What is real in an age when purported "reality TV" has "finales" and one-named self-branded celebrity wannabes posing as people?
When being on a show like "Survivor "or "Jersey Shore" is just another path to celebrity in which every move is self-conscious and calculated to achieve effect? You want real? Try enduring the clip
below - the emotional climax to the 1973 PBS series "An American Family."
On July 7 PBS will run an anniversary 2-hour compilation from the original series. Extended clips from the 12
episodes are available online. Notice how different the visual style was in this first stab at reality TV. No manipulative editing. No
suspiciously trumped up reaction shots and outrageous set ups. The long pauses that make up real conversations are part of the drama and the tension.
This was the birth of reality TV, but in
many ways the peak from which it descended. For 12 weeks many of us were absolutely transfixed by this well-heeled but profoundly lost and aching Southern California family. Bill and Pat Loud's clan
of teen kids, including the first openly gay characters on American TV, Lance, became the cause celeb in this country as documentarians Alan and Susan Raymond chronicled their privileged but arguably
vapid lives. Unbeknownst to anyone when the novel project of recording everyday existence began, the Louds were headed straight for the heart of the defining trend of 70s America - divorce. In the
scene below Bill returns home from one of his chronic business trips only to be handed the business card of Pat's divorce lawyer. Almost 40 years later, I still recalled the chilling calmness of the
scene and all that is left unsaid but clearly felt.
In the face of this, modern programming should be ashamed to take the name "reality TV." The next time we hear critics bemoan that unscripted
programming has gone too far, they might well consult their media history. "An American Family" should remind us just how manufactured our TV "reality" had become in four decades. In its capacity to
make us think, feel and gain insight about how we live and why we live this way, our "realty TV" hasn't gone "too far." It is lagging far, far behind what came before it and where video truly is
capable of taking us.
Watch the full episode. See more THIRTEEN Specials.