More than Just Lines on a Map: Best Practices for U.S Bike Routes
Econ final project1
1.
2. Definition: A genre of television programming in which ‘real life’ people
are fallowed in a situation, game, etc.
*Mainly scripted*
Producers techniques to make the story:
-Characters Arc
- Plot Points
-Narrative Arcs
-A definitive beginning, middle, and end
3. • Producers create and manipulate scenes that people want to see
• The scenes are created so viewers will stay interested
- These scenes are things that aren’t normally seen on
television like fighting and sex
• People get so interested in reality television because viewers
get a ‘connection’ with a member on the show, giving them a
personal emotion for that cast member
• The viewer feels for a character because they compare their
own lives with the person on the screen
• Viewers then get a feeling of personally understanding a
character, making them more interested in watching the show
*This is why every cast member on a reality show is different*
5. •Every show aired on television cost money
•Most are sponsored and paid for by businesses and companies
• When the economy is tight, companies are less able to spend
money on shows that aren’t being watched by viewers
•These shows are scripted with drama and conflicts that will
make viewers become more interested in watching and tuning in
to the next episode premiere
•If a show doesn’t have many viewers, than the show won’t be
able to stay on the air for very long, that’s why producers of these
reality shows cut and manipulate scenes that will draw in viewers
and keep them interested.
*If a show becomes popular, they can raise the prices on episode
6. • Season 1: $5,000 per episode for each of the cast
members
• Season 2: $10,000 per episode for each of the cast
members
• Season 3: $30,000 for cast members Snooki, Pauly D,
JWOWW, and the Situation. Less for the other cast
members
• Season 4: $100,000 per episode for each of the cast
members
7. Influences
• Producers & advertisers know that if they have
someone who is well known and liked by people,
promoting a product, it will sell quicker because
the population is easily influenced by somebody
they look up to
• People look up to others on television because
they desire to have their life like what they see
and/or is interested in it because their life is
nothing like what they are watching
8. • Wellknown celebrity
•World’s most highest paid celebrity
• Makes $40,000 per episode she stars on
• Earning $6 million a year
• Made $18 million off her wedding
9. • Because the stars are looked up to, people will copy
what they see them doing, to become more ‘like’ them
• Companies send celebrities free products for them to
use so the companies logo will be shown off
-In the end, people will be more likely to buy it
- Making the demand for the product go up
10. • Advertised muscle enhancing products
•Affects: make the company and product more known and demanded
because he claimed he used the product, influencing viewers to use
the product
•If a celebrity says they don’t like a product, their fans will most likely
stop using it as well
•This trick has been around for a long time and is used to promote
products by people who are at the top of the charts at that particular
time
11. • To get a reality show, you have to find people who are interested in
being a part of it
-Producers place ads on the internet as if it were a job search
- People then have to audition for the show
- Every person on a reality television show gets paid some amount
of money
- Being filmed takes away the real in reality because people don’t
normally have a camera following them, causing them to act
different
• If a new show is created, more jobs are needed to be filled for people to
work
•T.V. channels like MTV, E!, and VH1 use more than 60% of show times on
reality television shows
•These channels would be nothing like they are today with the creation
of reality TV
12. Our future is determined by the younger generations of kids
who are being surrounded by technology that influences
their every decision
• Reality T.V. takes up seventeen percent of prime time T.V.
programming
-which means more kids are influence to watch and act
like the cast on these shows
• Not only do they watch television, but they are now able to
access T.V. episodes on the internet
-meaning people are now able to take television ‘on-the-
go’, and raising the numbers of hours spent watching it
DOWNLOADING = No more buying
13.
14. "How Much of the Reality Show Is Scripted? - Forbes.com." Information for the
World's Business Leaders - Forbes.com. Forbes.com. Web. 15 Dec. 2011.
<http://www.forbes.com/2010/07/30/forbes-india-how-much-reality-tv-is-
scripted.html>.
"How Reality TV Fakes It - TIME." Breaking News, Analysis, Politics, Blogs, News
Photos, Video, Tech Reviews - TIME.com. Time Magazine. Web. 18 Dec. 2011.
<http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1154194,00.html>.
Mosthof, Mariella. "How Much Does the Jersey Shore Cast Make? - Jersey
Shore." Home - Wetpaint.com. Wetpaint.com. Web. 18 Dec. 2011.
http://www.wetpaint.com/jersey-shore/articles/how-much-does-the-jersey-
shore-cast-make
-Elling, Wyatt. "6 Ways to Make Money on Reality TV." Open Casting Calls -
Modeling Auditions - Reality TV Casting. Web. 20 Dec. 2011.
http://www.instantcast.com/LearnAbout/Articles/6_ways_to_make_money_o
n_reality_tv .
Chase, Libby. "How Much Does Reality TV Pay?" YOUNG MONEY Magazine |
Articles on Careers, Entrepreneurship, Personal Finance, and Investing | Young
Money. Youngmoney. Web. 18 Dec. 2011.
<http://www.youngmoney.com/careers/how-much-does-reality-tv-pay/>.