1st Edition

The Television Entrepreneurs Social Change and Public Understanding of Business

By Raymond Boyle, Lisa W. Kelly Copyright 2012
    184 Pages
    by Routledge

    184 Pages
    by Routledge

    With business seemingly everywhere on television, from the risks of the retail and restaurant trade to pitching for investment or competing to become the next 'apprentice', The Television Entrepreneurs draws upon popular business-oriented shows such as The Apprentice and Dragons' Den to explore the relationship between television and business. Based on extensive interviews with key industry and business figures and drawing on new empirical research into audience perceptions of business, this book examines our changing relationship with entrepreneurship and the role played by television in shaping our understanding of the world of business. The book identifies the key structural shifts in both the television industry and the wider economy that account for these changing representations, whilst examining the extent to which television's developing interest in business and entrepreneurial issues is simply a response to wider social and economic change in society. Does a more commercial and competitive television marketplace, for instance, mean that the medium itself, through a particular focus on drama, entertainment and performance, now plays a key role in re-defining how society frames its engagements with business, finance, entrepreneurship, risk and wealth creation? Mapping the narratives of entrepreneurship constructed by television and analysing the context that produces them, The Television Entrepreneurs investigates how the television audience engages with such programmes and the possible impact these may have on public understanding of the nature of business.

    Contents: Introduction; Part I Industry, Text and Media Discourse: Television, representation and social change; Continuity and change in the development of television's 'business entertainment format'; Risking it all: analyzing 'business entertainment formats'; Enterprise, society and cultural change. Part II Audiences, Television and the Entrepreneur: Understanding the audience: engaging with television; The television entrepreneur: representations and role models; Television business in the age of celebrity; Conclusion: knowledge, television and understanding business; Appendix; Bibliography; Index.

    Biography

    Raymond Boyle is a Professor of Communications at the Centre for Cultural Policy Research at the University of Glasgow, UK Lisa W. Kelly is an AHRC Research Assistant at the Centre for Cultural Policy Research at the University of Glasgow, UK

    'Boyle and Kelly offer a powerful narrative of the centrality of television in debates about business and public knowledge. Anyone who wants to understand reality TV should read their rich and insightful research in production and reception processes for business entertainment that connects culture with society and politics.' Annette Hill, Lund University, Sweden 'Boyle and Kelly develop an illuminating inquiry into how television turns the values and practices of business into "good viewing". This topical book is rich in detail about the television process, both the documenting of realities and the fashioning of fairytales, placing its findings convincingly within the broader political and social setting.' John Corner, University of Leeds, UK 'Far from simplistic audience engagement, televisual showcases of entrepreneurs craft an image and a narrative of business acumen that shifts the public understanding of capitalism and introduces the cultural heroes upon which the system relies. The Television Entrepreneurs is an important step in the process of understanding how the culture of capital is reified and repaired.' Contemporary Sociology 'Business is the new form of entertainment. Raymond Boyle and Lisa Kelly study the ways in which entrepreneurs and businesses are represented in factual entertainment programming in Britain, showing how such programming has developed and become centred around the ’business entertainment format’... Boyle and Kelly show how the ’business entertainment format’ in television has become central to public discussion and debate about business. Theirs is a timely book. It offers a valuable account of how business has been transmuted into regular entertainment viewing.' European Journal of Communication 'This thought-provoking book provides stimulus for reflection on a wide range of cultural causes and effects connected with mutations in television programming. In particular, it touches on the cultural shifts that have result