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TV
Future, Unscripted
Fall pilots: Real deal, or no deal?
by Joy Press
May 9, 2006 4:04 PM
More than a year ago, the overheated art world got even more frenzied
for a few days as the Jeffrey Deitch Gallery held cattle-call auditions
for Artstar, an art world counterpart to American Idol. No one was
quite sure if it was a reality show or some kind of performance-art
prank. Nevertheless, it sucked hundreds of freaks and artistes out
of their garrets (some precincts of Williamsburg were completely emptied
that winter day) and back to Soho, where critics like David Rimanelli
and Carlo McCormick helped Deitch pick a slate of eight hopefuls to
collaborate on a project for the cameras. As it turns out, this wasn't
just a giant conceptual performance piece on the nature of reality
TV; Artstar actually is a reality TV series, though many New Yorkers
won't see it when it launches on June 1, since it airs on Gallery
HD, a high-definition channel on the Dish satellite network.
Now that artists have joined models, musicians, designers, chefs,
filmmakers, and would-be apprentices as fodder for reality TV, why
not broaden the concept further?
Some pilot ideas for the fall season:
America's Next Literary Novelist: Judges are currently scouring the
country's MFA programs looking for the next Jonathan Safran Foer,
Jonathan Lethem, and any other applicable Jonathans. Unfortunately,
several semifinalists have already been disqualified for plagiarizing
their entries.
Top Lobbyist: Some of the nation's most gifted schmoozehounds vie
for this prestigious title and a chance to spend a weekend with Karl
Rove and Dick Cheney. Weekly challenges will root out the most honest
contenders.
Ultimate Realtor: Contestants compete to rebrand derelict, impoverished
urban zones as the next hot neighborhood. The first to lure a Starbucks
branch to their hipster 'hood wins.
American Butcher: Currently two productions are in litigation over
the use of this name: One is a competition to find the nation's finest
cleaver wielder, while the other features plastic surgeons in a battle
for silicone supremacy. |
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