Description

Book Synopsis
This book examines product placement and brand integration in U.S. television. Using examples from 1950s television sponsorship to The Real Housewives, Bjelskou illustrates how the commercialization of TV programing affects both formats and narratives and how these genres are in conversation with contemporary political and social environments.

Trade Review
This textual analysis provides insightful commentary on reality TV and contemporary media culture. . . .A short and dense read, Branded Women is a recommended case study for the implications of unabashed consumerism and industry-sanctioned narcissism--critical facets to grasp in today's media landscape. * Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly *
[T]his book-length study of The Real Housewives of New York City offers sustained analysis of the show’s housewife-entrepreneur stars. . . .I learnt a great deal from Bjelskou’s opening overview of ‘Women and Products as a Staple in US Television’, as well as from the following chapter on the branding of RHONY’s network Bravo TV. . . . Bjelskou remind[s] us forcefully that the medium’s capacity for bestowing value on products outside itself cannot be detached from the specific representational politics of its particular mode of entertainment. * Critical Studies in Television: The International Journal of Television Studies *
Peter Bjelskou admirably synthesizes a half century of cultural critiques of the audience/commodity nexus, and takes the critique a full step further in his groundbreaking analysis of Real Housewives of New York. This Bravo cable reality show features women who are neither "real" nor "housewives," but are the most current version of the modernist conflation of hucksterism and culture. Identifying matches between everyday life and television is the holy grail of cultural studies, and Branded Women in U.S. Television is a solid new contribution. Scholars and students of media, cultural, and American studies will appreciate the accessibility of Bjelskou’s treatment of this important topic. -- Frederick Wasser, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
In this exceptionally well-written book, Bjelskou skillfully navigates Bravo’s commercial offerings where viewers are regaled with narratives of conspicuous consumption and not the everyday lives of average housewives. Here is a clear view into television’s latest entertainment that explains in detail how these programs make cultural sense of the present neoliberal moment. Ultimately these insights reveal a new level of commodification where product-pushing housewives become themselves, the brand. -- Robin Andersen, Fordham University

Table of Contents
Part I Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2: From Midcentury Housewives to Martha Stewart: Women and Products as a Staple in U.S. Television Chapter 3: Zeitgeist and Camp at Bravo TV Part II Chapter 4: The Entrepreneurial Housewife: Jill Zarin and Alex McCord’s Branded Versions of the Domestic Goddess Chapter 5: The Curious Presence of the Upper Class in Reality TV: Countess LuAnn de Lesseps and Sonja Tremont Morgan Chapter 6: Embodying Neoliberalism: Bethenny Frankel’s Skinnygirl Empire Conclusion

Branded Women in US Television When People Become

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    A Hardback by Peter Bjelskou

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      View other formats and editions of Branded Women in US Television When People Become by Peter Bjelskou

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 12/18/2014 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739187937, 978-0739187937
      ISBN10: 0739187937

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book examines product placement and brand integration in U.S. television. Using examples from 1950s television sponsorship to The Real Housewives, Bjelskou illustrates how the commercialization of TV programing affects both formats and narratives and how these genres are in conversation with contemporary political and social environments.

      Trade Review
      This textual analysis provides insightful commentary on reality TV and contemporary media culture. . . .A short and dense read, Branded Women is a recommended case study for the implications of unabashed consumerism and industry-sanctioned narcissism--critical facets to grasp in today's media landscape. * Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly *
      [T]his book-length study of The Real Housewives of New York City offers sustained analysis of the show’s housewife-entrepreneur stars. . . .I learnt a great deal from Bjelskou’s opening overview of ‘Women and Products as a Staple in US Television’, as well as from the following chapter on the branding of RHONY’s network Bravo TV. . . . Bjelskou remind[s] us forcefully that the medium’s capacity for bestowing value on products outside itself cannot be detached from the specific representational politics of its particular mode of entertainment. * Critical Studies in Television: The International Journal of Television Studies *
      Peter Bjelskou admirably synthesizes a half century of cultural critiques of the audience/commodity nexus, and takes the critique a full step further in his groundbreaking analysis of Real Housewives of New York. This Bravo cable reality show features women who are neither "real" nor "housewives," but are the most current version of the modernist conflation of hucksterism and culture. Identifying matches between everyday life and television is the holy grail of cultural studies, and Branded Women in U.S. Television is a solid new contribution. Scholars and students of media, cultural, and American studies will appreciate the accessibility of Bjelskou’s treatment of this important topic. -- Frederick Wasser, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
      In this exceptionally well-written book, Bjelskou skillfully navigates Bravo’s commercial offerings where viewers are regaled with narratives of conspicuous consumption and not the everyday lives of average housewives. Here is a clear view into television’s latest entertainment that explains in detail how these programs make cultural sense of the present neoliberal moment. Ultimately these insights reveal a new level of commodification where product-pushing housewives become themselves, the brand. -- Robin Andersen, Fordham University

      Table of Contents
      Part I Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2: From Midcentury Housewives to Martha Stewart: Women and Products as a Staple in U.S. Television Chapter 3: Zeitgeist and Camp at Bravo TV Part II Chapter 4: The Entrepreneurial Housewife: Jill Zarin and Alex McCord’s Branded Versions of the Domestic Goddess Chapter 5: The Curious Presence of the Upper Class in Reality TV: Countess LuAnn de Lesseps and Sonja Tremont Morgan Chapter 6: Embodying Neoliberalism: Bethenny Frankel’s Skinnygirl Empire Conclusion

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