{"title":"Podcast Reenactments and the Sonics of Fictionalization from Cher to Swift","authors":"Amy Skjerseth","doi":"10.1525/jpms.2023.35.4.34","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Podcasts often blend journalistic investigation with personal reflection, from Serial to Switched on Pop. Their veneer of fiction-as-fact especially confounds representation when podcasts’ voice acting and sound design portray pop stars in caricatured dramatizations. This paper examines reenactments of Cher and Taylor Swift in podcasts that investigate popular music industries and technology. As I show, these stars often are ventriloquized on podcasts due to their respective ages and visibility as women. Podcasts interrogate them for being too old or too young and for trespassing onto the often-male domains of business and technology.\n To show how podcast hosts represent women pop stars in particularly gendered and ageist ways, I listen to the sonics of fictionalization of two episodes that mythologize Cher’s Auto-Tuning and Swift’s battle to take back her masters from record industry men. First, American Innovations reenacts Cher’s request to producers to create the Auto-Tune effect, but the male host’s ventriloquy of her voice reduces her artistic and technological prowess to parody as they make her seem outdated. Then, in Business Wars, multiple voice actors reenact Swift’s career from its beginning and depict her as a child who doesn’t know any better. These podcasts blur facts and public opinion with alluring dramatizations of what “really happened,” placing listeners in the scene with compelling voice acting and ambient sound effects. In these reenactments, podcasts’ affordances of intimacy and immersion—which hosts often herald as democratizing—perpetuate cultural mythologies about gender and age in popular music.","PeriodicalId":43525,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Popular Music Studies","volume":" 16","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Popular Music Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1525/jpms.2023.35.4.34","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"MUSIC","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Podcasts often blend journalistic investigation with personal reflection, from Serial to Switched on Pop. Their veneer of fiction-as-fact especially confounds representation when podcasts’ voice acting and sound design portray pop stars in caricatured dramatizations. This paper examines reenactments of Cher and Taylor Swift in podcasts that investigate popular music industries and technology. As I show, these stars often are ventriloquized on podcasts due to their respective ages and visibility as women. Podcasts interrogate them for being too old or too young and for trespassing onto the often-male domains of business and technology.
To show how podcast hosts represent women pop stars in particularly gendered and ageist ways, I listen to the sonics of fictionalization of two episodes that mythologize Cher’s Auto-Tuning and Swift’s battle to take back her masters from record industry men. First, American Innovations reenacts Cher’s request to producers to create the Auto-Tune effect, but the male host’s ventriloquy of her voice reduces her artistic and technological prowess to parody as they make her seem outdated. Then, in Business Wars, multiple voice actors reenact Swift’s career from its beginning and depict her as a child who doesn’t know any better. These podcasts blur facts and public opinion with alluring dramatizations of what “really happened,” placing listeners in the scene with compelling voice acting and ambient sound effects. In these reenactments, podcasts’ affordances of intimacy and immersion—which hosts often herald as democratizing—perpetuate cultural mythologies about gender and age in popular music.
播客经常将新闻调查与个人反思结合在一起,从《Serial》到《switch on Pop》。当播客的配音和声音设计将流行明星描绘成漫画化的戏剧时,它们的虚构作为事实的表象尤其令人困惑。本文研究了雪儿和泰勒·斯威夫特在调查流行音乐产业和技术的播客中的再现。正如我所展示的,由于她们各自的年龄和作为女性的知名度,这些明星经常在播客上进行腹语表演。播客会质疑她们是否太老或太年轻,以及是否擅闯通常由男性主导的商业和技术领域。为了展示播客主持人是如何以特别性别化和年龄歧视的方式代表女性流行明星的,我听了两集虚构的声音,这两集虚构了雪儿的自动调音和斯威夫特从唱片行业的男人手中夺回她的主人的战斗。首先,《美国创新》重现了雪儿要求制作人创造自动调音效果的过程,但男主持人的口技削弱了她的艺术和技术实力,使她看起来过时了。然后,在《商业战争》中,多位配音演员从一开始就重现了斯威夫特的职业生涯,并将她描绘成一个懵懂无知的孩子。这些播客模糊了事实和公众舆论,对“真实发生的事情”进行了诱人的戏剧化处理,将听众置于引人注目的配音和环境音效的场景中。在这些重现中,播客对亲密感和沉浸感的展现——主持人通常将其标榜为民主化——使流行音乐中关于性别和年龄的文化神话永久化。
期刊介绍:
Journal of Popular Music Studies is a peer-reviewed journal dedicated to research on popular music throughout the world and approached from a variety of positions. Now published four times a year, each issue features essays and reviews, as well as roundtables and creative works inspired by popular music.