Popular Culture Review Vol. 14, No. 2, Summer 2003 | Page 87

“It Had to Be You:” Narrative Themes in A Wedding Story Introduction In the past several years there has been an explosion of television programs that fall in the broad genre of “Reality T.V.” For whatever reasons— additional channels, audience appetites, marketing strategies—cable and network television outlets offer viewers an ever-increasing number of programs involving no “real” acting. This is not to say that professional actors and other celebrities are never involved. Anna Nicole, The Osbournes and other shows frequently revolve around famous individuals. Fear Factor and other reality shows feature special episodes wherein well known people participate. Still other programs, such as Survivor, Big Brother, and The Real World, put everyday folk in unusual circumstances, tape and edit the results and then broadcast the “real” interactions among the participants. The Learning Channel (TLC) has created its own particular niche for realitybased programming. Their variations on the “story” theme—A Baby Story, A Per sonal Story; A Makeover Story, A Dating Story, and A Wedding Story—cover major individual life changes, running the gamut from birth to middle age. As TLC refers to it, this is “life unscripted.” The network promotes itself using the implicit idea that “truth is more interesting than fiction.” In the process, what may for many be considered private and personal moments are now regularly displayed in the most public way, on national television. On these “story” shows, the characters describe their lives in their own words. There is no host or intrusive voice-over telling us how to interpret what is shown. The implication is that, despite the fact that these shows are edited and packaged, it is the participants’ own private story that is being shared. For narrative analysts, shows such as A Wedding Story offer an enticing op portunity to study how people employ culturally resonant themes and metaphors to construct sensible versions of their lives for mass consumption. What makes A Wedding Story particularly compelling is that these narratives emerge out of a rather complex set of creative agents—the couples involved and the producers of the show. The stories they create make sense to them and to us, the audience, because the themes and metaphors employed in them resonate so strongly with our cultural view of love and romance. The very fact that these narrative plots are so similar to one another contradicts a common belief in our culture - that each love story is unique.