The unreality show
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TONIGHTâS return of âThe Simple Lifeâ on E! Entertainment briefly recaps the showâs fourth season, which was marred by a feud between its stars, Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie. The goal this season was to get the women back together again, so Paris is shown offering an olive branch by ringing Nicole to wish her a happy birthday. âI mean, Iâm just like in shock right now that weâre even talking on the phone,â says Nicole, glimpsed lounging poolside somewhere above the Sunset Strip.
âThe Simple Lifeâ is allegedly a reality show, whatever that term means nowadays. But only a real-life hermit would fail to notice that the happy setup for Season 5 skips over a few inconvenient truths -- such as Nicoleâs reported stay last fall at an âundisclosed private facilityâ for weight-related medical problems (sheâs vehemently denied having an eating disorder) as well as Parisâ 45-day jail sentence, imposed by a court earlier this month, after she violated terms of her probation for a DUI arrest last fall (authorities later said sheâd serve about 23 days, starting early next month).
Nicoleâs problems in particular delayed production for months. Even when filming finally began in March, she suffered an illness that briefly landed her in the hospital -- two more bits of reality that went missing from tonightâs premiere. But then, facts are fungible on âThe Simple Life.â The debut will include a disclaimer that the footage of Paris and Nicoleâs telephone reconciliation was actually âre-created for dramatic purposes,â an E! spokeswoman says.
Life these days is getting less and less simple for the âSimple Lifeâ gals, who are even attracting A-list political attention, albeit not of the friendly variety. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger airily dismissed Parisâ recent plea for a pardon; meanwhile, in his new book, âThe Assault on Reason,â Al Gore slams the news media for giving short shrift to serious issues such as the Iraq war in favor of the attention-seeking Paris and Nicole, whom he cites by name as part of âa new pattern of serial obsessions that periodically take over the airwaves for weeks at a time.â
At the risk of underscoring Goreâs complaint (well, this is the entertainment section, after all), now may be the appropriate time to ask: Has âThe Simple Lifeâ -- initially meant as a nonscripted goof on âGreen Acres,â with a flaky blond debutante and her mean-girl sidekick who are forced to mix it up with regular folks -- moved past the point of funny to the general vicinity of sad? Paris and Nicole remain reality TVâs most notorious and recognizable duo, each of whom has used âThe Simple Lifeâ as a steppingstone for a wide range of business ventures -- in Parisâ case that includes a semi-successful pop album, branded perfumes and handbags. But the gap between the ârealityâ of the pairâs lives on the show and the reality of their actual lives as depicted in news accounts is becoming a bit too wide to bridge.
In the season premiere of âThe Simple Life Goes to Campâ -- which plants the duo as guffawing and not particularly empathic counselors at, of all things, a weight-loss camp -- Nicole repeatedly complains about inaccuracies in news stories and tries to characterize reports about her rumored anorexia as a cultural lack of size acceptance, akin to the insults suffered by the obese.
Executive producer Jonathan Murray says that the show ignores the duoâs other real-life problems, though, because their magnitude wasnât apparent during filming. âWhen we were shooting this, they really werenât on the horizon,â Murray says of Parisâ legal woes. (Paris was arrested for suspected drunk driving in September and five months later was picked up for speeding and other moving violations, which authorities say broke her probation agreement. Parisâ personal publicist referred questions to her manager, who didnât return a call seeking comment.)
Tellingly, tonightâs season premiere ends with a late-night scene in which Paris and Nicole attempt to break open a padlocked refrigerator by hitching it to the back of a car and driving recklessly at high speeds, laughing all the way.
Ted Harbert, the president of E! Entertainment, reiterated the notion that âreality TVâ is a loose concept, particularly when youâre talking about celebrities as famous as Paris and Nicole. âYoung women, in particular, are drawn to them,â he says. âThe show doesnât deal with anything else in their personal lives. Itâs a comedy.â
Thereâs no question that Paris and Nicole have real fans. Paris in particular is a subject of intense fascination, whether or not Al Gore approves. Much of the interest stems, of course, from her famous last name and its associations with wealth and privilege. Then thereâs her amateur sex tape that surfaced a few years back. Since then, sheâs cultivated her own brand of celebrity crypto-inscrutability, making herself ubiquitous while revealing as little as possible of her personal credo and convictions, assuming she actually nurtures such things. Paris offers merely the outline of a persona; viewers are obliged to color in the rest by themselves.
âSheâs like the quintessence of superficiality,â says USC professor Leo Braudy, author of âThe Frenzy of Renown: Fame and Its History.â
But the fame that Paris and Nicole enjoy is of the high-wire, deeply conflicted, could-be-over-at-any-moment sort.
For millions of Americans, Paris and Nicole are convenient targets of scorn and ridicule -- virtual shorthand for the idiotic celebrity culture that Gore laments. When Fox News Channel wanted to hand CNNâs Anderson Cooper the ultimate dis, it referred to him as âthe Paris Hilton of TV news.â Last week, the Internet gambling site GottaBet.com hawked its own line of wagers surrounding Parisâ jail stay (âWill a prison sex tape be released?â âWill she have a moving violation within six months of exiting jail?â). And this summer, author Jerry Oppenheimer, a specialist in celebrity hatchet jobs, will unleash âHouse of Hilton: From Conrad to Paris: A Drama of Wealth, Power, and Privilege,â which, according to Publishers Weekly, will make readers âshudder to hear that such a privileged family could be so shockingly uneducated and uncouth.â
As Braudy says, âThereâs always been disgust with certain forms of celebrity.â He compares Parisâ antics with those of heiresses Barbara Hutton, the âpoor little rich girlâ once married to Cary Grant, and Gloria Vanderbilt, the fashion designer who happens to be the mother of CNNâs Cooper.
Murray, for his part, compares Paris with another famous blond: Princess Diana. Like Diana, he says, Paris has a mysterious connection with ordinary people. And like Diana, she has suffered the slings and arrows of the tabloid press.
âYou build anyone up, you also get people who try to tear you down,â Murray says.
Of course, Diana never starred in a prime-time reality series, let alone one thatâs staggering into its fifth season as the personal lives of its stars risk implosion. But the TV industry, seemingly like Paris, isnât big on regret, caution or introspection.
âI think these are some of the funniest episodes weâve had,â Murray says. âI think the concept still works. Clearly these are not the same people they were when we started this. Itâs fun to watch them, in a way, growing up.â
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