Real Life, Music, Television is a trilogy of music videos which examine the hyper-self-consciousness of adolescents. The images from "Performance" are derived from found footage of an 8th grade talent show and are combined with a list of gender-specific transformative sexual memories from the age of 4-18. "Ladies, There's a Space You Can't Go" is a deconstruction and a distortion of an episode of Sally Jesse Raphael titled "My Daughter Dresses Like A Hooker." "Talent Show" is derived from the same found footage as "Performance." The young boys lip-synch to a bubble gum rock song as they attempt to publicly assert their new-found sexual power.
Release Date | March 20, 1997 | |
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Status | Released | |
Original Title | Real Life, Music, Television: A Trilogy | |
Runtime | 15min | |
Budget | — | |
Revenue | — | |
Language | — | |
Original Language | English | |
Production Countries | — | |
Production Companies |