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Hunger Games: CBS reality show exploits poor families

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Hunger Games: CBS reality show exploits poor families

Unread postby Sixstrings » Wed 03 Jun 2015, 18:56:49

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The Hunger Games: New CBS reality show exploits poor families by making them grovel for $101,000

As if to prove there are new depths to be plumbed in the world of reality television (because who knew?), CBS just debuted The Briefcase, a show which takes poverty porn, class anxiety, emotional manipulation and exploitation and packages them all neatly into a pretty despicable hour of primetime television. Kicking off each episode with the question, “What would you do with $101,000?” the show then deep-dives into a competition that asks two unwitting, financially strapped families to choose between two no-win options: being financially solvent yet appearing heartless and greedy, or drowning in debt yet having audiences recognize them as selfless and giving.

It’s hard to imagine a network executive didn’t get the idea for this show from the “Button, Button” episode of the Twilight Zone. The Briefcase focuses on two “middle-class” families—a questionable but highly American take on the phrase, since both are debt saddled, with one primary breadwinner, and essentially living on the edge of financial ruin. Both are told they’ll be participating in a documentary about money. Instead, a producer from the show unexpectedly comes to their house with a suitcase full of cold, hard cash: $101,000 to be exact. That could be a life-changing – and in the case of families so near the financial cliff, nearly life-saving – sum of money. But this being reality TV, instead of just giving them the cash, there’s a major catch.

Both families are informed that somewhere out there, there’s another family “who’s also in need,” and are given a choice: “You can keep all of the money, you can keep some of the money, or you can give it all away.” Neither family knows that the other family also has a suitcase full of cash and is debating how much, if any, they’ll share. And since both families were originally told they were merely going to be the subjects of a documentary, neither of them really signed up for this exercise in televised torture.

What follows, predictably, is a gut-wrenching look at the two families being guilted this way and that over whether to choose charity or financial survival. In the first episode, the Bergins of North Carolina, a family of five—mom, Kim; dad, Drew; and three teenage daughters—are trying to make do on Kim’s salary of $15.50 an hour, since Drew’s ice cream truck business is failing. And in New Hampshire, the Bronsons—featuring dad Dave, an Iraq war vet who lost his leg in combat—are scraping by on the earnings of mom Cara, who works the night shift as a nurse and is pregnant with their second child.

The families are told they have to take the first $1,000 and spend it on themselves, which is basically a way of giving people who’ve been in dire straits for eons a fleeting taste of the kind of the financially carefree existence they’ll soon have to feel bad about wanting. From there on, the show does all it can to ensure the decision over the money is as guilt-ridden and uncomfortable as possible. Each clan is, bit by bit, given information about each others’ lives—including financial details, outstanding debts and shortfall salaries—and even allowed to tour each others’ houses. If you have any doubt about the cynicism that birthed CBS’s latest show, watch as mom Kim spots Dave’s prosthetic leg. It induces just the level of empathy—and guilt; always with the guilt—you might expect, and ensures exactly the sort of anguish CBS was hoping to capture on camera.

The whole thing is, in a word, gross.
http://www.rawstory.com/2015/05/the-hunger-games-new-cbs-reality-show-exploits-poor-families-by-making-them-grovel-for-101000/


Trailer:

The Briefcase - How Much Would You Share? CBS Announces New Reality Series The Briefcase.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77lUAy8vwTo


Message of the show is "it's about the journey, not the money."

I say f*ck that. People should campaign for and vote for Bernie Sanders.

This is a democracy. We have a vote. The 1% cannot have it all, if we do not allow it. Poor people don't have to be pitted against each other in some "hunger games" poverty exploitation freak show on CBS -- they need to go to a Sanders rally instead.

(the largest shareholder of CBS, which produced this "have the poor cry and fight each other and see if they share their last piece of bread" psychological experiment show -- is worth $6.4 billion.)
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Re: Hunger Games: CBS reality show exploits poor families

Unread postby Sixstrings » Wed 03 Jun 2015, 19:41:59

And I see the BBC just debuted a similar show, having poor Brits work in an experimental factory, like they are lab rats or something:

Television's Long History of Humiliating Poor People
"The Briefcase" and "Britain's Hardest Grafter" enter the annals of Misery TV.

It’s an entertainment concept that’s difficult to defend (though BBC’s PR team is certainly trying, calling it a “serious social experiment” investigating “just how hard people in the low-wage economy work”). Asking poor people to “prove themselves” by laboring in a faux-factory is creepy and dystopian and, yes, kind of reminiscent of The Hunger Games or the bleak futuristic TV show “Black Mirror.” The production company’s description of the show—“At the end of each episode, those who have produced the least will be eliminated”—is both a perfect distillation of capitalism and a nightmarish vision of the future. Over 20,000 people have signed an online petition asking the BBC to scrap the show.
http://www.newrepublic.com/article/121944/briefcase-britains-hardest-grafter-and-return-misery-tv


The CBS show has a twitter hashtag #WhatWouldYouDo (for money).

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I don't know what they're trying to encourage here. This is like the youtube thing where people pay homeless to do humiliating things. It's disgusting and amoral, and these tv shows are disgusting.
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Re: Hunger Games: CBS reality show exploits poor families

Unread postby careinke » Wed 03 Jun 2015, 22:16:01

I would suggest they take all the money, fix their own problems, and THEN help others. Giving away stuff you need to survive is stupid and counterproductive.

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