Popular Culture Review Vol. 19, No. 2, Summer 2008 | Page 44

40 Popular Culture Review or generalizing is seen as a “as a kind of slavery” which disrespects the sanctity of individual experience (110). This narrow frame of interpretation suggests that the apparent moral relativism of talk shows conceals an inflexible understanding of the rules of dialogue. The paradox of liberalism is that it appears to welcome all positions, while it silences those that are incompatible with its assumptions. Liberalism is, in the sense it is being used here, less a specific ideological position and more a system of organizing ideological positions, and as the following example illustrates, this system structures the dialogue about racism in ways that are less than helpful. TALK SHOW TREATMENTS OF RACISM Amid the endless stream of mother-daughter conflicts, unhappy marriages, and makeovers there were very few explicit discussions of racism on old-style talk show television. Unlike the new-style shows, on old-style shows people of color were rarely seen at all, except as occasional, topical subjects for debate. Liberalism was the most notable feature that shaped those occasional debates that did occur. Because these talk shows adopted the style of personal conversation, and because they utilized liberal discourse, racism was often discussed in terms of individual prejudice. Confusing negative feelings with the social power to enact them, this line of reasoning locates racism only in those who overtly hate others. On old-style talk shows, the scapegoating could go in either direction, as African-American figures like Louis Farrakhan and Sister Souljah were the focus of frequent accusations of reverse racism. When only the most flamboyantly hateful people are implicated, racism is falsely contained and conceptualized as an easily manageable problem. For example, a 1991 episode of Jenny Jones crosses the makeover with a discussion of bullying. The result, “I Was a Geek, but Look at Me Now,” represents racism as a beauty issue. A young African-American woman talks about being teased as a girl for being ugly. She was picked on mercilessly in her predominantly white school. All the former bullies brought on the show are whi