Following the crowd

/

With the recent announcement that the cast of MTVโ€™s Jersey Shore is appearing in Toronto come February, I think itโ€™s safe to assume that the showโ€™s Ontario ratings will jump as those not well-versed in โ€œJersey speakโ€ attempt to acquaint themselves with the ignorant, crass and offensive.

Now, I know what youโ€™re probably thinking โ€“ itโ€™s MTV, itโ€™s a joke, itโ€™s funny, donโ€™t take it seriously.

But the fact is that shows like Jersey Shore are the new โ€œitโ€ thing. Quotes making their way into Twitter and Facebook statuses and people willing to shell out their hard-earned cash for a glimpse of the over-tanned and over-gelled speaks volumes about who we are as people.

Are we shallow or are we pretentious? Are we voyeuristic or is this just another example of societyโ€™s infatuation with the freak flag? Why do we stop living our own reality to indulge in the highly-edited version of somebody elseโ€™s?

Clearly, Jersey Shore is not the beginning. Blame Survivor; itโ€™s clear that at the turn of the century we got a taste of a brand new type of programming โ€“ a โ€œrealisticโ€ glimpse into the lives of other people who are โ€œjust like usโ€.

After all, couldnโ€™t everyone relate to Richard Hatch or Sue the truck driver?

After that, it was a reality TV free-for-all as The Amazing Race, The Bachelor, Big Brother and The Biggest Loser made their way to mainstream television, beginning their decade-long fight with award-winning writers and audiences who longed to be challenged.

Sure, these shows were entertaining (so is watching a frat boy do a keg stand), but what do they offer? Itโ€™s like eating pan-Asian cuisine โ€“ suitable at the time, but you never walk away satisfied.

And when Laguna Beach entered the scene, the craze soared to a whole new level.

Sure, MTVโ€™s The Real World had been around since the mid-90s, but most of us were too far removed from the Generation X crusades that made up the controversy behind the series.

But suddenly with a Hilary Duff theme song and a variety of dramatic camera angles, a whole new generation was introduced to a different kind of programming. After all, Laguna Beach was real.

Unlike The O.C., these were the real lives of the rich and fabulous โ€“ and they were only a couple years apart from us in age.

Steven was a babe, Kristen was a bitch and L.C. had long, beautiful hair โ€“ it was a winning combination.

Surf culture took off, blonde high-lights skyrocketed and Laguna was the talk of the town.

Why embrace who we are when we can mimic the spoiled and cavalier?

Sure, most of us donโ€™t drive a Lexus, but that doesnโ€™t stop us from attempting to impersonate near-actors.

As the franchise progressed with an inevitable spin-off show called The Hills, the scripted drama engulfed us all.

Credible journalists began covering Lauren-Speidi drama, and the heavily-styled cast was soon appearing in (horrible) movies and writing books.

Suddenly LAโ€™s superficial club scene was an accredited destination. Plastic surgery, Botox, cheap sex, drugs and bad music were not only pined for, but justified.

By watching The Hills we werenโ€™t only supporting the Speidi press machine but funding their lifestyle. Those boobs and that nose โ€“ we bought them. And so it continues with Jersey Shore.

We claim to hate it, we mock them endlessly and Michael Cera embraced his inner โ€œGuidoโ€ with his own makeover, but by making it the go-to series for the university-aged demographic, weโ€™re essentially justifying their ignorance, stupidity and the qualities many have spent their lives working to fight against.

Sure, we chalk up our viewership to a fascination with the ridiculous, but when we waste hours of our own lives observing the empty existence of others, isnโ€™t that a little ridiculous?

The cast of Jersey Shore are gracing magazines, creating slang and have reached the point of getting paid to appear at nightclubs.

Whatโ€™s โ€œthe situationโ€? We just sponsored the castโ€™s Ed Hardy wardrobes.


Serving the Waterloo campus, The Cord seeks to provide students with relevant, up to date stories. Weโ€™re always interested in having more volunteer writers, photographers and graphic designers.