The Jerry Springer Show

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The Jerry Springer Show
Image:Jerryspringer logo 240.jpg
The logo of The Jerry Springer Show, in use since the show's tenth season starting fall 2000
Genre Tabloid talk show
Starring Jerry Springer (host)
Steve Wilkos
Country of origin United States of America
Language(s) English
No. of seasons 17
No. of episodes 3,433 (as of June 8, 2008)
Production
Executive
producer(s)
Richard Dominick
Producer(s) Toby Yoshimura, Rachel Winn
Editor(s) Bob Gassel
Location(s) WMAQ-TV NBC Tower in Chicago, Illinois
Cinematography Multiple-camera setup
Running time 1 hour (including commercials); 40 minutes (without commercials)
Broadcast
Original channel Syndicated
Picture format 4:3
Original run September 30, 1991 – present
External links
Official website
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

The Jerry Springer Show is a television tabloid talk show hosted by Jerry Springer, a former politician, broadcast in the United States and other countries.[1] It is videotaped at the NBC Tower studios of WMAQ-TV in Chicago and is distributed by NBC Universal, although it is not currently broadcast on any NBC-owned stations. A popular show, it has been broadcast during the high morning, afternoon, and late night hours of many syndicated TV stations since the early 1990s.

The Jerry Springer Show is ostensibly a talk show where troubled or dysfunctional families come to discuss their problems before a studio audience so that the audience or host can offer suggestions on what can be done to resolve their situations. In actuality, the show has come to epitomize the so-called "trash TV talk show"[1], as each episode of the show focuses on topics such as adultery, bestiality[2], divorce, homophobia, homosexuality, incest, infidelity, pedophilia, pornography, racism, or transvestism and continues to take pride in its infamous image. At one point, the show proudly boasted that it was voted the "Worst TV Show Ever" by TV Guide magazine. Currently, the show slogan is "an hour of your life you'll never get back". The Jerry Springer Show has received widespread criticism and caused many controversies for a variety of reasons including its elements of prurience, foul language and the exploitation of the vulnerable.[3]

On July 15, 2007, it was announced that Springer was picked up by NBC-Universal through the 2009-2010 season.[4]

Contents

[edit] Production

Show host Jerry Springer
Show host Jerry Springer

[edit] Format

A typical episode of Springer begins with a title card with usually sound effects. For example, in Season 18, it can be either a crying clown or a toilet flushing. The title card warns parents that the show may contain content inappropriate for children. The warning is followed by the opening sequence, which since the fifteenth season has usually consisted of clips from past Springer episodes. After the opening sequence, the screen cuts to Springer entering the stage, usually being greeted by audience applause and the "Jerry, Jerry" chant. Once the audience settles down, he welcomes the viewer to the show, introduces a particular situation, and interviews a guest who is experiencing it. After finishing the interview, Springer announces the entrance of another guest whom the first guest would like to confront. The second guest enters the stage, and a confrontation between the two guests usually occurs, often breaking down into a brawl that is eventually broken up by on-set security personnel. Once the fight is broken up, Springer interviews the second guest about the situation faced by the first guest.

This cycle is repeated about twice for other sets of guests on the show. Once all guests have told their stories, there is a "question and answer" segment where audience members ask guests questions relevant to their situations. Finally, Springer ends the show with a segment titled "Final Thought"[5], in which he shares his feelings about the stories he has heard for the day's show. He ends the segment with the concluding statement, "Until next time, take care of yourselves and each other".

Generally, Springer tends to present his program standing up in the stands rather than the main stage.[5]

Sometimes the show will have a look back at an early episode. These have been rebranded as Classic Springer. These shows are interspersed with commentary from Springer, usually before and after commercial breaks.

[edit] Set

The program is taped at the NBC Tower operated by NBC television station WMAQ in Chicago, Illinois.

[edit] Security

Security is provided by off-duty officers of the Chicago Police Department.

[edit] History

[edit] 1990s

The Jerry Springer Show debuted on September 30, 1991, with fellow talk-show host Sally Jessy Raphaël as its first guest. Initially, both Springer and Sally were distributed by Multimedia Entertainment, before Sally was sold to Universal in the mid '90s, with Springer at first going to the former Universal and later to Studios USA.[6]

1993-2000 logo, most identified with the show's peak in popularity
1993-2000 logo, most identified with the show's peak in popularity

It started as a politically-oriented talk show, a longer version of the commentary for which Springer had gained local fame as a reporter and anchor.[7] Guests early on included Oliver North and Jesse Jackson, and the topics included homelessness and gun politics[8][9], as well as social effects of rock and roll, featuring shock rock stars like GG Allin[10][11] and GWAR as guests.[12] Low ratings led it to be run by a new producer, Richard Dominick. The search for higher ratings led the program towards tawdry and provocative topics, becoming more and more successful, although it still covered issues that were more sensitive and less sensational.[7] It became, through Springer's own admittance, a "freak show" where guests seek their 15 minutes of fame through discussion and demonstrations of deviant behavior.[13] Its extraordinary success has led it to be broadcast in dozens of countries. The show gained so much popularity that for a while it was the top-rated daytime talk show in the United States.[1]

[edit] Controversies over authenticity and violence

In the late 1990s, the show was quite popular and controversial, so much so that it caused contemporaries like Jenny Jones, Maury Povich, and Ricki Lake to "revamp" their own shows in order to improve ratings.[14] However, major figures in television, along with many religious preachers, had called for the show's removal and consider it to be of bad taste.[5]

In 1997 and 1998, the show reached its ratings peak, at one point becoming the first talk show in years to beat The Oprah Winfrey Show.[15] However, it has since been shown featuring almost non-stop fighting between guests, triggering mass protests from TV personalities and some priests.[5] The Chicago City Council suggested that if the fistfights and chair-throwing were real, then the guests should be arrested for committing acts of violence in the city, as alderman Ed Burke was concerned over the fact that the off-duty Chicago police officers serving as security guards for the program failed to take legal action against fighting guests.[16] Springer explained that the violence on the program "look[ed] real" to him, also arguing that the fighting on the show "never, ever, ever glamorizes violence".[17] Ultimately, the City Council chose not to pursue the matter.[17] Because of this probe and other external and internal pressures, the fighting was taken off the show temporarily before being allowed again in a less violent nature.[18] [19] In the years of the show having toned down the fights, viewership has declined but remains respectable by newer standards of daytime television ratings.[20][21]

The episode from 1997, I'm Pregnant By A Transsexual, included past guest Brittany, a man living as a woman. Her lover, Dee, arrived. Her sister Braetta and mom Vera, and Dee's two close friends named Wheeze and June arrived, and Brittany told Wheeze and June that she looked better than them. Jerry Springer welcomed Dee's sister Wanda to the show. Vera and Braetta, Brittany's mom and sister, told Brittany to hang up the dress and take off the women's shoes and to be a dad to Dee's child. Two viewers named Alicia and Maria arrived and confronted Brittany. The women started fighting. Maria told Springer about Brittany.

However, there has been continuous debate over the actual authenticity of the fighting. Marvin Kitman, television critic for the Newsday newspaper, felt that the fighting had been choreographed beforehand.[13] Christopher Sterling of the George Washington University media department compared the program to professional wrestling. Sixteen former guests of The Jerry Springer Show, who appeared on another tabloid talk show, Extra, and also had interviews with Rolling Stone and The New York Post, even claimed there was a "fight quota" for each episode and that they and other guests were encouraged to fight one another.[22]

[edit] Early 2000s

In 2000, Springer was given a five-year, $30 million contract extension paying him $6 million per year.[23] The same year, a married couple, Ralf and Eleanor Panitz, were guests on an episode of the show entitled "Secret Mistresses Confronted" with Mr. Panitz's ex-wife, Nancy Campbell-Panitz, in which they complained about Ms. Campbell-Panitz's behavior and accused her of stalking them. Hours after it was broadcast on July 24, 2000, Ms. Campbell-Panitz was found dead in a home that the three were fighting over, and Florida police soon confirmed that they were treating the death as homicide.[24] It was then reported that Mr. Panitz, having been issued a first-degree murder warrant for the death, was trying to flee to Canada to avoid prosecution.[25] Upon news of the 52-year old woman's murder, a spokeswoman for the program issued a statement saying it was "a terrible tragedy"[26]

In August 2000, Springer himself appeared on CNN's Larry King Live to discuss the incident, claiming that it "had nothing to do with the show" and that his talk show does not glamorize deviant behavior.[27] On March 27, 2002, after 18 hours of deliberating from jurors, Mr. Panitz was convicted of the murder after a 10-day trial and sentenced to life.[28]

In 2001, efforts from groups like the Parents Television Council and American Family Association made some advertisers decrease or stop their sponsorship of Springer.[29] The show also topped TV Guide magazine's 2002 list of the "The Worst TV Shows Ever".[30] The phrase "Jerry Springer Nation" began to be used by some who see the program as being a bad influence on the morality of the United States.[31] In addition, the phrase has shown the association of Springer with any "lowbrow" type of entertainment in general.[32][33]

In 2003, a British opera inspired by the series, Jerry Springer: The Opera, began playing in the United Kingdom.[34] The same year, it was revealed that a group of guests from Hayward, California faked a "love triangle" for an appearance on two episodes of the show; one guest in the group was murdered, but Hayward police determined that his appearance was not connected to his murder.[35]

Starting with the 2005 season, director of security Steve Wilkos occasionally hosted the show. Episodes that he hosted were intended to be more serious in tone than the typical Springer show.[36]

[edit] Mid-2000s to present

In 2005, the program became a subject of criticism in Bernard Goldberg's book 100 People Who Are Screwing Up America, being called "TV's lowest life-form"[37] and Springer himself being ranked at #32 and labeled an "American Pioneer".[38] Goldberg also claimed that Springer was knowingly capitalizing off the disadvantages of his guests and stupidity of his audience, also citing the controversial episode revolving around the man who married his horse.[39]

In January 2006, the show was renewed for its sixteenth season, ending speculation that Springer would leave his talk show to run for elected office in Ohio, where he was the former mayor of Cincinnati.[20] On May 12, 2006, Springer celebrated his show's 3,000th episode by throwing a party on the show (which no one but Jerry showed up to humorously), and showed many clips, including rare excerpts from the first episode.[40]

In the United Kingdom, meanwhile, a Commercial High Court trial was scheduled for summer 2006 to resolve a dispute between Flextech Television and NBC Universal over Flextech in 2002 cancelling its 1998 contract to broadcast Springer in the UK as long as new episodes continued to be produced in the U.S.[41]

In the episode Viewers vs. Springer Guests 4, viewer Bridget confronted past guest Strawberry (a stripper from 2005).

In 2007, security director Wilkos left Jerry Springer to host his own syndicated talk show. "The Steve Wilkos Show" is also shot at the NBC Tower in Chicago and produced by Richard Dominick, who continues to produce Springer as well. On July 15, 2007, it was announced that Springer was picked up by NBC-Universal through the 2009-2010 season.[4] Also, VH1 ran a documentary series The Springer Hustle, going "behind the scenes" of the show[42], having already run another Springer-related documentary in 2005 titled When Jerry Springer Ruled the World.[43] Springer's appearance on the ABC television network show Dancing with the Stars led to an increase in viewership for the first quarter of 2007.[21]

A recurring character, the comical "Reverend Shnorr", was introduced in 2007 to perform weddings on the program and counsel certain guests on "Biblical values".[44][45] The security staff for the program also was given new additions, as starting in the seventeenth season, three female security guards were added.[46] Certain professional athletes have come on the show as one-off security guards for some episodes. They include hockey player Joe Corvo[47], and mixed martial arts fighters Andrei Arlovski[48] , Shonie Carter[49], and Bas Rutten.

In Uncle Bob/Aunt Robin, Aunt Robin (who was born a man named Uncle Bob and is now a woman) was about to get married to Vinny, her fiance, but her niece Amanda was not thrilled that her uncle was a woman.

Certain advertisers continue to avoid buying ad time for Springer.[50] However, the show has continued to keep steady ratings in the February 2008 "Sweeps" period.[51]

[edit] Censorship

Springer is syndicated on various stations in the United States at various times of the day, whether in the morning, afternoon, or late evening. All syndicated episodes of Springer are edited for content for broadcast regardless of broadcast time to comply with FCC regulations regarding the broadcast of indecency and obscenity. Initially, profanity or other explicit language on the program was bleeped out, but later episodes used muting to edit out explicit language; in fact, mute censors can extend as far as to remove a group of many words or even an entire sentence, thus making some speech incomprehensible. In addition, nudity and the partial exposure of breasts or buttocks are pixelized out.

[edit] Too Hot For TV

During the show's most popular era in the late 1990s, The Jerry Springer Show released videotapes and later DVDs marketed as Too Hot for TV. They contained uncensored nudity, profanity, and violence that was edited out from broadcast to conform to FCC standards for broadcast decency. The releases sold remarkably well[52] and inspired similar sets from other series. Eventually, the show started producing similar "uncensored" monthly pay-per-view/video on demand specials as well.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Dixon, Mary. Trash TV? Salt Lake City Weekly: May 26, 1998.
  2. ^ Springer's latest: 'I Married a Horse'. The Cincinnati Post: May 21, 1998
  3. ^ Green, R (on the application of) v The City of Westminster Magistrates' Court [2007] EWHC 2785 (Admin), paragraph 5 (2007-12-05)
  4. ^ a b Pursell, Chris. "Tribune Stations Keep 'Em Talking", TV Week, 2007-07-15. Retrieved on 2007-07-16. 
  5. ^ a b c d Kelly, Erin St. John.. "Springer's Harvest", .The New York Times, 1998-04-27. Retrieved on 2007-09-22. 
  6. ^ Fabrikant, Geraldine. "Unit of MCA is Acquiring Talk Shows", The New York Times, 1996-11-26. Retrieved on 2008-04-18. 
  7. ^ a b TV Guide biography on Springer
  8. ^ Jerry Springer Show
  9. ^ Elder, Larry. Who's faking whom? Jewish World Review: April 30, 1998.
  10. ^ Jerry Springer episode from May 5, 1993 from IMDB
  11. ^ Huey, Steve. G.G. Allin - Biography. All Music Guide. Retrieved on 2008-03-01.
  12. ^ "Shock Rock!". The Jerry Springer Show. Syndicated. 1997-01-31.
  13. ^ a b Kitman, Martin. "Jerry Springer an "appalling diversion"", CNN.com, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, 1998-06-29. Retrieved on 2007-09-28. 
  14. ^ Goodman, Walter. "As TV Sows Outrage, Guess What It Reaps", The New York Times, 1995-03-28. Retrieved on 2007-09-22. 
  15. ^ Mifflin, Lawrie. "Jerry Springer Loses a Chicago TV Contract, But Bounces Back", The New York Times, 1998-04-24. Retrieved on 2008-03-20. 
  16. ^ Robinson, Bryan. "Jerry Springer hearing before Chicago City Council to reveal whether show violence is real or staged", Court TV, 1999-06-03. Retrieved on 2007-10-06. 
  17. ^ a b Weber, Bruce. "Live, at Chicago's City Hall: It's the 'Jerry Springer Show'", The New York Times, 1999-06-05. Retrieved on 2007-09-22. 
  18. ^ Mifflin, Lawrie. "'Springer' Returns to Its Antics", The New York Times, 1998-11-09. Retrieved on 2007-09-22. 
  19. ^ Mifflin, Lawrie. "Studio to Rein In Violence on 'Jerry Springer'", The New York Times, 1999-05-26. Retrieved on 2007-09-22. 
  20. ^ a b Benson, Jim (2006-01-16). Springer Stays on Board. Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved on 2008-03-30.
  21. ^ a b Benson, Jim (2007-03-12). Syndication Ratings: Daytime Talk Shows. Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved on 2008-03-30.
  22. ^ "Springer faces fake fight claims", BBC News, 1998-04-24. Retrieved on 2007-11-11. 
  23. ^ Schlosser, Joe. Springer reups with Studios USA. Broadcasting & Cable: April 10, 2000
  24. ^ Police hunt for Springer guests. BBC News: July 26, 2000.
  25. ^ Potter, Mark. Springer guest wanted in murder trying to flee to Canada, authorities say. CNN: July 27, 2000.
  26. ^ Silverman, Stephen M. 'Springer' Guests Sought in Slaying. People: August 19, 2000.
  27. ^ "Did 'The Jerry Springer Show' Cause a Murder?". Larry King, Jerry Springer. Larry King Live. CNN. 2000-08-24. Transcript.
  28. ^ 'Jerry Springer' Murder Conviction. CBS News: March 27, 2002
  29. ^ Downey, Kevin. Here they are, TV's Dirty Dozen. Media Life Magazine: January 29, 2001.
  30. ^ CBS News The Worst TV Shows Ever
  31. ^ Peterson, Isaac (2002-03-30). Stop Making Sense. Democratic Underground. Retrieved on 2007-11-15.
  32. ^ Myers, Kenneth. Is television worth watching? Helium.com
  33. ^ Bozell, L. Brent III (2006-08-24). Roasting the Final Frontier. MediaResearch.org. Creators Syndicate. Retrieved on 2007-10-20. Bozell wrote the article criticizing the 2006 Comedy Central Roast of William Shatner, explaining "the ratings (at least compared to the usual Comedy Central gunk) were good, so they replayed this sleazy spectacle over and over again in heavy rotation until every member of Jerry Springer Nation had watched it twice."
  34. ^ "Springer opera set for Broadway", BBC News, 2004-04-27. Retrieved on 2008-04-20. 
  35. ^ De Benedetti, Chris. "Slain Hayward man had appeared on Jerry Springer show", Oakland Tribune, FindArticles.com, 2003-07-12. Retrieved on 2008-04-20. 
  36. ^ About Steve Wilkos. WGN-TV (2007). Retrieved on 2007-12-15.
  37. ^ Goldberg, Bernard (2005). 100 People Who Are Screwing Up America. New York, New York: HarperCollins, 15. ISBN 0060761288. 
  38. ^ Ibid., 208.
  39. ^ Ibid., 209.
  40. ^ NBC Universal Television Group (2006-05-05). ""The Jerry Springer Show" Celebrates 3,000 Episodes". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  41. ^ "Judge to view Jerry Springer show", BBC News, 2006-07-19. Retrieved on 2008-04-14. 
  42. ^ The Springer Hustle | Get Info About the TV Series, Find Info on the TV Show Episode | VH1.com
  43. ^ When ___ Ruled The World | Get Info About the Jerry Springer Episode, Find Info on the TV Show Online | VH1.com
  44. ^ Rev. Shnorr
  45. ^ Noe, Denise. The Jerry Springer Show's Rev. Shnorr character is a creation of anti-Christian bigotry. Men's News Daily: Sept. 6, 2007.
  46. ^ Blackmon, Joe (2007-09-17). Jerry Springer Hires Three Off-Duty Female Law Enforcement Officers. Reality TV Magazine. Retrieved on 2008-03-30.
  47. ^ "Rockin' Reverend!". The Jerry Springer Show. 2007-09-24.
  48. ^ "Three Pigs in a Trailer, Part II". The Jerry Springer Show. 2007-09-26.
  49. ^ "Eat Your Tomatoes!". The Jerry Springer Show. 2007-10-11.
  50. ^ Dorsey, Tom. "Springer's dirt can't compete with network TV", Louisville Courier-Journal, 2008-03-29. Retrieved on 2008-03-29. 
  51. ^ Albiniak, Paige (2008-03-04). Syndication Ratings: Sweeps Good for Talkers. Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved on 2008-03-30.
  52. ^ Bianculli, David. It's a Circus: Is Jerry Springer's No-Holds-Barred Talk Show Harmless Populist Escapism, the End of Civilization as we know it, or both? New York Daily News: February 8, 1998

[edit] External links