Posts Tagged ‘Television program’

The Mainstreaming of Science Fiction on TV?

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Lost (TV series)Image via Wikipedia

The ABC series Lost is, quite pos­si­bly, the most broadly suc­cess­ful sci­ence fic­tion tele­vi­sion show yet. While rat­ings have been on a decline in this, the fourth sea­son, the season’s pre­miere pulled in 16.07 mil­lion view­ers. Now, these are Nielsen num­bers, which I con­sider sus­pect at best, but it shows that the show is very pop­u­lar, and almost cer­tainly not just with tra­di­tional SF fans (those num­bers can­not be accounted for purely by fans). Current episodes have dealt openly with sci­ence fic­tion tropes (which I will not name exactly to avoid spoil­ers). You could argue about the true clas­si­fi­ca­tion of the show, but it most cer­tainly falls into sci­ence fic­tion, as well as maybe a cou­ple of other genres.

When the show first started, fans knew some­thing was unusual, but that was a bit sub­tle. Dozens of peo­ple had sur­vived a hor­rific plane crash, land­ing on a strange island. Compasses don’t work. There’s a weird radio trans­mis­sion. And there’s a mon­ster in the jun­gle that nobody can see.

Still, I sup­pose, many audi­ence mem­bers dis­in­clined to like SF could make the case for the show being in the thriller/​mystery genre. And it did have a heavy human, more dra­matic ele­ment in the form of each episode’s character-​​centric back story arcs. It wasn’t until late sea­son 2 that things really began to take a turn for the spec­u­la­tive. And even then, it was sub­tle, just a few ele­ments. But as the show has pro­gressed, it’s become clear that the entire foun­da­tion of what the show is about is sci­ence fic­tion (or at least sci­ence fantasy).

But as each sea­son has gone on, it has been increas­ingly impos­si­ble for even the most deter­mined to deny that Lost is, at its roots, a sci­ence fic­tion show. You could call the tech­niques they used to grab their audi­ence bait-​​and-​​switch, because the show cre­ators intro­duced the heavy spec­u­la­tive ele­ments slowly. I’d also call it the frog in a pot of boil­ing water accli­ma­tion method.

My coworker, the Lost fan

An anec­dote: I have a coworker who hates sci­ence fic­tion. In his words, he likes “real things.” He despises super­hero movies, and pretty much every­thing a SF fan loves. Early on, the show cre­ators of Lost said in an inter­view that every­thing pre­sented on the show had a ground­ing in real sci­ence (some­thing that at this point is highly debat­able). Still– my coworker clung to this state­ment like it was a life pre­server. It allowed him to keep watch­ing the show no mat­ter how fan­tas­tic things got, because it was still some­how “real.” At this point in the fourth sea­son, he’s pissed off, because he real­izes that state­ment was total bull­shit. But he’s still watch­ing, and still hooked.

The rea­son? A good mys­tery is com­pelling no mat­ter what other genre tropes you add to the stew of your story. The char­ac­ters, after 3 com­plete sea­sons, are sym­pa­thetic and well-​​known. All the foun­da­tions of a good story are there, to the point that, despite my coworker hat­ing every­thing there is to hate about sci­ence fic­tion, he is still a huge fan of the show.

This is a good exam­ple of how genre is becom­ing the main­stream. For those fans who would like to see the genre remain dis­tinct and sep­a­rate, I think this turn of events is going to be a mas­sive dis­ap­point­ment. Reviewing the past events of the show, it almost looks as if the show cre­ators delib­er­ately plot­ted out their intro­duc­tion of SF tropes to cre­ate the frog in a pot of boil­ing water effect.

What’s espe­cially fan­tas­tic in my mind is that Lost hasn’t given us SF-​​lite. It slowly intro­duced the ele­ments, yes, but they are not watered down to be more palat­able. We have full-​​fledged weird­ness here. This is a show that Charles Fort would watch and clap his hands with glee.

The poten­tial for new fans

By the time Lost com­pletes its arc, there is going to be a whole new audi­ence primed to accept our stranger ideas. New TV shows will come along to take advan­tage of this, but maybe, just maybe, SF pub­lish­ers can lure some of them in too. Frankly, you could do worse than adding even 1% of Lost’s fan­base to your read­er­ship. You could do a hell of a lot worse.

I’m sure there are down­sides to the main­stream­ing of SF tropes. It makes us feel less spe­cial and unique, maybe. But as a work­ing cre­ative, I will just have to swal­low my pride on that one. With this kind of poten­tial for fans out there, it gives me hope that we could actu­ally make a good liv­ing telling genre sto­ries, and not just the ones mar­keted to an aging, increas­ingly con­ser­v­a­tive SF fanbase.

But then, maybe I’m all wrong

But then, the decline in rat­ings that Lost is suf­fer­ing right now might be an indi­ca­tor that the broader audi­ence of Lost has been alien­ated by the spec­u­la­tive aspects of the show. For the week of May 4, the show didn’t even break the top 20. There may be many rea­sons why this show is falling in the rat­ings. And even if it is pop­u­lar by genre show stan­dards, it pales in com­par­i­son to real­ity shows involv­ing danc­ing and singing.