Boston Phoenix: The Tea Party is the Reality TV of U.S. Politics

Sep 23, 2010 12:23

Crosposted to ontd_political and awaiting moderation.



By STEVEN STARK | September 22, 2010

The American Idol Party


In their attempts to understand the Tea Party movement, analysts have looked to the Populists of the 1890s, the followers of Father Coughlin and Huey Long in the 1930s, and, of course, the original Boston tea partiers themselves. But in a nation whose pop culture is its politics and vice versa, the real antecedent for this political happening is a relatively recent phenomenon - reality television.

This is not to denigrate the movement. After all, popular culture is a primary outlet for political expression - a source of both candidates and mass sentiment, as Ronald Reagan well knew. And, while the roots of reality television derive from many sources, the principal one is the notion that "the people" can do a better job than the elites. Reality television is democratic to a fault, premised as it is on the idea that we no longer need "stars" because average men and women on the street are the real sources of talent and energy in the land.

It's a very American sentiment, of course - the product of a nation that, beginning with its first tea party, defined itself as a place in which "the people" ruled. And that concept always has political resonance in eras in which elites on places such as Wall Street have appeared to prosper at the expense of Main Street.

But what has given that old idea a new cast this time around is television. Beginning, really, with America's Funniest Home Videos in the early 1990s, and continuing on through Survivor, American Idol, The Apprentice, and Dancing with the Stars, the television programming that has appealed the most in the modern era has been that which made "the folks," as Fox News host Bill O'Reilly calls them, the stars.

Figures such as Sarah Palin and Christine O'Donnell are figures straight out of reality television - somewhat narcissistic good lookers (a TV prerequisite) who are proud of their ordinariness and lack of traditional expertise. They and the people who love these shows the most are what Richard Nixon used to call "the silent majority" - the same audience that once made shows such as The Beverly Hillbillies and Hee Haw big hits. Put another way, the Tea Partiers are the people who never watch HBO - in part for reasons of taste, in part because they can't afford it. They are older, less urban, and whiter than the rest of America and they know they are no one's favorite demographic.

Once one accepts the notion that anyone can be a TV star, it's only a small jump to the idea that expertise of any sort is a false god and elites of all sorts - intellectuals, journalists, and, of course, government bureaucrats and politicians - must be overthrown. It's no coincidence that the Tea Party movement is linked at the hip to Fox News since it, too, has profited from the same cultural sentiments. Sure, that network has a more conservative slant than its competitors. But what really animates the Fox News universe is the idea (accurate or not) that this is the only network not in thrall to the liberal elite - an enormously popular idea in a populist age.

The Tea Party platform is amorphous because movements that define themselves as anti-elite and pro-people are by definition that way: anything or anyone in power must be bad because it's in power. And in Barack Obama they have their perfect foil. He's not only in power, of course, but he's beloved by many of the forces that are their arch-enemy - the mainstream press, the intellectual elite, and government workers. These new populists object to being called racists because their opposition to the current regime is anything but: doesn't American Idol welcome winners of all races? In the end, the Tea Partiers may not change American politics. But they'll always be good television.

For three years, I was a moderator on a now defunct reality TV fan discussion site. I could just imagine the rotten tomatoes the members would have thrown at this article if were posted on the site's news forum. They may have been fans of trashy television, but they were not conservatives.

reality tv, sarah palin, conservatives, politics, christine o'donnell, tea party

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