Curator's Note
FX Networks CEO John Landgraf terms the staggering number of scripted series (over 400 programs available via broadcast, cable, and online services in 2015 alone) within today's television scene as 'peak tv'. An endless stream of original television pervades our screens, pushing the industry to pursue counter-intuitive strategies that will captivate audiences. Rather than responding to the hunger for new content, the industry is focusing on re-engaging fans of discontinued series by "rebooting” past programs. This trend appeals to viewers’ sense of nostalgia, garnering revivals instant interest and name recognition.
When a beloved series jumps back into the entertainment cycle, it is expected to uphold the spirit of its forerunner. In this promotional clip for Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life, Lauren Graham and Alexis Bledel take us back to the early 2000s when their fast paced banter and non-stop pop culture references defined a new model for mother-daughter relationships. Their characters, Lorelai and Rory, offer us a dose of the past that we remember as innocent and simplistic, illuminated through lighthearted conversation from the comforts of their kitchen. However, while this revival, among others, exude a nostalgia that appeals to viewers dissatisfied with today’s sociopolitical and economic climate, reboots still strive to be relevant within contemporary culture. While Lorelai and Rory uphold the traditional structure of the series, they simultaneously claim status within the present as they namedrop Amy Schumer and John Oliver. Similarly, Fuller House, another reboot, celebrates its carefree past, reanimating Michelle Tanner’s famous catchphrase, “you got it dude!”, while also critiquing a character who seems “stuck” in the 90s.
Television makes it easy for us to revisit the past with little demand of our imaginations, but does not allow us to entirely escape our present world. What does our appetite for old content made new suggest about how we cope with a present that is broader, more complicated and threatening than the past we remember? I propose that rebooted series satisfy our yearning for a romanticized past, while ensuring that we stay grounded in a contemporary media-saturated world that requires our constant attention and engagement.
Comments
Reboots
Although this is an interesting piece, the use of the term 'reboot' is conceptually problematic. A re-launch/ revival and a reboot are not the same thing. Your examples of Fuller House and Gilmore Girls are emphatically not reboots but re-launches. A reboot is a serial concept that disavows or ignores a pre-established narrative sequence to begin again in an alternate narrative universe. Both Fuller House and Gilmore Girls are continuations so they do not reboot. That would involve wiping the slate clean and beginning again as if the originals did not exist in the first place. Of course, reboots can never truly wipe the slate clean as the memories of audiences cannot be expunged like a text. But that is what a reboot aims to achieve: a beginning again.
Great Post!
What surprises me most about bringing back a series like the Gilmore Girls is how little time has passed since its original run. I think, for myself, it feels more like a continuation. Whereas I see Fuller House completely as a reboot. I think that's where the gray area lies for me in terms of the conception of the term. There's not set definition for it, and I may agree with William's ideas above. However, I do think that sense of nostalgia placed inside a more contemporary structure is really compelling. As you've noted, nostalgia plays a huge part in that. I am fascinated by TV movie reunions of old shows, such as Still the Beaver and Return to Mayberry. Because of their idealized structure, they have a lot less room to update the TVMs into something more contemporary and any attempt to do so may alienate viewers (see Mary and Rhoda from 2000 for an example). The Gilmore Girls was already really self-aware, so it had a bit more room to move. The more interesting reboot here for me is Fuller House, since it was cut from the same cloth as The Andy Griffith Show and Leave it to Beaver in many ways. I've not seen the updated version, but I do know it has been fully embraced.
Etymology
There is a set definition of the term which I explored in my PhD (which was, unsurprisingly, on reboots) and forthcoming book which studies the phenomenon. Now the term obviously derives from computer technology, but the first time the term was used as a narrative technique was in 1994 and it emerged as a comic book concept to describe the Legion of Superheroes which wiped the slate clean to begin again. Even the notorious Wikipedia uses the correct definition: "to reboot means to discard all continuity in an established series in order to recreate its characters, timeline and backstory from the beginning." From this perspective, even Fuller House is a re-launch as opposed to a continuation. If it continues, regardless of the time span between series, it does not reboot.The term grew into a buzzword around 2005 with Nolan's Batman reboot -- prior to that, the only use was for superhero comics. But as journalists pounced on the word and began using it frivolously to describe adaptations, remakes, sequels, prequels and revivals/ relaunches, then we are in a jungle of conceptual foliage. That it has been misinterpreted by aligning oneself with journalistic discourse is fine as far as it goes. But a lack of historicising is wide spread across the academy and this requires rethinking and further analysis. For if Fuller House is a reboot, then so is Godfather 3.
When Nostalgia Goes Wrong
Really interesting post, Hannah. I'm curious about the general flattening effect of nostalgia in things like the GG revival. Part of my sense in watching A Year in the Life was that it was like watching an old favourite band give a lacklustre performance of their own greatest hits album. Many of the things which felt nuanced and interesting about the original run seemed reduced to one part of what had once made them interesting, but then also essentialized in a way which erased that former nuance. (I'm thinking particularly of townie characters like Kirk, for instance, or even of interestingly suggestive wrinkles like the structuring absence of Mr Kim in the life of Lane and her mother, something which was dealt with in a horribly offhand way in the revival.) Yet at other times the nostalgic aspect of the show struck home with me, as in the almost magical return of the Life and Death Brigade, which seemed to comment on Rori's own nostalgia for an earlier, easier time, rather than just flatly replicating it.
Twin Peaks
Just a follow up. I have been writing about the way in which Twin Peaks has also been described as a reboot. Writer, Mark Frost, however, expressly claimed that this was not the case. X-Files, too, is not a reboot.
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