Everybody Hurts: Addiction, Drama, and the Family in the Reality Television Show Intervention
2011; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 46; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês
10.3109/10826084.2011.570610
ISSN1532-2491
AutoresJason R. Kosovski, Douglas C. Smith,
Tópico(s)Media Influence and Health
ResumoThis article employs the literature on reality television as well as empirical studies on addiction to analyze Intervention's narrative. We look at the narrative structure of the Intervention's first six seasons (2005–2009), its repeated emphases on the causes of addiction, and the show's purported success rate. Highlighting disturbing discrepancies between the show's representations and assertions versus empirical research, Intervention's notions of what constitutes effective remedies are those treatments generally available only to the financially affluent, and the program's depictions of addiction and intervention practices reinforce a popular culture, rather than a science-based understanding, of the family and of addiction itself.
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