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Fri, 22 Dec 2006 00:13:02 -0800 |
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Please view our five minute film, a parody director’s commentary for
the archaeology reality television program Digging for the Truth. Two
real archaeologists pretend to be the archaeologist and television
producer working on the program. In these part-fact, part-fiction
roles, the two parody the extreme archaeological adventures of the
television host, Josh Bernstein. Fan propelled parachutes, cliff
rappelling, outdoor fashion, and wilderness wifi internet research are
comically explained as legitimate and necessary archaeological methods.
In the process, television industries transform the methods of
archaeology into extreme sports for televisual and economic gains.
Through this performance, satirical commentary isolates the industrial
televisual exaggeration of archaeological methods.
What these non-fiction performers cheekily call science is what media
theorists call spectacle and is what the television industries need to
entertain audiences. The performance begs the question: how can satire
and parody be used to exhibit the findings of media archaeology?
The video can be viewed and embedded html acquired at this address:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2151003492809801090
Yours,
Adam Fish
UCLA: Cinema and Media
[log in to unmask]
Brad Garrett M.A.
International Centre for Archaeology Underwater
[log in to unmask]
----
Online resources for film/TV studies may be found at ScreenSite
http://www.ScreenSite.org
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