Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Donald Trump, Professional Wresting, and Reality TV

In a September 2016 article about the Donald Trump campaign, Salena Zito noted that when the soon-to-be president makes counterfactual statements, “the press takes him literally, but not seriously; his supporters take him seriously, but not literally.” This turn of phrase became widely used by pundits to describe the popularity of Trump and his ultimate success in the November 2016 election. The notion of taking something seriously but not literally easily applies to two phenomena in popular culture with which Trump is quite familiar—popular wrestling and reality television. To both of these cultural institutions, ostensibly savvy critics denigrate them by pointing out that neither of them are “real.” As with Trump, to question the reality of pro wrestling or reality television is to engage on the wrong register—the reality of each is beside the point. While wrestling and reality TV may not be real, their fans maintain a strong affective relationship to the characters and the morality plays that structure their narratives. These audiences are already primed to think about truth in ways that are seemingly incompatible with rational truth, and thus were able to see the appeal of Trump while pedantic fact-checkers were busy taking him literally. In this paper, I attempt to take Donald Trump seriously using the logic of professional wrestling and reality television, and to show the ways that all rethink and reconfigure the logic of reality and ultimately the consequences of that for representative politics.
In a 2015 Think Process article, Judd Ledlum offered this provocative clickbait: “This French Philosopher is the Only One who Can Explain the Donald Trump Phenomenon.” Ledlum reads Trump through the semiotician Roland Barthes and the theorist’s reading of professional wrestling. Writing in 2015, very early in the presidential campaign, he notes that “in the current campaign, Trump is behaving like a professional wrestler while Trump’s opponents are conducting the race like a boxing match.” Barthes notes the distinction between a boxing match and a wrestling match, the former is focused on the outcome, while the latter is concerned with the spectacle of individual moments and is ultimately unconcerned with who wins. He writes that “wrestling is a sum of spectacles, of which no single one is a function: each moment imposes the total knowledge of a passion which rises erect and alone, without ever extending to the crowning moment of a result” (16). This logic applied to the debates, after most of which pundits declared that Trump had surely lost, and would subsequently fall in the polls and lose the election. Just as the public for a pro-wrestling match does not ultimately care who wins or loses, the logic of Trumpism holds that he wins by simply being the center of attention. He flaunted this logic during the Republican debates involving many candidates on stage. Trump was always situated in the center and received the most questions and the most media attention—that was what mattered to him. In a blogpost for Salon, Chauncey Devega argues that traditional media institutions were not prepared for a candidate who defined winning and losing by the amount of press coverage that he received. He writes that “supposed journalistic standards of balance and neutrality were ill-equipped to deal with a presidential candidate who learned from reality TV and professional wrestling that the way to win is to always keep the camera focused on him.” Trump’s multiple encounters with professional wrestling and his long tenure on reality show prepared him to strive for attention at all costs even if it meant sometimes playing the part of the heel.
            Ledlum is not the only pundit to associate Trump with professional wrestling, and the President’s past in which he hosted wrestling events, infamously shaved the head of WWE president Steve McMahon with the help of “Stone Cold” Steve Austin, and was eventually inducted into the pro-wrestling Hall of Fame encourage those connections. In the midst of the campaign, Aaron Oaster penned an article for Rolling Stone titled “Donald Trump and WWE: How the Road to the White House Began at ‘WrestleMania.’” Vann Newkirk’s Atlantic article from the campaign was titled “Donald Trump, Wrestling Heel,” and a Chris Kelly piece in the Washington Post notes in the wake of the election that “sometimes the heel wins.” In The New York Times, Jeremy Gordon asks “Is Everything Wrestling” and argues that the performed reality of the wrestling ring now proliferates in many aspects of contemporary society. Gordon writes:  “With each passing year, more and more facets of popular culture become something like wrestling: a stage-managed ‘reality’ in which scripted stories bleed freely into real events, with the blurry line between truth and untruth seeming to heighten, not lessen, the audience’s addiction to the melodrama.” Donald Trump invites his supporters and the media to indulge in this world in which reality and ‘reality’ comingle. He insists that thousands of Muslims in New Jersey celebrated 9/11. He asks the public to disbelieve visual evidence about the number of attendees at his inauguration, and his Press Secretary assures journalists that the unemployment numbers were bogus during the Obama Administration, but suddenly were accurate once he took office. Sean Spicer quipped: “They may have been phony in the past, but it’s very real now.” Spicer and the journalists at the press conference laughed at this moment when the Press Secretary, and the humor stemmed from the savvy acknowledgement that Spicer was involved in the construction of reality. They all recognized that the strange ritual of a press conference is no different from a pro wrestling match in the way in which its reality is constituted by a mutual understanding between the performers and the audience.
            Ironically, though Trump offered a version of truth that did not always conform to the confines of objective reality, his authenticity was one of the qualities that supporters cited as a reason to vote for him. Silicon Valley tycoon Peter Thiel, one of Trump’s more famous supporters, uses wrestling terminology to explain Trump’s success. In an interview with the New York Times’ Maureen Dowd, he maintains that “many people assumed Mr. Trump was “kayfabe” — a move that looks real but is fake. But then his campaign turned into a “shoot” — the word for an unscripted move that suddenly becomes real.” He goes on to note that “maybe pro-wrestling is one of the most real things we have in our society and what’s really disturbing is that the other stuff is much more fake. And whatever the superficialities of Mr. Trump might be, he was more authentic than the other politicians.” French theorist Jean Baurdillard presaged this move in his 1983 essay “The Precession of Simulacra.” He writes that “when the real is no longer what it was, nostalgia assumes its full meaning. There is a plethora of myths of origin and of signs of reality—a plethora of truth, of secondary objectivity, and authenticity” (6-7). Trump’s “authenticity” exists in the same way Thiel suggests that pro-wrestling is one of the most real things we have in society. Like Trump, it’s meant to be taken seriously, not literally. Just as Baudrillard contends that Disneyland exists as imaginary to convince its consumers that the rest of Los Angeles is indeed real, pro-wrestling exists as fake in order to convince its audience that the rest of the world is indeed real. Trump’s authenticity is a secondary authenticity that is produced and constructed like wrestling’s kayfabe.
            Scholar Benjamin Litherland examines the notion of kayfabe, specifically its complicated role in the multi-mediated experience of contemporary professional wrestling. Litherland explains that the term comes from old carnival slang and “refers to the practice of sustaining the in-diegesis performance into everyday life” (531). While he does not write about Trump, he does talk about the ways in which Twitter, Trump’s medium of choice, complicates the relationship between a celebrity’s real self and their persona. In Litherland’s schema, Twitter calls into question any distinction between a celebrity’s true self. For him, “the borders of diegesis and ‘in’ and ‘out’ of character performance are stretched to breaking, especially in the wake of structured reality television genres. The complexities of kayfabe, therefore, may serve as a useful starting point for considering the layers of performance in modern celebrity, both on Twitter and beyond” (533). Trump uses the ambiguity of Twitter as a means of allowing himself to play multiple roles and to create a gap between the presidential Trump who appears in meetings in the Oval Office, and his Twitter handle, which is ostensibly the same as his presidential persona, but through which he can blur the lines between reality and celebrity in ways consistent with WWE performances and reality performances.
            Gregory Quinn specifically links Donald Trump with the practice of kayfabe in a piece for the blog Bullshitist. He asserts that “Donald Trump is our first kayfabe president” and goes on to note that while wrestling is fake “it’s complicated fake. It’s fakeness treated as real.” The complicated nature of the fake stems from the fact that the performers do not break character or break kayfabe. Many in the media keep hoping or assuming that Trump will break character and “pivot” to being more presidential. They assume that it’s in the best interest of Trump to transition from his role as “heel,” to one that assumes the more traditional “face” status of the president or one that more closely resembles who he is. They see his undisciplined Tweets, acknowledge that they’re “part of the act,” but assume that at some point he’ll move beyond the character or caricature of himself who appears undisciplined, buffoonish, and potentially unhinged. The astute wrestling fan understands that such a pivot is unlikely, and even if it does momentarily seem that Trump is playing the role of the Face or the good guy, the potential for a heel turn persists. Trump has committed to the role of performer and the logic of kayfabe; a similar logic undergirds reality television, the genre in which Trump played his most famous role.
            Scholars of reality television have linked the genre to professional wrestling. Mark Andrejevic references an MTV show called Tough Enough which is a pro-wrestling themed reality show. He notes that “the marriage of these two formats seems particularly appropriate, since pro wrestling represents the culmination of the demise of symbolic efficacy: it thematizes cynical savviness by not even trying to make viewers believe the action is real” (226). The consumer of both reality television and pro-wrestling knows very well that the events are staged, but nevertheless participates in the conditions that construct reality. Andrejevic goes on to say that “the impasse of the savvy subject position is that, even as it collapses the imaginary into the real, it remains locked into the desperate search for some reality that would sustain its dismissal” (212). In this schema, the consumer of reality television and professional wrestling continues to crave something authentic despite knowing very well that the authentic is exactly that which is being produced and manipulated in these genres. The Trump supporter lauds their candidate because he “tells it like it is,” despite knowing full well that what Trump says does not have any basis in objective reality. The Trump opponent becomes frustrated because they can see through the ruse, but is playing the game on the wrong terrain. The former is taking him seriously, the latter is taking him literally.
             The rise of Trump occurs against a backdrop of popular culture in which reality television has become normalized and established as an entertainment genre. Trump has of course been in the reality show business since 2004, and for two decades before that he gained his celebrity and notoriety through tabloids and televised magazine shows such as Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous, which are forbearers of reality TV’s halcyon days in the 2000s. Writing in the 2000s in “Training Camps of the Modular,” scholar Barry King notes that “reality TV advances its own reality principle which is based on notions of authenticity and the value of exposing the ‘false’ faces that the participants present to the camera” (43). For him, the crucial aspect of this reality principle is that “truth is to be found in the subjective and personal.” The notion of truth being subjective is paramount to Trumpism and has its roots in theories of postmodernism and reality television. Kellyanne Conway’s coinage of the term “alternative facts” exemplifies the postmodern undercurrents of Trumpism. In the blog Quartz, Max de Haldevang identifies Trumpism as postmodernism and makes a distinction between politicians who massage the truth or “spin” the facts; instead, “Trump has moved beyond that, ushering in an era where truth plays literally no bearing on what he says.” Astonishingly, this strategy was effective in elevating Trump to the presidency, and while it’s too early to tell if it will foster a successful presidency, Trump and his administration show no signs of realigning themselves with a more traditional notion of truth.
As a genre, reality television has often been linked to postmodernism in part because of the ways that it reconfigures truth and reality. Randall Rose and Stacy Wood make the connection between reality television and postmodernism explicit in “Paradox and the Consumption of Authenticity through Reality Television.” They outline what they call the postmodern paradox in which “although authenticity is desired and earnestly promoted, consumers of reality television revel in the ironic mixture of the factitious and the spontaneous” (286). Like the postmodern pleasure that Rose and Wood suggest provides pleasure for the reality television viewer, Trump supporters, and indeed the media who play a part in this morality play, luxuriate in Trump’s ability to meld the factitious and the spontaneous. The most intriguing version of Donald Trump is when he is making “off the cuff” remarks rather than reading off of a teleprompter, or he his Tweeting with little discipline at odd hours of the day or night. What is real or true becomes secondary to what Trump feels at any given moment.

Both professional wrestling and reality television create staged events in which the audience is heavily invested despite knowing that the events are not real, or rather, they complicate the notion of objective reality. Political media events such as debates are inherently imbued with a level of gravitas because they portend to real consequences in the real world. Despite the supposed gravitas, however, the media eschew policy for style, and reward candidates who can dominate a crowded stage or those who say outlandish or shocking things. In a Salon thinkpiece, Sonia Saraiya subtitles her piece “Hate-Watching the GOP: The Debates are Officially Trashy Reality TV, and by those Rules, Trump’s Winning.” Writing in the middle of the seemingly never-ending primary debate season, Saraiya acknowledges the staged aspects of the debates, noting that “it’s all theater, and more to the point, it’s theater that refuses to acknowledge that it’s theater.” Her piece was written in the wake of perhaps the most surreal debate moments in which Trump and Marco Rubio exchanged jabs about the size of each other’s hands and insinuations about the size of their penises. That debate was indeed great theater, but I question whether it did not acknowledge itself as such. Perhaps the moderators and political pundits acted as if this had any semblance of a storied tradition of American democracy, but Trump was deeply aware of the theatrical elements of his performance. In the wake of an earlier debate in which Megan Kelly grilled him for his past transgressions against women, Trump responded that “I frankly don’t have time for political correctness.” He goes on to state that “frankly, what I say, and oftentimes it’s fun, it’s kidding. We have a good time.” Here Trump tries to elide his horrible behavior towards women by maintain that he was “kidding.” Here, Trump is getting at the crux of his campaign. He chastised anyone for taking him literally and suggests that voters should not take those words seriously; however, his supporters understand that the “serious” issue is political correctness run amok, so he’s able to allow people to take him seriously while maintaining that he’s kidding. Rhetorical scholar Paul Johnson responds to Trump’s exchange with Kelly by noting that “the inability of all those captured by political correctness—to distinguish between sincere commentary and joking tacitly figures Trump as the avatar of authenticity, the actor capable of exercising judgement about what matters and what does not” (21). Once Trump is able to determine which issues are important—which should be taken seriously, he controls the terrain of the contest, and the terrain on which he wants to compete is that of reality television.

Works Cited
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Barthes, Roland. “The World of Wrestling.” Mythologies. New York: Hill & Wang, 1972. Print.
Baudrillard, Jean. Trans. Sheila Faria Glaser. “The Precession of Simulacra.” Simulation and Simulacra. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1994.
De Haldevang, Max. “Trump is the Ultimate Postmodern Presidential Candidate—And He’s Been a Long Time Coming.” Quartz. 23 Sep. 2016. Web. 12 Apr. 2017.
Dowd, Maureen. “Peter Theil, Trump’s Tech Pal, Explains Himself.” New York Times. 11 Jan. 2017. Web. 8 April 2017.
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Johnson, Paul. “A Return to Demagoguery: Donald Trump’s Challenge to Democracy.” Academia.edu 2016.
Kelly, Chris. “What Donald Trump Learned about Politics from Wrestling.” Washington Post. 11 Nov. 2017. Web. 8 Apr. 2017.
King, Barry. “Training Camps of the Modular: Reality TV as a Form of Life.” How Real is Reality TV?: Essays on Representation and Truth. Ed. Escoffery, David S. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, 2006.
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Litherland, Benjamin. “Breaking kayfabe is Easy, Cheap, and Never Entertaining: Twitter Rivalries in Professional Wrestling.” Celebrity Studies 5.4 (2014): 531-33.
Newkirk II, Vann R. “Donald Trump: Wrestling Heel.” 15 Mar. 2016. Web. 8 Apr. 2017.
Oster, Aaron. “Donald Trump and WWE: How the Road to the White House Began at ‘WrestleMania.’” Rolling Stone. 1 February 2016. Web. 8 Apr. 2017.
Rose, Randall L. & Stacy L. Wood. “Paradox and the Consumption of Authenticity through Reality Television.” Journal of Consumer Research 32.2 (2005): 284-96.
Saraiya, Sonia. “Hate-Watching the GOP: The Debates are Officially Trashy Reality TV, and by Those Rules, Trump’s Winning.” Salon. 4 Mar. 2016. Web. 12 Apr. 2017.
Quinn, Gregory. “There’s a Perfect Word to Describe Donald Trump’s Unreality. It’s ‘Kayfabe.” The Bullshitist. 22 Dec. 2016. Web. 9 Apr. 2017.
Zito, Salena. “Taking Trump Seriously, Not Literally.” The Atlantic 23 Sept. 2016. Web. 30 Mar. 2017.

Sunday, April 2, 2017

March Media Journal

Black Mirror [Season 1]. Creator Charlie Brooker. Zeppotron, 2011.
Foreigner. 4. Rhino Records, 2002/1981.
Adams, Ryan. Prisoner. Pax-Am Records, 2017.
Harris, Emmylou, Linda Rondstadt, & Dolly Parton. Trio. Warner Bros. 1987.
Black Mirror [Season 2]. Creator Charlie Brooker. Zeppotron, 2013.
Black Mirror [Season 3]. Creator Charlie Brooker. Zeppotron. 2013.
Son Volt. Notes of Blue. Transmit Sound, 2016.
Newman, Randy. Ragtime: Music from the Motion Picture. Rhino Records 2002/1981.
Dams of the West. Youngish American. 20th Century Records, 2017.
Best Coast. Fade Away. Jewel City Records, 2013.
Plant, Robert & Alison Krauss. Raising Sand. Rounder Records, 2007.
Indigo Girls. All That We Let In. Epic Records, 2004.
The Cove. Dir. Louie Psyihoyos. Diamond Docs, 2009.
Van Halen. Women and Children First. Warner Bros., 2000/1980.
Newman, Randy. Sail Away. Rhino, 2002/1972.
[Various Artists] Sedated in the Eighties. The Right Stuff, 1993.
Merchant, Natalie. The House Carpenter’s Daughter. Myth America Records, 2003.
Jennings, Shooter. Put the O Back in Country. Universal South Records, 2004.
Review [Season 3]. Creators Jeffrey Blitz, Andrew Daly, Charlie Siskel. Abso Lutely Productions, 2017.
Love [Season 2]. Creators Judd Apatow, Lesley Arfin, Paul Rust. Apatow Productions, 2017.
Sepinwall, Alan and Matt Zoller Seitz. TV (The Book): Two Experts Pick the Greatest American Shows of All Time. New York: Grand Central Publishing, 2016.

Évocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie. Dirs. Seth Kramer & Daniel A. Miller. Ironbound Films, 2012.