It’s Thursday evening, 7:30pm, and millions of pale, fifty-something-year-old housewife toes are warmly settled in stokies across the country, ready to live their imaginary lives through a few indefatigable paragons of upper-middleclass waspish style. Yes, it’s Top Billing time. Time for vicarious television lives for those who need an aspirational injection of money-culture.
As soon as I see Mike Mol’s purposeful walk into shot, screen left past a green settee that, in a few minutes, will be termed “functional, yet aesthetically pleasing”, I begin to feel anxious.
But it’s not only the presenters who challenge my couch-time composure (I do try to not get worked up, but always fail), the voice-over guys are even worse. How did Top Billing become a retirement home for has-been Radio 5 DJs? I used to love Phil Wright and Alex Jay when I was 14. Now they talk to me like I talk to my cat. And even he looks at me funny. The more I listen to them the more I think the viewer isn’t given a chance to decide what is significant for herself. The faked lilts and accentuations riding on their artificially energetic cadence tell us exactly what we are supposed to consider humorous, poignant, enviable, frivolous, desirable etc. Are we so daft that we need this didactic, spoon-fed TV? I almost expect them to talk down to us like a condescending aunt who finishes your sentences for you. Except here they start them for you too. It’s like we’ve been drawn unwittingly into a state of infantilism; we become children of “lifestyle” programming. And it never ceases to amaze me how they can state the obvious with so much conviction. Sometimes so enthusiastically that it can make you reconsider the simplest facts. You become inclined to doubt the validity of a truism merely because it's so difficult to believe that something so self-evident can actually be expressed with such satisfaction.
Although I can’t stand it, I can imagine how Top Billing works like an amphetamine. People wait in anticipation for the Thursday evening hit, get a huge high from the places they’re taken (basically out of their own lives), followed by a depressing comedown when it slowly dawns on them how far removed their life is from what they’ve just seen. Maybe I’m totally wrong and the programme just serves to fuel the viewer’s unrelenting drive towards the South Africash dream. Either way, is this programme a much-needed, light-hearted distraction from the everyday troubles we face in this country? Or is it a blinkered kick in the guts to those same troubles? Or can it be both simultaneously? Maybe when I’m a fifty-year old, addicted, infantilised viewer, I’ll have a quick answer to that.
6 comments:
Brilliant!
I can't stand all that smiling and all those hand gestures, it's such a fake program. Evening dresses in someones house?? How 90s!!
Heehee, I am in the UK at the moment, is Top Billing STILL going strong??? And still with Mr Moll? Good grief, it actually give me comfort to know that things don't change.
Unfortunately it still is! I think it's officially the longest running SABC show ever... to our detriment.
Back in the day, I thought Top Billing was fairly decent. I enjoyed the movie stuff. But somehow it's been reduced to an absolute yawn fest. I can handle Michael Mol's super corniness (apparently he writes his own lines) and even Ursula's permanent Colgate smile. But Jeannie D and those two pretty-boy DIY guys drive me mad. (Why is it so hard for those boys to keep their shirts on? I'm not complaining, mind you. Just wondering.)
Yeah - it's pretty awful. And all those wedding inserts of faux-celebrities. They're really scraping the bottom of the barrel these days.
Anyway, nice to see you back in action, Ant. :)
Yuck. I actually thought exactly the same thing when he did that whole "glass house" bit last night. Thank you for this post, it's made my day.
No way Mr Mol writes his own lines! Haha. I saw it the other day and he fancies himself a bit of a comedian these days too. And yes exactly about those DIY guys!! I was going to include that in my rant!
I didn't see the glass house thing, but I'm glad the post made your day!
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