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AMERICA'S FUNNIEST
HOME VIDEOS
 Bob Saget Photo courtesy of Vin Di Bona Productions HOST
Bob
Saget
PRODUCERS
Vin
Di Bona, Steve Paskay
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
ABC
January
1990-- Sunday 8:00-8:30
U.S. Reality/Comedy
A peculiar variant
of reality-based television programming, America's Funniest Home
Videos (AHFV), first aired as a Thanksgiving special in 1989,
and later debuted on 14 January 1990 as a regular series on ABC.
The show still maintains respectable ratings in its sixth season
and is due for syndication in 1995 by MTM Television Distribution.
The program's simple premise--to solicit and exhibit a series of
humorous video clips shot by amateurs who compete for cash prizes--has
had a surprisingly enduring run in its half-hour slot at 7:00 P.M.
in the Sunday night schedule.
Rooted generally
in the sub-genre of its comical, voyeuristic predecessors, such
as Candid Camera, TV's Bloopers and Practical Jokes,
and Life's Most Embarrassing Moments, AFHV more particularly
owes its genesis to a weekly variety show produced by the Tokyo
Broadcasting Company, Fun with Ken and Kato Chan, which featured
a segment in which viewers were invited to mail in their home video
clips. Vin Di Bona, who had earlier success with other TBC properties,
eventually purchased U.S. rights to the Japanese concept. As executive
producer, Di Bona expanded the segment into a half-hour hybrid of
home video, variety show, stand up comedy, and audience participation
synthesized to fit the ABC profile of family viewing.
Although indebted
to a prevalence of reality-based programs when it debuted, AFHV
had a far greater and more immediate impact on weekly ratings than
any of its predecessors or imitators. Cracking the Nielsen Top 5
after only six episodes, by March of 1990 it had become the number
one ranked series, temporarily unseating CBS's 60 Minutes,
a feat no other ABC program had been able to achieve in twelve years.
Since then, it has regularly won its time period among children,
teenagers, and women and men ages 18 to 34.
At the series'
peak of popularity, producers reported receiving close to 2,000
video submissions a day. These tapes, eventually sorted out by screeners
for broadcast approval, must meet criteria that render them suitable
for family audiences. First and foremost, qualifying videos should
portray funny, amazing, or unexpected events in everyday life, such
as animal antics, blunders at birthday parties, bloopers during
wedding ceremonies, and fouled plays at sporting events. Because
the series emphasizes the supposed universality and spontaneity
of slapstick humor, tapes that depict extreme violence, offensive
conduct, and serious physical injury, or that encourage imitative
behavior, are strictly forbidden. Deliberately staged videos, such
as parodies of advertisements or lip-synching of popular songs,
may be accepted, but in general events rigged to look accidental
or spontaneous are disqualified (or were reserved for Di Bona's
follow-up program, America's Funniest People, now defunct,
but created especially to accommodate staged video performances).
Once a clip
is approved, its creators and performers must sign releases for
broadcast authorization. Then follows a process during which clips
are adjusted for uniform quality and matched in terms of production
values; are embellished with sound effects and wisecracking voice-overs
by host Bob Saget; are organized as a montage related to a loose
theme (e.g. dogs, talent shows, skiing); and finally, are nestled
into the format of the program. Each episode is first taped before
a live studio audience, during which the clips are broadcast upon
studio monitors so that the series' producers can gauge audience
reaction. After subsequent reviews of the taping, producers pass
on their recommendations to the staff, who edit out the less successful
moments before the program is broadcast nationwide. Although labor-intensive,
this method of television production is a relative bargain, costing
less per episode than the average sitcom, and of course was soon
imitated (for example, by Fox's Totally Hidden Video).
Television critics
have been somewhat puzzled by the continued success of AFHV,
many having panned the series as yet another illustration of the
American public's increasing willingness to broadcast their most
private and embarrassing moments. Several hypotheses for the series'
popularity have been cited: the urge of the viewing public to get
on television in order to secure their fifteen minutes of fame;
the possibility of winning a $10,000 cash prize; the all expenses
paid weekend trip to Hollywood to attend studio tapings; the charisma
of host Bob Saget, the first performer since Arthur Godfrey to star
in two concurrent, high-rated series (the other being Full House);
the universal identification with everyday life fundamental to home
movies and home video; and the sheer fun of producing television
about and for oneself. The series' producers, however, cite the
program's humor as the key to its success. Taking the "Bullwinkle
approach" that provokes different kinds of laughter from both children
and their parents, AFHV not only seeks to attract a wide
demographic, but self-consciously mocks itself as insignificant,
harmless fun.
Despite its
overt lack of pretension, AFHV remains significant on several
accounts, especially its international origins and appeal. Banking
upon the perceived cross-cultural universality of home video productions,
Di Bona had conceived of the series as international from its inception.
AFHV can be seen in at least 70 countries and in more than
a dozen languages (it is rumored to be the favorite show of the
Sultan of Brunei). Di Bona has subsequently sold the format rights
to producers in other nations, at least 16 of which have created
their own versions, while others merely replace Saget with indigenous
hosts. Most international affiliates also have clip trade agreements;
AFHV itself liberally blends domestic and imported clips
(blurring the title's emphasis on "America" and pointing to television's
partnership in global capitalism).
Also
significant is the series' premise that the typical consumers of
television may become its producers--that the modes of television
reception and production are more dialogic than unidirectional.
This inversion, as well as the format's unique hybridization of
genres, results in peculiar effects worthy of investigation: the
professional's commissioning of the amateur for commercial exploitation;
the home video's simultaneous status as folk art and mass media;
the promise of reward through competition that re-inflects the home
mode of production's typical naiveté and non-commercial motivation
with formal contrivance and financial incentives; the stress on
comedy which excludes the banal everyday activities most typical
of home video; and, finally, the format's allowance for a studio
audience to vote for and reward their favorite video clip, maintaining
the illusion of home video's folksy character, while the ten thousand
dollar first prize reifies the slapstick conventions which the producers
seek and that keep home viewers tuning in.
-James
Moran
FURTHER
READING
"Bob
Saget, the Host with the Most on His Busy, Busy Mind." People
Weekly (New York), 26 March 1990.
Coe, Steve. "Home Is Where the Video Is." Broadcasting and Cable
(Washington, D.C.), 12 April 1993.
Delsohn, Steve. "The Hip, Low-Key Host of This Season's Most Surprising
Hit." TV Guide (Radnor, Pennsylvania), 31 March 1990).
Elm, Joanna and Lisa Schwartzbaum. "Tonight's Hot Story Is Brought
To You.By You! How the Camcorder is Changing TV Newscasts." TV
Guide (Radnor, Pennsylvania), 24 February 1990.
Fore, Steve. "America, America, This Is You!: The Curious Case of
America's Funniest Home Videos." Journal of Popular Film and
Television (Washington, D.C.) Spring 1993.
Goldman,
Kevin. "60 Minutes Show Beaten in Ratings by Home Videos." Wall
Street Journal (New York), 27 February 1990.
Hiltbrand, David. "America's Funniest Home Videos." People Weekly
(New York), 5 March 1990.
Kaufman, Joanne. "America, Let's Go To Tape!" People Weekly
(New York), 26 March 1990.
Lippman,
John. "ABC To Warn Viewers About Risky Videos; The Network Was Prompted
by Mounting Criticism About Safety of Some Acts in Its Mega-Hit,
America's Funniest Home Videos." Los Angeles Times, 14 April
1990.
Lyons,
Jeffrey. "The Best Of America's Funniest Home Videos." Video
Review (New York), August 1991.
Rachlin,
Jill. "Behind the Screens at TV's Funniest New Show." Ladies'
Home Journal (New York), June 1990.
Sackett,
Susan. "America's Funniest Home Videos." Prime Time Hits: Television's
Most Popular Network Programs, 1950 to the Present. New York,
Billboard Books, 1993.
Sherwood,
Rick. "The Hollywood Reporter Salutes America's Funniest Home Videos
On Its 100th Episode." The Hollywood Reporter (Los Angeles),
19 November 1991.
"That's a Wrap: America's Funniest Home Videos: Funniest New TV
Show." U. S. News and World Report (Washington, D.C.), 9
July 1990.
Waters,
Harry F. "Revenge of the Couch Potatoes: The Outrageous Success
of America's Funniest Home Videos Proves That Any Fool Can Be a
Star." Newsweek (New York), 5 March 1990.
Zoglin,
Richard. "America's Funniest Home Videos." Time (New York),
5 March 1990.
See
also Camcorder
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