Autoren-Bilder

Rezensionen

Zeige 8 von 8
A fascinating work that places the rise and experience of Donald Trump within the culture of American television. The only thing that really hinders the work is the author's clear bias against Trump - but the structure and placement of Trump within the work can be appreciated by all.

Recommended to those interested in American politics, American culture, television, or Trumpism.
 
Gekennzeichnet
alrajul | 7 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 1, 2023 |
This has been on my TBR shelf for a long time. I knew if I didn’t read it before Trump left office I’d probably never read it so finally picked it up. Big fan of Poniewozik’s columns and this book lives up to his usual standard. It’s an interesting critique of modern news and reality television and it’s influence on Trump and of course vice versa.
 
Gekennzeichnet
thewestwing | 7 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 12, 2022 |
i had said that I would not read another Donald Trump book but this one came highly reccommended and it was worth it. Instead of the politics and scandals, it was much more about the television culture and creation of the Trump character. Fascinating, if terrifying. I really enjoyed the cultural history of television and the rise of reality TV. There were large chunks that had no Trump and that was a bit of a respite but the last few chapters were scary and sobering.
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
amyem58 | 7 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 25, 2021 |
Trump and television. Trump IS television. A great survey of tv's history and Trump's history with it
 
Gekennzeichnet
gbelik | 7 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 7, 2019 |
James Poniewozik was one of the first writers whose columns I actively followed on the Web, back in the 1990s when he wrote for Salon. Since then, I had lost view of his work as he graduated to more prestigious positions at Time magazine and The New York Times. I was happy to return to his punchy prose and incisive observations in this book on the symbiosis between Donald J. Trump and the American media landscape.

Poniewozik treats Trump's long history as a media figure as central, not incidental, to his electoral identity and success. Trump was coeval with television itself, and neither of them have been unchanging. The author protests that he is not writing a biography of the human being Trump so much as a history of the character generated and inhabited by Trump as a television personality. The larger thesis and structure of the book he eventually sums up thus: Trump "watched TV, and then he courted TV, and then he starred on TV, and then he became TV. He achieved a psychic bond with the creature, and it lowered its head, let him climb on its back, and carried him to the White House" (236). The narrative of this progress through "businessman" celebrity, reality TV hosting, cable news pugilism, and Twitter demagoguery is filled with astonishing anecdotes that tie the whole thing into a single hyperreal composition.

This book is not about policy, and it is about politics only in the broad cultural sense. Alas, no one today can afford not to give a damn about Donald Trump, and that is the measure of his crowning achievement to date. "To live in America post-2016 was to live inside the rattled mind of a septuagenarian insomniac cable-news junkie" (270). Stories of regulatory capture and accelerating ecocide, concentration camps for refugees, egocentric foreign policy, and evisceration of Constitutional norms (beyond the long-abused Bill of Rights) are strangely outside the scope of the present treatment, which--like its subject--sees them mostly as means to an end. That end is an agonistic hypostasis: the "gorilla channel" where every actual problem is just fodder for the virtual conflict that ravenously consumes mass attention.

I recommend Audience of One as a fast, nearly compulsive, read, holding up an unflattering mirror to our reality-TV political culture.
2 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
paradoxosalpha | 7 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 26, 2019 |
not worth buying, perhaps borrow from a library.
 
Gekennzeichnet
wwj | 7 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 20, 2019 |
This is a fascinating look at the development of television in America combined with the rise of Donald Trump from "businessman" to "reality TV star" to president. The author makes the argument that these are all roles he plays and plays for the benefit of his one true love - the television camera. I found the book to be very insightful and frightening, as well as especially important with the upcoming 2020 elections.
 
Gekennzeichnet
Susan.Macura | 7 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 17, 2019 |
This was interesting for me because, in addition to looking at how Trump's career and political ascendance is interwoven with the ways that television has changed and also influenced American culture, it's also a sociological overview of TV itself. I haven't read much of that kind of thing, so I can't tell if it's going over old ground, but I found it absorbing—particularly as someone who basically stopped watching television in the late '70s, other than a run of The Sopranos in its last few seasons. At the same time I knew OF everything he mentioned—living proof of the fact that even if you don't watch the stuff, it creeps into your general cultural consciousness—and it was neat to see it all put together in a timeline and appraised as a thing. I'm guessing if you're a Cultural Studies person this might be old hat, but I'm not so it was an interesting read. And it made me dislike Trump even more, which I didn't think was even possible.
2 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
lisapeet | 7 weitere Rezensionen | May 4, 2019 |
Zeige 8 von 8