
In a time of global infotainment, the crisis of modern journalism, the omnipresence of celebrity culture and reality TV, and the colonization of public discourse by media spectacle and entertainment, postmodern satiric media have emerged as prominent critical voices playing an unprecedented role at the heart of public debate. Indeed, satiric media has filled gaps left not only by traditional media but also by weak social institutions and discredited political elites. In Satiric TV in the Americas, Paul Alonso analyzes the most influential satiric TV shows in the Americas--focusing on shows in Argentina, Peru, Ecuador, Mexico, Chile and the United States--in order to understand their critical role in challenging the status quo, traditional journalism, and the prevalent local media culture. Alonso illuminates the phenomenon of satire as resistance and negotiation in public discourse, the role of entertainment media as a site where socio-political tensions are played out, and the changing notions of journalism in today's democratic societies. Introducing the notion of "critical metatainment" -- a transgressive, self-referential reaction to the process of tabloidization and the cult of celebrity in the media spectacle era -- Satiric TV in the Americas is the first book to map, contextualize, and analyze relevant cases to understand the relation between political information, social and cultural dissent, critical humor, and entertainment in the region. Evaluating contemporary satiric media as a consequence of the collapse of modernity and its arbitrary dichotomies, Satiric TV in the Americas also shows that, as satiric formats travel to a particular national context, they are appropriated in different ways and adapted to local circumstances, with distinct consequences.
This book investigates how satiric television programs across the Americas function as a form of critical metatainment to challenge political elites, traditional journalism, and media spectacle. Paul Alonso, a scholar of media and Latin American culture, utilizes a comparative framework to examine how satire operates as a site of negotiated dissent. By analyzing the intersection of humor, politics, and entertainment, the author argues that these programs fill institutional voids left by failing democratic structures and the tabloidization of public discourse.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of transnational media and political communication. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a foundational text for understanding the role of humor in contemporary democratic societies.
Page Count:
192
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190636521
ISBN-13:
9780190636524
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