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This American Life

568: Human Spectacle

This American Life

This American Life

Society & Culture, News, Politics, Arts

4.688.8K Ratings

🗓️ 28 April 2024

⏱️ 59 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Gladiators in the Colosseum. Sideshow performers. Reality television. We've always loved to gawk at the misery or majesty of others. But this week, we ask the question: What's it like when the tables are turned and all eyes are on you?

  • Prologue: Ira talks to Joel Gold, a psychologist and author, about a strangely common delusion known as the "Truman Show Delusion," in which patients believe that they are being filmed, 24/7, for a national reality television program. (6 minutes)
  • Act One: Producer Stephanie Foo speaks to Nasubi, a Japanese comedian who, in the 90s, just wanted a little bit of fame. So he was thrilled when he won an opportunity to have his own segment on a Japanese reality TV show. Until he found out the premise: he had to sit in an empty apartment with no food, clothes or contact with the outside world, enter sweepstakes from magazines… and hope that he won enough sustenance to survive. (23 minutes)
  • Act Two: Writer Ariel Sabar tells the story of Roger Barker, a psychologist who believed humans should be studied outside the lab. So Barker dispatched an army of graduate students to follow the children of Oskaloosa, Kansas, and write down every single thing they did. Sabar wrote a book about Roger Barker called "The Outsider." (8 minutes)
  • Act Three: Charlie Brill and Mitzi McCall were a comedy duo back in the mid-1960s, playing clubs around Los Angeles, when their agent called to tell them he'd landed them the gig of a lifetime: They were going to be on The Ed Sullivan Show. The only problem was that their performance was a total fiasco, for a bunch of reasons, including one they never saw coming. David Segal reports. (17 minutes)

Transcripts are available at thisamericanlife.org

Transcript

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0:00.0

In October 2003, a guy was brought into the psychiatric emergency room at Bellevue Hospital in New York City.

0:07.0

Dr. Joel Gold was the chief attending psychiatrist that day and saw him.

0:11.0

He felt that his life was essentially a reality show that he's

0:15.4

been recorded for years that everyone in his life was an actor reading from a

0:21.4

script and he came to New York essentially to test this

0:25.8

hypothesis. He thought that maybe 9-11 was faked just to get a reaction out of him

0:30.7

on reality TV and if he came to New York, and if the World Trade Centers were still standing,

0:36.0

he would know that that was in fact the case.

0:38.0

If in fact they had been destroyed, then he would admit that perhaps he was delusional.

0:43.4

Though once he got to New York, instead of visiting the Twin Towers, he walked into the

0:46.9

United Nations and asked for asylum. Asylum from a TV show.

0:51.4

They was filming him without his consent 24 hours a day which you know

0:55.6

is how he ended up in Bellevue. Dr. Gold didn't think much of this people show up

1:00.3

at Bellevue with lots of weird delusions all the time. And then a few months later another

1:04.5

guy walks in with the same idea, that he was being filmed 24-7 and broadcast around the world.

1:10.2

And the second guy, like the first one, mentioned a film,

1:13.0

the 1998 movie The Truman Show.

1:15.4

Both of them named the Truman Show, you know, by name.

1:19.4

They said, my life is like the Truman Show.

1:22.5

Truman is played by Jim Carrey.

1:24.3

He's filmed all day, every day, on a program that has broadcast to billions of people around the

1:29.0

globe.

...

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