Time Magazine International Edition

How the virus attacks traditional TV

ON A RECENT EVENING, OUT OF A COMBINATION of professional obligation and morbid curiosity, I sat down on my couch and turned on my TV to watch celebrities … sit on their own couches to watch TV. That is literally all that happens on Celebrity Watch Party, which now occupies a full hour of Fox’s Thursday lineup. Famous faces including the Osbournes, Tyra Banks and Rob Lowe stare into their screens—and out at viewers who get to observe them cooing over, say, an elephant doc narrated by Meghan Markle. Just like us!

As reality TV goes, is gentle enough. It doesn’t traffic in public humiliation like or inspire virulent misanthropy like Yet it manages to offend through sheer dullness. The highlight of the premiere comes when a listless Ozzy observes the unmasking and slurs, “Who the f-ck was that?” Shot remotely and infused with the half-glib, half-naive “We’re all in this together, never mind that I’m quarantining in a mansion with live-in staff” spirit that has pervaded celebrity-driven entertainment since March, may be TV’s most pathetic response yet to the COVID-19 crisis.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Time Magazine International Edition

Time Magazine International Edition2 min read
Helping The World Live Better
In 2018, we worked with Bill Gates on a special issue of TIME dedicated to the power of optimism. Gates’ view, shared by many of the issue’s contributors, was that people are wired to focus on when things go wrong and when they don’t work. Sometimes
Time Magazine International Edition1 min readInternational Relations
Protests Spread
Members of a student protest movement in support of Palestinian civilians link arms on Columbia University’s Manhattan campus on April 18. When the protesters, who called on Columbia to divest from companies that supply weapons to Israel, refused to
Time Magazine International Edition7 min read
Innovators
In 2020, for every 100,000 Nigerian women who gave birth, about 1,000 did not survive, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Hadiza Galadanci, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Nigeria’s Bayero University, knows that problem all

Related Books & Audiobooks