1st Edition

Meta Television A History of US Popular Television's Self-Awareness

By Erin Giannini Copyright 2024
164 Pages
by Routledge

164 Pages
by Routledge

164 Pages
by Routledge

The idea of metatextuality is frequently framed as a recent television development and often paired with the idea that it represents genre exhaustion. US television, however, with its early “live” performances and set-bound sitcoms, always suggested an element of self-awareness that easily shaded into metatextuality even in its earliest days. Meta Television thus traces the general history of... Read more

Introduction: Exploiting TV’s TV-ness, or isn’t television weird? Part I: Facets of meta television 1. “Like there were only three walls, not a fourth one”: Addressing the world outside the TV 2. “That’s fake me!”: Shows about shows Part II: Deep dives: Defining shows 3. Soap’s parody of soap opera’s dramatic excesses 4. “Tonight, broadcasting takes a giant leap...backwards”: Moonlighting’s comedy noir 5. Life isn’t a John Hughes Film: Parker Lewis Can’t Lose, film, and surveillance 6. Whose story is it? Roseanne, Supernatural, and the writer as God 7. “Abed, stop being meta”: Community deconstructs TV tropes 8. “In one indescribable instant”: Crazy Ex-Girlfriend’s rom-com-musical deconstruction 9. “Teachers at a school like Abbott...we have to be able to do it all”: Meta as pedagogy in Abbott Elementary  Conclusion “The audience might just see through this little charade”: WandaVision and when meta TV goes streaming

Biography

Erin Giannini, PhD, is an independent scholar, and author of Supernatural: A History of Television’s Unearthly Road Trip and The Good Place, as well as co-editor of the book series B-TV: Television Under the Critical Radar for Bloomsbury.