Loving neoliberalism? Digital labour and aspirational work on streaming food TV

IF 1.2 Q3 COMMUNICATION Communication Research and Practice Pub Date : 2022-03-31 DOI:10.1080/22041451.2022.2057270
Michelle Phillipov
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Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper considers the changing textual meanings, industrial practices and platform infrastructures of food TV as it moves from network television to on-demand streaming platforms. Using Netflix cooking competitions Sugar Rush and Crazy Delicious as case studies, it shows how streaming TV normalises the tenets of the aspirational, branded self to such an extent that the work of self-production is presented as both self-evident and a pleasurable form of leisure. The paper argues that streaming reality’s persistent reframing of labour as leisure allows services to profit from contestants’ pre-existing identities and content (including from other platforms, most notably Instagram), just as its algorithmic logics extract value from the labour of audiences. Netflix food programmes highlight a significant expansion in the forms and types of unpaid labour taken for granted on contemporary reality TV, whereby the invisibilisation of work on-screen increasingly mirrors the invisibilisation of work in Netflix’s own platform logic.
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爱的新自由主义?数字劳动和流媒体美食电视的理想工作
摘要本文考虑了美食电视从网络电视到点播流媒体平台的文本含义、行业实践和平台基础设施的变化。以Netflix的烹饪比赛《Sugar Rush》和《Crazy Delicious》为例,它展示了流媒体电视是如何将有抱负的、品牌化的自我信条正常化的,以至于自我制作的工作被认为是不言而喻的,也是一种愉快的休闲形式。该论文认为,流媒体现实不断将劳动重新定义为休闲,这使得服务可以从参赛者已有的身份和内容(包括来自其他平台的内容,最著名的是Instagram)中获利,就像它的算法逻辑从观众的劳动中提取价值一样。Netflix的美食节目突显出,在当代真人秀电视中被视为理所当然的无偿劳动的形式和类型出现了显著扩张,由此,屏幕上工作的不可见性日益反映出Netflix自己平台逻辑中工作的不可见性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
8.30%
发文量
21
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