The Real World: The (Forgotten) Grand-Daddy of Reality Shows
The Real World: The (Forgotten) Grand-Daddy of Reality Shows By Cameron Copeland In the cultural canon of American television, there are few shows more quietly revolutionary, and more unjustly forgotten in modern discussions of pop culture, than The Real World . Premiering in 1992 on MTV, a network once known exclusively for music videos and youth-targeted programming, The Real World was a risky, novel experiment: place seven strangers in a loft, roll the cameras, and see what happens when people stop being polite... and start getting real. At the time, there was nothing quite like it. Sure, there had been docuseries before. Public broadcasting had flirted with reality-style storytelling, consider the 1973 PBS series An American Family , which chronicled the daily lives of the Loud family in California. But that was niche. The Real World was primetime accessible, youth-oriented, and culturally explosive. It didn’t just break ground—it laid the foundation for everything from Survivor...