Deconstructing America’s Next Top Model
By leily on Jun 4, 2008 in News
Ambiguous Negligible Thematic Manipulative
Every Wednesday night millions of people are tuned in to watch
It is important to understand that
The show is currently in its seventh season with thirteen finalists who are given contrasting roles to play. There is the sweet and innocent one, the rebel, the egonostic, the insecure one, and most essentially the ‘diva.’ Most viewers are blinded by these roles, as the ‘reality’ part of the show attempts to naturalize them. According to literary critic Roland Barthes, by constructing the natural, the ‘mythological’ is shaped. Thus, in the context of the show, the qualities and roles of each contestant are mythological constructions. However, the viewers are unaware of these myths. Barthes (1957) says quote: “…all the materials of myth (whether pictorial or written) presuppose a signifying consciousness, that one can reason about them while discounting their substance.” Thus, in the context of the show, viewers consciously reason with competitors role-playing and overlook hidden meanings.
While the contestants play roles to fulfill the producer’s demands, they also push role-playing on themselves. As cameras watch their every move, they inevitably monitor and control their behaviours. When the girls talk directly to the camera in the ‘confessions room,’ it seems as though they have each built up a wall to repress their true emotions. Since they are aware that masses of people are watching, they try to convey themselves as ‘likable’ characters. The setting of the show also causes them to mask their true behaviour. The fairy-tale like model mansion was purposely chosen by producers to draw out their unconscious emotions and to intensify their natural behaviours. The producers consider Psychiatrist Sigmund Freud’s theory on the state of unconsciousness. Freud theorizes that power can be maintained by control over the unconscious mind. On this show, the producers are the controllers who take power over the competitor’s unconscious state to heighten their behaviours. As they seek intensified behaviours to increase the entertainment value of the program, the true character of each competitor is overshadowed.
The competitors are always playing roles. Not only do they take on these roles to fulfil the ‘reality TV’ part of the show, but they also take on roles as model contestants. In each episode there is a photo-shoot based on a thematic fantasy, and the girls have to carry out the parts. The photo-shoot on the first episode of this season’s
The contestants experience a life of luxury, but in turn, this new world causes them to change themselves. On the second episode of this season’s
Since the show is about turning girls into fashion models, the girl’s characters are transformed. Not only do they experience a changed appearance but also a changed outlook on themselves. While Jaeda struggled with her new appearance, another contestant named Anchel began to re-evaluate her body image. She begins to lose a sense of herself by comparing herself to the thinner models around her. Psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan supports this occurrence. Lacan states that when our consciousness is fully formed, we can’t help but think about ourselves in relation to others. Anchel inevitably returns to Lacan’s second stage of development, the ‘Mirror Phase.’ She re-evaluates her reflection by comparing what she ‘lacks’ in relation to the ideal model type. The judge’s debate about whether Anchel has the body to be a top model further triggers her to re-evaluate her image and feel like an outsider. She is left ‘outside of the system:’ a system of rules and conventions created and maintained by the modelling industry.
The problem with this show is that it follows the high fashion category of modelling. It’s the type of modelling that has the narrowest and the unhealthiest criterion: one must be over 5’9 in height, have a very thin build, proportional features, and a good bone structure. As this version of a model is true for high fashion, this type does not stand for the whole modelling industry. Other categories of modelling promote the ‘healthy’ and ‘real’ individual. Tyra’s choice to promote high fashion modelling unfortunately re-enforces the stereotypical version of a model’s appearance. As a consequence, Viewers are bombarded with these unrealistic and unhealthy model images. Judith Butler explains how everyday women have a difficult time recognizing themselves in the ideal. The show causes women viewers to re-evaluate their own bodies by comparing themselves to the model ideal.
To further manipulate viewers, the program is driven by hidden messages that endorse beauty products. While viewers identify with what they ‘lack’ in comparison to the ideal, product tie-ins are used to advance solutions to the problem. Subliminal advertising is used to trigger the unconscious: “If you buy this stuff we can fix you up, and make you look like a model.” Even if a viewer is aware of these idealistic representations and tries to repress them, they will still be affected. Freud explains that beneath the surface of one’s thought process lays a brew/area of all of the impulses one has repressed in their lives. These negative representations viewers try to repress are merely contained in an unconscious area. This proves that all viewers are affected, whether they internalize these messages on a conscious or unconscious level.
Theorists have helped to confirm that
By: Kelly Foss

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