Kaelan Doyle Myerscough
Enrollment: contact kaelandm@mit.edu before day you plan to attend
Limited to 20 participants
Attendance: Participants are encouraged, but not required, to attend all three sessions
What is it that makes watching so-called “trashy TV” so fun? What does it mean for a film to be “so bad it’s good?” In such a saturated media landscape, what makes us seek out and enjoy the worst of it? And what is with all of those screenings of The Room?
In this three-day course, we will watch and analyze bad media as an introduction to media studies concepts and fields. Each class will consist of a screening and an extended discussion.
Contact: Kaelan Doyle Myerscough, kaelandm@mit.edu
Tuesday, Jan 23
03:00PM-06:00PM
The Room: The Anatomy of a Good-Bad Movie. We’ll stage a screening of The Room complete with plastic spoons and a football, then talk about what makes the film so enjoyably bad, why people think this is, and the fandom that has cropped up around it.
Wednesday, Jan 24
03:00PM-05:00PM
Keeping Up with the Kardashians: Reality TV, social media, and “trashiness.” We’ll use the Kardashian empire to talk about how and in what contexts people watch TV and consume social media, and how the contemporary internet landscape has reshaped reality TV.
Thursday, Jan 25
03:00PM-05:00PM
Monster Factory: Bad games and the art of making fun of them. What makes bad games enjoyable, and how is this different from bad film and television? We’ll watch a few works by YouTube creators to figure this out, and then get our hands dirty with character creators and make some monsters of our own.