Alternative History of the World: Reality TV Through Time

Some people seem to believe that reality TV is a relatively new phenomenon that began with documentary films and exploded onto the scene with The Real World, Big Brother, Survivor, and The Osbournes.

Nonsense.

Reality TV has long been a staple in households since civilization began to take shape. If you will, let’s take a look back at some of the most groundbreaking shows in reality television history.

Everybody Loves Ramesses II (1278 BC-1209 BC)

After a few years of the reign of Ramesses II, the popular Egyptian pharoah decided to cash in on his fame. So, he forced laborers to invent a television so he could be on it.

The show peaked during the Exodus (during April sweeps!), when Ramesses’s rivalry with his brother Moses, reached a boiling point. Unfortunately, most of the tapes of the show and original television sets were buried with Ramesses  in his tomb. That decision set reality TV back for years.

Caligula (31-41 A.D.)

This painting depicts a touching personal moment on Caligula's reality show

After he “leaked” a sex tape, Caligula brought back reality television with a show centered on his life. The show, like the movie based upon it in the 20th Century, was really just a disgusting sex romp. Nasty entitled people who focused entirely on sex and meaningless conflicts.

Many regard it as the intellectual precursor to the Jersey Shore and Keeping Up With the Kardashians.

Finding Nero (54-68 A.D.)

This show was based on trying to locate Roman Emperor Nero. Regular Romans were asked to find Nero when he went out at night and murdered people in the streets for kicks. If they found him, Nero would usually utter his catchphrase, “Caedite eos!”, which means, “Kill them all!” in Latin, and then would bludgeon them to death with his violin.

After Finding Nero, people began to become terrified of reality TV. Between the years 500 and 1000 — often referred to as “The Dark Ages” because a lack of interest in television — reality shows almost disappeared for good.

Survivor: Europe (1348-1350)

This show was much different than its descendants, although both were hosted by the ageless Jeff Probst. The point of the show was for millions of contestants throughout Europe to try to survive the Black Death for a chance at one million sixpence.

The Tribe and The Plague have spoken. photo: Kristin Dos Santos

The show only lasted two seasons after ratings dropped precipitously due to a lack of living viewers.

Joan of Arcadia (1427-1431)

The popular Joan of Arc was the original chick reality show. The show was unable to find a sympathetic audience and was canceled early for heresy. Only years later did viewers really appreciate her work on the show.

Real Housewives of Henry VIII (1509-1547)

The show followed the drama between Henry VIII and his six different wives during his reign as king. The show lasted for quite awhile because he kept things fresh with a steady stream of new wives.

The Catholic Church was appalled by such garbage on the airwaves, but Henry, as king, continued to order that the show stay on the air.

The Amazing Race: Lewis and Clark (1804-1806)

When President Thomas Jefferson needed a crew to explore the territory he had bought from those scheming Frenchmen, he turned to Virginian comedy duo Meriwether Lewis and William Clark. The two brought along a camera crew that captured all of their exploits and hi jinx, delighting the young nation.

The show was also one of the first to include American Indians as characters, opening the door for….very little since then.

The Ultimate Fighter: Congress (1856)

Some people believe Brooks cheated in his final fight by using a cane. Psh. Like there were rules. It was 1856!

The goal of this show was to find the best fighter in Congress. After several weeks of training and trash-talking, Rep. Preston Brooks of South Carolina won the show after knocking out Massachusetts Sen. Charles Sumner in the first round.

The show became extremely popular in the South, but Northern audiences were horrified by the violence and demanded its cancellation. The network obliged and the tapes of the show were destroyed during the Civil War.

Later, the show produced spinoffs such as “Extreme Makeover: The Reconstruction” and “Made: I want to be the president of the United States,” both of which starred an illiterate Tennessee tailor named Andrew Johnson.

Alternative History of the World: “Shirley Temple: FDR’s most successful New Deal Program”

A few months ago, my sister and I started a blog called “The Alternative History of the World.” We ended up getting distracted by other things, but I wanted to continue what we started on this blog.

During the Great Depression, United States President Franklin Delano Roosevelt called for “bold, persistent experimentation” to fix the ailing economy. The result lead to a massive increase in the size and scope of the federal government, but it was his littlest program that proved to be most successful — Shirley Temple.

Shirley Temple (which stands for “Serving Homesteads In Rousing Laughs and Emotions Yearly and Triggering Excitement for Movies, People, Love and Entrepreneurship”) actually began as a pilot program in 1932 under the Herbert Hoover administration. Hoover, an engineer, believed that a small dose of cuteness could help cure the economic collapse that plagued his presidency. Hoover also thought that associating himself with such childish cuteness would endear him to voters, who thought him a grumpy old douche.

Herbert Hoover pretending to listen to his mother-in-law.

It was too little, too late for Hoover, who couldn’t shake the grump factor in time for the election. Later, Hoover became a philanthropist and, on weekends, a clown at children’s parties who went by the pseudonym of “Belly.”

As Roosevelt prepared to take office in March 1933 after a landslide victory, Roosevelt’s top aide/hot-dog aficionado Felix Frankfurter received a series of letters from renowned economist/mustache aficionado John Maynard Keynes. In the letters, Keynes articulated his economic rationale for continued and expanded support of Shirley Temple using a series of charts, mathematical equations, and personal asides.

Felix Frankfurter later went on to become a Supreme Court justice who looked a lot like the warden from the Shawshank Redemption

“I mean, have you seen Shirley Temple?! She’s so f***ing cute!!! I can’t stand it!!!! LOL ;) ,” Keynes wrote to Frankfurter.

After investigating the matter himself, Frankfurter could see that Keynes was right. He replied, “U R right, ROFLMAO.” For as much as Roosevelt wanted to set himself apart from his predecessor, Temple had to stay, Frankfurter thought.

Frankfurter enlisted the help of Eleanor Roosevelt, and the two convinced Franklin, who sold Congress on continuing funding to Shirley Temple during the 100 days, a period of time known for major legislative changes and extreme day counting.

Eleanor Roosevelt was a big fan of the Shirley Temple program.

But not everyone was pleased with Temple. After initially supporting the New Deal, populist radio talk show host Father Coughlin believed that, despite the expanded role, Temple didn’t go far enough with her dancing and sweet-talking antics. Leading conservative Sen. Robert Taft, R-Ohio, attacked from the other end of the spectrum, saying he appreciated the intention behind Temple, but didn’t believe she was constitutional. Temple, he said, gave the government too much cuteness, and, therefore, too much power over the movie-going habits of the American people.

A group of ugly, angry lawyers then followed Taft’s lead and challenged Temple’s constitutionality in court. The case made its way to the U.S. Supreme Court along with other challenges to the New Deal. In Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States, the nation’s highest court declared both the National Recovery Administration and Shirley Temple to be unconstitutional.

Penning the court’s unanimous opinion, Chief Justice Charles E. Hughes declared that Temple’s “intolerable cuteness” qualified as cruel and unusual punishment on the general public. Temple looked doomed to dance her way out of people’s hearts.

Jealous old man Charles Hughes

The Schechter Poultry decision drew the ire of Roosevelt and other New Dealers. While much of the media believed Roosevelt was upset with the massive NRA’s dismantling, Roosevelt was privately more upset with the court’s decision on Temple, who had become the centerpiece of his plan to pull the country out of economic and literal depression.

In response, Roosevelt first threatened to pack the Supreme Court with younger, cuter justices that were more favorable to his policies. However, the public quickly turned on his plan.

Shirley Temple cuts a cake celebrating both FDR's birthday and her success in Super Friends Court

Fearing a broader political backlash, Roosevelt backtracked and said that what he meant to say was that he wanted the Supreme Court members to “pack up for a road trip full of fun and adventure!” He then agreed to allow the NRA’s dismantling, but took the rare step of appealing the Temple decision to the Super Friends, a secret panel within the judicial branch of the Shadow Government. Chief Justice Superman, who, at the time, was still an American citizen, wrote the majority opinion for the nearly-unanimous decision. Wonder Woman was the lone dissenter because she hated children.

Although Shirley Temple was a Republican program, her success cemented a bond between Democrats and Hollywood that exists to this day.

Temple continued through the Depression, and the result was an unmitigated success in the eyes of New Deal liberals. Temple raised the spirits of Americans during troubled economic times and is widely credited with helping to defeat those bad, bad Nazis in World War II by figuratively and literally melting their hearts.

Conservatives, however, argue that Temple might have actually prolonged the Great Depression by forcing Americans to spend what little money they had on Shirley Temple movies and by distracting top policymakers and businesses from noticing that a tremendous amount of people were out of work.

Shirley Temple expired in 1949 under the Truman administration and was not renewed during a military buildup in the wake of the Cold War. The funding was needed to halt the expansion of the Soviet Union, which had acquired two top U.S. military secrets: a nuclear weapon and Col. Sanders’ original recipe.

In the 1970s, Richard Nixon was advised by Henry Kissinger to revive Temple as a foreign policy program after Kissinger watched a Temple movie one night because there were only, like, three channels back then and nothing else was on. Nixon sweatily followed suit. Although certainly not as cute as it once was, Shirley Temple enjoyed some limited success abroad during the Nixon years.

The Jerry O'Connell program did well for itself.

Recent attempts by modern presidents to re-create the success of Shirley Temple have not gone as well and usually fell apart after a few years. George H.W. Bush’s Macaulay Culkin program was quashed by Bill Clinton’s administration and puberty; Bill Clinton’s Haley Joel Osment program was wildly popular at first, but became irrelevant as times changed; and the Gary Coleman program never grew due to deficits during the Reagan administration (although Reagan is now credited for starting Jerry O’Connell, a program that was bloated and slow-moving in its infancy, but is now married to Rebecca Romijn.)

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