Over the past decade, television talk shows have proliferated and diversified in style. One of the most demonized of television genres, talk shows have fueled debates about television's faltering role as a medium for social interaction. Overlooked in all this discussion is the fact that many viewers don't just absorb the shows but react to them and even talk back to their televisions. Focusing on the political and everyday nature of talk, Talking with Television explores the relationship between talk on TV, talk about TV, and, most dynamically, talk with TV. By observing and analyzing the daily viewing habits of a dozen women viewers, Helen Wood captures how television dynamically unfolds alongside the viewers' own personal opinions, experiences, and life stories. She interprets these experiences as daily rituals of self-reflexivity, focusing on the performance of gender as a doubling of place in contemporary conditions of modernity. Offering a critical analysis of the ritual communication of talk television, Wood argues for a more sustained focus on the mechanics of mediated interaction in media studies, particularly as the field attempts to theorize the characteristics of "old" and "new" media. Directly challenging the fundamental assumption that new media forms are uniquely interactive, Talking with Television reveals that televisual styles, particularly talk-based TV, have always sought to encourage a participatory relationship with viewers at home.
Acknowledgments ix
Transcription Conventions xi
Introduction 1
1. Talk Is Not So Cheap 13
2. Making Talk Talk in Media Studies 31
3. Daytime Talking 56
4. Method: Texts-in-Action 100
5. Talking about Daytime Talk 118
6. Talking Back: The Mediated Conversational Floor 147
7. Texts, Subjects, and Modern Self-Reflexivity 180
Conclusion: Media, Mechanics, and the Politics of Self-Reflexivity 199
Appendix: Biographies of the Women 211
Notes 215
Bibliography 223
Index 235