a diet of apples and tomatoes, sparked worldwide concern [14]. The extent of the dieting and consequences are not portrayed and therefore it can be argued that ‘Ugly Betty’ promotes values such as females should be slim. This is further reinforced by Wolf: “Women’s bodies and female sexuality have become commodities and the consequences of this are mental and physical illness, starvation diets and eating disorders” [15].
However, Betty is shown to be average weight and as she is the protagonist the audiences identify with her and she is supposedly representing real women and this could be one of the main reasons for the shows popularity and high viewing figures. Betty shows a side of society that is so obsessed with looks that the everyday person feels inferior and not meeting the standard the world (not the real world, but the business and fashion world) has set on them [16]
Yet whether Betty is actually ugly is questionable as the actress America Ferrera is in fact not ugly, she wears fake braces on her teeth, bushy eyebrows and a dishevelled wig, and make-up and clothing intended to downplay her looks. Moreover, Ferrera’s smile has been insured by Lloyd for $10 million [17]. This demonstrates that Ferrera is not unattractive and is concerned about her image, and it can be argued that she contradicts the character of Betty, which when considering Ferrera is not ugly seems unrealistic. By having an attractive actress to play the role of an unattractive character seems to promote the importance of image, and the audience may view Betty’s character as unrealistic. Nevertheless, Ferrera is not the conventional beauty so in some ways does seem to represent real women due to her weight etc.
-Bennett,Peter ,Slater,Jerry and Wall,Peter: A2 Media Studies: The Essential Introduction , 2006, Routledge [15]
Betty’s image seems to fit in with the role she plays, she is represented as a mother figure to Daniel which is reinforced by her facial expressions of disappointment when he does something wrong, and by the position she stands in- usually hands on her hips when telling him off. Her mother role is further emphasized by Daniel’s father who says ‘Protect him Betty’. Similarly in ‘Our Miss Brooks’, Connie Brooks occupation as a teacher means she is also fulfilling her nurturing motherly role as she is surrounded by children. This promotes the idea of gender roles and that being a nurturer is ‘natural’ to females, as they are unable to escape from this role even though they are working women. Moreover, Betty seems to have other characteristics which reflect her mother role, for instance, in the Swag episode, Betty sells her Gucci bag in order to obtain medicine for her father, which shows that she is self-sacrificing. This also demonstrates the bond Betty has with her family, as she tries to take care of them and is the main breadwinner in her household, which promotes family values. By showing Betty’s family life reflects that the genre is not a sitcom but is a hybrid of drama and comedy.
By having many elements such as the home and work environment as well as the fact that the protagonist is Latino reflects the fact that this show has been adapted from the telenovela genre. For co-executive producer Salma Hayek, it was only natural to bring Ugly Betty to ABC and a wider American audience that's becoming increasingly Latino. [18].This is a reflection of society which is very multicultural, and one of the many narratives concerning Betty’s father involves the idea of immigration, which seems to give a portrayal of society. This is what Ugly Betty is partly about, as Horta states when accepting the Golden Globe for Best Comedy Series (2007) “"Like a lot of its characters and a lot of us up here right now, this show is an immigrant, and Betty is a testament to the American… and the American dream is, in fact, alive and well and within reach of anyone in the world who wants it." [19]. ‘Ugly Betty’ does represent America as the land of opportunity and promotes capitalist ideas to all audiences- whether they are Latino or not. The mise-en-scene reinforces the ‘American Dream’ as the environment is shown to be busy and glamorous.
Within this glamorous environment Betty works as Daniel’s assistant. This is not a positive representation as the occupation has a low status and demonstrates that perhaps some of the representations and roles of women have not changed. ‘Our Miss Brooks’ protagonist Connie was one of TV's noblest working women: the center of a highly successful show, toiling in a realistically portrayed, and unglamorized career (Miss Brooks often made mention of how low her wages were), and rewarded and honored by real workers whom she represented [20]. Similarly, Betty seems to be giving a realistic portrayal of people who are assistants. ‘Ugly Betty’ shows that in some ways the representation of women has not changed as she is the assistant and her boss being a male is a reflection of our patriarchal society and it reinforces this ideology, which is also the case with ‘Our Miss Brooks’ where the principle is a male which also reflects patriarchy.
Betty is represented as a strong, kind caring woman and this promotes feminine characteristics to the females audiences, which feminist would argue is a negative representation, as by promoting feminine characteristics through Betty’s character, ‘Ugly Betty’ is enforcing gender roles which a passive audience will follow. Not only this, but the characteristics of Betty show a dichotomy between the masculine and feminine characteristics which people have to conform to according to their gender, which from a feminist perspective is negative as this means patriarchy will always remain intact. Moreover, the fact that Betty has these qualities could be to validate for her appearance, as the audience need to see something positive in the main protagonist in order to identify with them. But as the 22-year-old Ferrera states,"[It's] not about being ugly at all. More than anything it's just about looking past what you see. Achieving that image is not all that we're on this planet to do" [21].
Whereas Betty doesn’t fit into the Mode environment, Wilhelmina’s character does. According to Prop’s theory, she is the villain whereas Betty is the heroine, thus creating binary opposition (Barthes) which allows the narrative to progress. The hero/villain idea is a convention of fairy tales, and ‘ugly betty’ is almost like an updated version to suit the needs of the audiences. Wilhelmina is almost like the witch- who is represented within patriarchal discourses as an implacable enemy of the symbolic order [22].
Wilhelmina is represented as a classy sophisticated career woman in a ‘dog eat dog’ industry, and although she is shown to be the villain, according to the second wave of feminist “"They argue that many battles for economic and workplace equality has still to be fought and won...” [23]. ‘Ugly Betty’ uses this idea by having Wilhelmina as the villain as she is constantly in competition with Daniel to get power and own everything. The fact that she has been employed in a high status position due to her talent promotes meritocracy as well as representing America to be a fair country. However, the fact that Daniel has attained his position due to his father owning the business not only reflects on Marxist ideas about the ruling elite having a ascribed status, but this also reflects patriarchy. By having Wilhelmina as this powerful strong character challenges this patriarchy.

Despite this strong role, Wilhelmina being represented as a villain promotes the ideology that females should be feminine and have feminine qualities. Wilhelmina is shown to be sly, manipulative and very career focused. These characteristics in the business world are viewed stereotypically as male characteristics and even the business world is male dominated, so it can be argued that the fact that she is viewed as a villain demonstrates that society does not approve of her taking this role, hence ‘Ugly Betty’ promotes gender roles, and Wilhelmina is punished for this behavior as she never wins and is not a likeable character.
Moreover, the fact that she is threatening Daniel’s position to some extent creates misogyny and relates to wider society, as there is a ‘crisis of masculinity’ as most jobs are becoming more female dominated, and by making Wilhelmina always unsuccessful and a hated character could be viewed as a male backlash, as that is her punishment for trying to be successful.
Wilhelmina’s character is also important in terms of representing the different classes and status. In ‘Ugly Betty’ Wilhelmina is usually shown standing straight with her head held high, and her body language connotes she is superior. Moreover, this is further reinforced via her costume, which is formal and sophisticated yet also feminine which promotes the glamorous lifestyle. Wilhelmina is shown to be wealthy and rich female and this suggests that her high status is also due to the things she owns, which promotes materialistic values and the idea of consumerism, which appeals more to the audiences who are aspirers. This also applies to passive audiences who will believe that in order to gain status, you need to buy things.
From the political economy approaches -Peter Golding ad Graham Murdock argue that the group who own huge proportions of the media "ensure that social imagery and knowledge which is circulated through the media is broadly in its interest, and reproduces inequalities from which it benefits" [24]. So by promoting these materialistic values, ‘Ugly Betty’ is influencing passive audiences as they are influenced to buy things which benefit the capitalist system- in particular the ruling elite. This idea is further reinforced by the ‘Swag’ episode, where Betty is respected and acknowledged due to the fact that she has a Gucci bag, which promotes the idea that it is not important who you are, but what you own. However, in general, Betty does not have a high status, she accepts this which demonstrates that ‘Ugly Betty’ is promoting inequalities as well as indoctrinates the working class to accept their social positions.
Wilhelmina’s character is important as it does not conform to the typical nurturing role, as she has a daughter who she has minimum contact with, which demonstrates that she is very career focused and her role can be viewed as empowering women. However, Hilda Suarez’s does fulfill her mother nurturing role as she is shown to be a single mother raising her son. The fact that she is a single parent shows family diversity and reflects on society where nine out of 10 single parents are women. However, Hilda does not play a typical mother role, as her character integrates the two separate typical roles of females- being either sex objects or nurtures/mother. She is shown to be a mother looking after her son yet she wears revealing clothes which make her a subject of the ‘male gaze’. Her role reflects a postmodern age and promotes the idea that females can now take on a variety of roles. However, Dr Linda Seger argues the that media images show women in a wife, mother or girlfriend role and these images are restrictive and negative : 'These images misrepresent who we are, demean us, and it make it harder to see women as people...' [25].
Creed,Barbara: 'The Monstrous-Feminine Film,Feminism, Psychoanalysis' 1993,Routladge, London [22]
Bennett,Peter,Slater,Jerry and Wall,Peter: A2 Media Studies:The Essential Introduction, 2006, Routledge [23]
Branston,Gill and Stafford,Roy: 'the Media Student's Book' second edition, [24]
Price,John,Nicholas,Joe: 'As Media Studies' 2003, Nelson Thornes LTD, Cheltenham[25]
Betty’s and Wilhelmina’s dominant roles are accompanied by Alexis, who is also represented as a career woman. The fact that she was a man before and then becomes a female relates to Freud’s theory, on one hand it could be going against his theory as Freud argues that females have penis envy, yet by Alexis getting castrated, this challenges this theory. However, Freud also argued that males feel anxiety as the female in their perspective is castrated, and therefore she needs a fetish object to get rid of the male audiences’ anxiety and in Alexis’s case, she dresses feminine and wears high heels etc. As she is very attractive, this relates to Mulvey’s idea of the ‘male gaze’ [26]. Amanda’s character is also subjected to the ‘male gaze’ and her character is very stereotypical, as she is a receptionist which is a negative representation as the low status job reflects patriarchy. Her character is stereotypical as she is shown to be ditzy and stupid. Amanda does not have an active role as she does not drive the narrative forward. Her character relates to feminism, as Alice Embree argued that women were seen as bodies, not people (1970, 206). As she is attractive and takes care of her appearance, from a feminist perspective, she is not liberated like Betty, as in order to attain liberation "women must no longer be 'enslaved by ludicrous "beauty" standards' (Morgan 1970, 586) ".
Both ‘Ugly Betty’ and ‘Our Miss Brooks’ have been very successful hits which is shown via the number of awards and nominations. Altogether including the actresses and actors etc, ‘Our Miss Brooks’ won two major awards and had six other nominations [27]. ‘Ugly Betty’ has exceeded this number by wining two Golden Globes, another 27 wins and 38 nominations [28]. The reason for this huge success is mainly due to the fact that ‘Ugly Betty’ shows a true portrayal of society and is viewed as a fresh and original idea which has not been explored successfully before. This is the same with ‘Our Miss Brook’ as it was one of the first office sitcoms, which made it very successful. Both have appealed to a predominantly female audience and have been adapted to the time. The representation of females are different in both as is the genre, as ‘Ugly Betty’ is far more complex with the narrative and also with the characters, which is one of the reasons for its success as the audiences are more active than before. The representations of females in ‘Ugly Betty’ are positive to a bigger extent as the majority of the female characters are not passive and they are shown to have a variety of roles. However, each character can be viewed either as a negative representation or positive, for instance, Wilhelmina is a career woman and is shown to have power which is inspirational for female audiences, yet she is the villain, hence it depends of the way the audience interpret the characters.

Thursday, 10 January 2008

Detailed Essay Plan

Intro:

  • talk about the genre- " Ugly Betty is actually an Americanized adaptation of a wildly popular Colombian telenovela—a type of Spanish-language soap that takes viewers on a 13-week roller coaster and then lets them disembark for the next series/ride. In many Spanish-speaking homes in the U.S. and in South America, telenovelas have been as much a part of the nightly routine as David Letterman and Jay Leno have in English-speaking ones. So for co-executive producer Salma Hayek, it was only natural to bring Ugly Betty to ABC and a wider American audience that's becoming increasingly Latino."
  • ugly betty is different to before in many ways reflecting society and its audiences
  • role of women has changed as:

Berger argued that "men act and women appear" but this is not the case anymore

  • Chracters of Ugly Betty and the historical text that will be compared
Para 1: what is beauty? how is it defined -


  • look at Eve Arden in Our Miss Brooks (black and white) but she looks attractive which promotes the idea that females should take care of image-its a common norm.
  • This is the same with Mary Tyler Moore-however she has dark hair-idea of stereotypes.
  • Even now -desperate housewivies has attractive females in postmodern age

linked to feminsim: "In an influential book The Beauty Myth, Naomi Wolf wrote: 'Beauty is a currency like the gold standard. Like any economy, it is determined by politics and in the modern age in the West, it is the last, best belief system that keeps male domination intact' (Wolf 1991: 10)" (1)

  • and studies prove that attractive people are more successful and are given more opportunites which demonstrates the importance of image.According to Dr. Mona Phillips, a professor of sociology at Spelman College in Atlanta:

""There is research [pioneered by Dion, Berscheid and Walster] that talks about the `Halo Effect,'" says Dr. Phillips. "This is when people assume that if someone is attractive, then they have other good qualities. It's a clustering of good attributes that are assumed based on one's appearance."" (2)

"" A multi-billion-dollar global industry exists that centers on appearance (the fitness industry, the cosmetic industry, the fashion industry). These industries are all built on notions of attractiveness."" (Dr. Phillips) (3)

A2 Media Studies: The Essential Introduction (1)

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1355/is_12_100/ai_77931216 (2 and 3)

Para 2: Betty the main female protagonist is unattractive and is shown to be in fashion industry where image is vital.

MAKE LINK TO OUR MISS BROOKS CHARACTER! (book concise history one)

  • the shots used to show her, her costume make her look like a greek etc.

""Before you can even open your mouth to express yourself, people have already formed an opinion about who you are based on your looks," reveals Dr. Work." (4)

  • she's employed due to her bad looks.
  • Betty being ugly makes a statement about the society we live in now where image obssession is at its highest peak-link to size zero debate, issues about weight.
  • Although she is average weight, characters around her such as Amanda are skinny

link to feminism: Wolf argues that "Women's bodies and female sexuality have become commodities and the consequences of this are mental and physical illness, stravation diets and eating disorders" (5)

  • she is supposedly representing real females-number of viewers show this is a successful program -link to audience and feminism.

she "shows a side of society that is so obsessed with looks that the everyday person feels inferior and not meeting the standard the world (not the real world, but the business and fashion world) has set on them" (6)

  • but is she actually ugly- no spots etc, and in real life she isnt but then she's not the conventional beauty. Not only this but Ferrera wears fake braces on her teeth, bushy eyebrows and a disheveled wig, and make-up and clothing intended to downplay her own looks.

"Lloyd’s has insured the smile of America Ferrera, star of the hit television show Ugly Betty, for $10 million." (7)

http://thehive.modbee.com/?q=node/2465 (6)

http://www.lloyds.com/News_Centre/Features_from_Lloyds/Lloyds_insures_Ugly_Bettys_smile.htm (7)

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1355/is_12_100/ai_77931216 (4)

Book: A2 Media Studies: The Essential Introduction (5)

Para 3: her looks link in with the role she plays:

  • she has a mother role as she protects daniel on many occasions as well as taking care of her family promoting family values -touchs on the genre development as it is a hybrid of drama etc and not only a office sitcom
  • talk about how this show was adapted from a differnent show, audience link, relfection of society becoming more muticultural (Latino population increasnig in America) link to narrative -immigration (issues) and the American dream.

In 2007 Horta accepted the "Golden Globe for Best Comedy Series "Ugly Betty", stating "Like most of us up here, Betty is an immigrant and The American Dream is alive and well and in reach of anybody who wants it"." (8)

  • Her low status job links to Our Miss Brooks and Mary Tyler Moore show
  • she is represented as strong, kind caring etc , promoting female characteristics -links to feminsim and audience. However, do these factors validate for ther bad looks?
  • "as the 22-year-old Ferrera states,

"[It's] not about being ugly at all. More than anything it's just about looking past what you see. Achieving that image is not all that we're on this planet to do." (9)

http://www.pluggedinonline.com/thisweekonly/a0002958.cfm (9)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silvio_Horta (8)

Para 4 : whereas Betty doesn't fit in to the enviroment of Mode Wilhelimina does:

  • she is the villian -barthes theory
  • new career woman-

link to second wave feminists "They argue that many battles for economic and workplace equality has still to be fought and won.." (10)

  • shows class differences between herself and betty-she has money- link to swag episode where betty is respected due to her gucci bag:

Link to: political economy approaches -Peter Golding ad Graham Murdock argue that the group who own huge proportions of the media "ensure that social imagery and knowledge which is cirulated through the media is broadly in its interest, and reproduces inequalities from which it benefits." this can be linked to the audiences of Ugly Betty as well as it being shown in Ugly Betty as it is based on fashion and promotes buying more materials -refer to swag episode where betty is acknowledged and respected.

  • doesnt conform to nurturing female role which empowers women but she is punished as she doesnt get what she wants and is the villian -audience link -feminism
  • whereas Wilhelmina doesnt look after her daughter so doesnt fufil her mother role, Hilda -a single parent does- touchs on family diversity, however, breaks the 2 roles of mother or sex object as she is a sex object as well as being a mother -postmordern age , idea that a female can take on vairety of roles

Dr Linda Seger says that media images show women in a wife, mother or girlfriend role and these images are restrictive and negative : " 'These images misrepresent who we are, demean us, and it make it harder to see women as people...' " (12)

Book: A2 Media Studies: The Essential Introduction (10)

the Media student's Book (11)

As Media Studies (12)

Para 5: the 2 seperate dominant roles are accomponied by Alexis:

  • career women who was a man-link to freud
  • Amanda -stereotypical, she is shown to be attractive so

link to feminism: "Alice Embree argued that women were seen as bodies, not people (1970, 206)" like betty- if women were to attain liberation "women must no longer be 'enslaved by ludicrous "beauty" standards' (Morgan 1970,586) " so amanda is not liberated (13)

book: Feminism, Femininity and popular culture (13)

Para 6: ugly betty awards :

  • all the awards won and all the awards won by Our miss brooks and the mary tyler moore show -reflect society and are fresh ideas which have not been explored successfully before.
  • the similarities they share that make them successful and how they have adapted to the time

The Mary Tyler Moore Show 1970's

U.S. Situation Comedy
The Mary Tyler Moore Show premiered on CBS in September 1970 and during its seven-year run became one of the most acclaimed television programs ever produced. The program represented a significant change in the situation comedy, quickly distinguishing itself from typical plot-driven storylines filled with narrative predictability and unchanging characters. As created by the team of James Brooks and Allan Burns, The Mary Tyler Moore Show presented the audience with fully-realized characters who evolved and became more complex throughout their life on the show. Storylines were character-based and the ensemble cast used this approach to develop relationships which changed over time.
The program starred Mary Tyler Moore who had previously achieved success as Laura Petrie on The Dick Van Dyke Show. As Mary Richards, a single woman in her thirties, Moore presented a character different from other single TV women of the time. She was not widowed or divorced or seeking a man to support her. Rather, the character had just emerged from a live-in situation with a man whom she had helped through medical school. He left her upon receiving his degree and she relocated to Minneapolis determined to "make it on her own." This now-common concept was rarely depicted on television in the early 1970s, despite some visible successes of the women's movement.
Mary Richards found a job in the newsroom of fictional television station WJM, the lowest rated station in its market, and there she began her life as an independent woman. She found a "family" among her co-workers and her neighbors. Among these were Lou Grant (Ed Asner), the crusty news director, Murray Slaughter (Gavin MacLeod), the cynical news writer, Ted Baxter (Ted Knight), the supercilious anchorman, and, later, Sue Ann Nivens (Betty White), the man-hungry "Happy Homemaker." Sharing her apartment house were Rhoda Morgenstern (Valerie Harper), Mary's best friend, and Phyllis Lindstrom (Cloris Leachman), their shallow landlady. This ensemble pushed the situation comedy genre in new directions and provided the show with a fresh feel and look.
The "workplace family," while not new to television sitcoms (Our Miss Brooks and The Gale Storm Show were among earlier incarnations of this sub-genre), was redefined in The Mary Tyler Moore Show. Here were characters easily defined by traditional familial qualities--Lou as the father figure, Ted as the problem child, Rhoda as the family confidante, and Mary as the mother/daughter around whom the entire situation revolved. But the special nature of these relationships gave the show its depth and humor. Never static, each character changed in ways previously unseen in the genre. One of the best examples occurred when Lou divorced his wife of many years. His adjustment to the transition from married to divorced middle-aged man provided rich comic moments but also allowed viewers see new depths in the character, to see behind the gruff facade into Lou's vulnerability, to grow closer to him. This type of evolution occurred with all the cast members, providing writers with constantly shifting perspective on the characters. From those perspectives new story lines could be developed and these fresh approaches helped renew a genre grown weary with repetition and familiar techniques.
Similarly, the program set the standard for a new sub-genre of situation comedy: the working woman sitcom. Beginning as a determined but uncertain independent woman, Mary Richards came to represent what has since become a convention in this type of comedy. Unattached and not reliant upon a man, Mary never rejected men as romantic objects or denied her hopes to one day be married. But unlike Rhoda, Mary did not define her life through her search for "Mr. Right." Rather, she dated several men and even spent the night with a few of them (another new development in TV sitcoms). Working-woman sitcoms since, including Kate & Allie and Murphy Brown, owe a debt to Mary Richards.
The program became an anchor of CBS' Saturday night schedule and, along with All in the Family, M*A*S*H, The Bob Newhart Show and The Carol Burnett Show, was part of one of the strongest nights of programming ever presented by a network. From September 1970 until its final airing in September 1977, The Mary Tyler Moore Show was normally among the top 20 shows. It garnered three Emmy Awards as "Outstanding Comedy Series" (in 1975, 1976 and 1977). Moore, Asner, Harper, Knight and White all won Emmy's for their performances and the show's writing and directing were similarly honored several times.
-Geoff Hammill

http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/M/htmlM/marytylermo/marytylermo.htm


One of the 1960s’ signature hairdos has endured over several decades.
“The Flip” was hip and initially favored by younger women-shoulder-length hair was backcombed slightly at the top and then curled out at the ends.
The classic style that Mary Tyler Moore wore on “The Dick Van Dyke Show” was considered a flip/bouffant combo (MTM could carry this off; she looked very cute in it!) And this became very popular (along with Jackie Kennedy’s classic bouffant) among famous and “civilians” alike throughout the decade.

Sitcoms

Sitcoms: The Realm Of Women
Until this study, no one had looked at TV in the context of contemporary, or “Third Wave,” feminism. While other studies have covered small blocks of shows for five- or 10-year periods, this one looks at sitcoms from the top 15 major network TV shows of every year since 1950, Pecora says.
The women collected data on the primary and secondary roles of characters from more than 300 different episodes of a variety of shows. And they found that in nearly two-thirds of these situations, the primary roles of female characters were mothers, wives, and daughters, or some combination. When their primary role was professional, females were disproportionately in communications, entertainment, and hospitality fields. “There are plenty of waitresses, journalists, and interior designers, but few lawyers or doctors,” Pecora says.
Characters whose secondary roles were professional had more varied and prestigious jobs; however, those were limited, taking a back seat to matriarchal roles.


In the 1970s, when female activists demanded equal opportunities, reproductive rights, and egalitarian partnerships, TV had Mary Richards — a single, working woman making a place for herself in life. On The Mary Tyler Moore Show, she was a woman in a man’s world going head to head with her boss Lou Grant, demanding equal pay. Unlike her best friend Rhoda, she wasn’t hung up about marriage. Instead she found satisfaction in a makeshift family at WJM-TV

http://news.research.ohiou.edu/studentresearch/index.php?item=131&page=132

Sunday, 6 January 2008

opening paragraph

To what extent have the representations of women changed with particular reference to 'Ugly Betty' 2006 (Silvio Horta)?

"In 2007, [Silvio Horta] he accepted the Golden Globe for the best comedy series 'Ugly Betty', stating " Like most of us here, Betty is an immigrant and The Amercian Dream is still alive and well in reach for anyone who wants". However, to what extent does this statement apply to the character Betty - a young greeky unattrative female? The female characters in Ugly Betty all take on very different roles, and demonstate how society has changed.

Saturday, 5 January 2008

Plan

Sitcom exploring ideas of:
Family – family values promoted
Capitalism- fashion world ‘dog eat dog’ world , character of Wilhelmina can be linked as she is a career women (theory of marxism and feminism can be linked )
Celebrification –Americanization- western culture revolves around celebrities and image
Class- Betty doesn’t fit in due to her class because her costume is different as are her values. Also, swag episode, she’s respected due to Gucci bag-so promotes consumption and idea that respect is gained via obtaining materials. “Betty’s clothes in other words, the most flamboyant side of her have not been integrated into her character”. (marxism)
Race -more muticultural, audience link ,
Hybrid of genres which makes it different and shows how society has changed- comparison to Our Miss Brooks. audience link

Betty/America
· Image – Outcast due to appearance: geek via costume- glasses, braces clothes. (feminism)
· She represents everyday normal people who ‘feel inferior and not meeting the standards of the world (not the real world, but the business and fashion world) has set on them’.
· Strong young female-who is smart and good but is this to validate her for her appearance, will she become less ugly?
· Normal – she has relationships etc
· Mother figure to Daniel ‘Protect him betty’
· America is the ‘fresh face’ and she is transformed via the process of ‘Bettification’
· ‘[it’s] not about being ugly at all. More then anything it’s just about looking past what you see. Achieving that image is not all that we’re on this planet to do’ (Ferrera)
· Golden Globe, Screen Actors Guild Award (2007) and Emmy- wining role as Betty. –Role model for young Latinas -Our Miss Brooks link social changes

The Villain: Wilhelmina
· Black: good vs bad –black vs white (theory)

· Tries to get power by manipulation
· Being ruthless- goes against nurtureing role =empowers women (postmodernism theory)



Monday, 31 December 2007

Historical Text

Hour Magazine - "Our Miss Brooks" Cast Reunion - 1985!





Our Miss Brooks : TV series 1952-1956
Director: William Asher
Writer: Bob Weiskopf (writer)
Genre:Comedy / Family


Plot summary: Miss Brooks teaches English at Madison High, rents a room from Mrs. Davis, gets rides to school with student Walter, fights with Principal Conklin, and tries to snag shy biology teacher Boynton. In the last year she switches to Mrs. Nestor's private school.

Awards:Won Primetime Emmy. Another 6 nominations :
1956
Nominated
Emmy
Best Actress - Continuing Performance Eve Arden

1955
Nominated
Emmy
Best Actress Starring in a Regular Series Eve Arden
Best Situation Comedy Series
Best Supporting Actor in a Regular Series Gale Gordon

1954
Won
Emmy
Best Female Star of Regular Series Eve Arden
Nominated
Emmy
Best Situation Comedy

1953
Nominated
Emmy
Best Situation Comedy


http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0044287/

OUR MISS BROOKS
U.S. Situation Comedy

The successful 1950s sitcom Our Miss Brooks was, heart and soul, actor Eve Arden. A Hollywood film and New York stage veteran, Arden specialized in playing the wisecracking friend to the heroine. She often did it better than anyone else, achieving her greatest success with an Oscar nomination for 1945's Mildred Pierce. But Arden's skill with the wicked one-liner and acid aside was beginning to lead to typecasting. To find a new image, Arden signed on for the radio comedy role of Connie Brooks, English teacher at fictional Madison High School, a smart and sharp-witted--but ever-likable--character. And unlike most of her film roles, radio offered her the lead.
Beginning on radio in 1948, Our Miss Brooks was successfully transferred to television beginning in 1952 (it ran on both media, with largely the same cast, for several months in 1952). Between gentle wisecracks, Miss Brooks doted on nerdish student Walter Denton, and frequently locked horns with crusty, cranky principal Mr. Conklin. Many of the program's episodes, however, revolved around Miss Brook's unrequited desire for Philip Boynton, the school's biology teacher. In this way Miss Brooks was the beginning of a long list of TV spinsters, to be followed by Sally Rogers (Rose Marie) on The Dick Van Dyke Show and Jane Hathaway (Nancy Kulp) on The Beverly Hillbillies.
The program had enjoyed good ratings on radio and only enlarged its audience when it moved to TV. And while some professional educators criticized the series, others celebrated Miss Brooks and Arden's work: she got teaching job offers, fan letters from educators, was made an honorary member of the National Education Association and, in 1952, was given an award from the Alumni Association of the Teachers College of Connecticut for "humanizing the American Teacher." Said Arden of her on-screen alter ego: "I tried to play Miss Brooks as a loving person who cared about the kids and kept trying to keep them out of trouble, but kept getting herself in trouble."
Obviously, Miss Brooks encountered enough trouble to sustain the series for over 150 episodes, but, unlike many other female comics on TV at that time, Miss Brooks' forte was not the wild antics that were the norm of Lucy or the lopsided logic that was the domain of Gracie Allen. Instead, Miss Brooks humor was achieved by her own sharp, observing wit and by her centered presence in the midst of a group of eccentric supporting players--dimwitted, squeaky-voiced student Walter, pompous Conklin, and the others. Miss Brooks was always the source of the jokes, not the butt of them.
In 1955, ratings were beginning to wane, and the series was overhauled. Miss Brooks and Mr. Conklin were moved out of Madison High to Mrs. Nestor's Private Elementary School. For a time there was no Mr. Boynton for whom Miss Brooks would pine, but there was a muscle-bound PE teacher, Mr. Talbot, who longed for Miss Brooks. This was an important turnabout in the overall premise of the show: now Miss Brooks was the pursued rather than the pursuer. (Mr. Boynton did turn up again in early 1956 just in time for the series to be canceled; in a film version of the series released by Warner Brothers in 1956, Miss Brooks and Mr. Boynton finally did tie the knot and presumably lived happily ever after.)


Connie Brooks was one of TV's noblest working women: the center of a highly successful show, toiling in a realistically portrayed, and unglamorized career (Miss Brooks often made mention of how low her wages were), and rewarded and honored by real workers whom she represented. While she was not quite as "no nonsense"--nor so tough--as film's prominent working women (Rosiland Russell, Joan Crawford), Connie Brooks, with her tart tongue, brisk manner, her sharply cut jackets and slim skirts, was just about as savvy as women were allowed to be on TV in the 1950s. And despite Miss Brooks desire to become "Mrs." Something--and despite the fact that she was never promoted to school principal--Our Miss Brooks legacy in TV history is that it dared to depict a woman, funny, attractive, wise, competent and working--outside the home, marriage, and children.

http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/O/htmlO/ourmissbroo/ourmissbroo.htm

Radio Shows:

Project X (1955-03-06): Miss Brooks is saved from falling down an open esculator by Jason Brill (rival of principle). To get promoted the principle has started project X - where he has formed a device which allows him to lishen in on students and teachers in the school anywhere. Various characters also stage accidents in order to allow the principle to become a hero and get promted.

Writing Magazines Articles- With Aliases (1955-04-17) : Miss Brooks along with the principle pretend to be someone else and write articles in order to recieve money from a magazine. Both use Walton and pretend he is their son.

http://www.freeotrshows.com/otr/o/Our_Miss_Brooks.html (has all the radio shows)

There are major similarities and differences between Ugly Betty and Our Miss Brooks:

  • Similar : Protagonist of both have low paid/low status jobs- miss brooks is a english teacher which is typcially a female subject and an assistant role is usually viewed as a female role.
  • Similar: the principle is a male and so is the boss of Betty , so both reflect and reinforce patriarchy
  • Differences: genre -ugly betty is a hybrid of comedy and drama etc, although it is a sitcom , it has elements of other genres whereas Our Miss Brooks is clearly a sitcom and nothing more. Ugly Betty is trying to be different due to all the competition, as Our Miss Brooks was the first office sitcoms so it did not have to compete for audiences.
  • Differences: the narrative is more complex in Ugly Betty as well as dealing with day to day problems, some continue to the next episode whereas Our Miss Brooks just deals with the problems within each episode.
  • The change in genre and narrative reflects the change in society and shows firstly how complex society has become. Society has modernized and we are in the post- modern period where there is choice and varied options. Moreover, the complex narratives etc reflect a more active audience whereas before the audience was more passive.
  • Difference: Betty is shown to be Mexican whereas the characters in Our Miss Brooks are white, which reflects how society has changed, become more muticultural and diverse.
  • Difference: Miss Brooks is shown to be pretty whereas Betty is not- again the idea of being different and reflecting issues concerning image etc.
  • Similar: Although Miss Brooks was the first independent female, the fact that shes at teacher does not take her away from gender roles, as she teachs children and although she is single, she fulfuils her nurturing mother role, this is the same with Betty as she has a motherly role as she looks out for Daniel.



Useful Books:

Hamamoto, Darrell Y. : Nervous Laughter: Television Situation Comedy and Liberal Demoncratic Ideology, 1980, Praeger publishers, New York

Moore,Barbara , Bensman, Marvin R. ,Dyker,Jim Van: Prime-Time Television: A Concise History, 2006, praeger publishers