Search articles from thousands of Examiners
Write for us
Honolulu Arts and Entertainment Baltimore Celebrity Headlines Examiner
Baltimore Celebrity Headlines Examiner

Going behind the scenes of Stage 46: The Reality of Reality Television

November 28, 8:17 AMBaltimore Celebrity Headlines ExaminerCheryl Taragin
1 comment Print Email RSS Subscribe

Subscribe


Get alerts when there is a new article from the Baltimore Celebrity Headlines Examiner. Read Examiner.com's terms of use.
Email Address


  Include other special offers from Examiner.com
Terms of Use

Stage 46: The Reality of Reality Television interview with R. Smith the author

He’s a freelance writer turned author, his first novel already lining bookshelves across the country. But R. Smith won’t reveal his true identity. That’s because he’s blowing the lid off reality television with true tales from the Hollywood underbelly.

Compiled from hundreds of hours of interviews with reality show employees, friends, and contestants, Stage 46: The Reality of Reality Television follows the “living hell” of fictional protagonist Ben Walker, a production assistant on a number-one reality program. Walker navigates a world filled with drug abuse, sex scandals, money laundering, unfair employment practices, and daily verbal attacks from the executives before walking away and telling his side.

Try as I might, Smith would not divulge details. I asked point blank whether the book skewered top rated American Idol, but Smith steadfastly declined to name names. “I’ll leave that to the readers,” he replied.

After browsing the following excerpt, I can understand why.

I entered from behind the stage and walked along the right wall, around to the front of the stage where the individual was sitting. Andy and James were up on stage with the stand-ins, making sure the camera operators knew how the elimination was going to unfold, where to focus the camera, and which contestant to follow. I thought this was weird: the performances would not be happening until the next day, and the eliminations a day after that, so there was no way to know who was going to be eliminated. Voting hadn’t even taken place yet for the show that they were rehearsing for....

 I waited until Andy announced that the rehearsals were wrapped for the day before I delivered the message and returned to the office upstairs. As I watched the live show unfold the next day, I thought that all of the contestants did very well, except for two of the male contestants. I figured that both would be in the bottom group the following day and that one of them would be eliminated from the show and sent packing. Many of the people in the office thought the same thing that I did, so we were all shocked when one of the best performers was eliminated the following day.

After the office calmed down following the shock of the elimination, I finished the last few things I needed to get done before my fifteen-hour day was over and I could head home. While I was driving home, it dawned on me that the person who had been eliminated was the same person who had been eliminated during the closed-door rehearsals just two days before.

That was too much of a coincidence for me. From that day on, I figured that people on the inside had a hand in how the results of the show were handled. 

When pressed about accuracy, Smith assured me his sources were completely genuine and had no reason to lie. In support, he referenced a pending lawsuit filed by disgruntled employees last July. Additional employee lawsuits are pending. Sympathetic websites lend further credence to the book’s sordid tale.

Smith shopped the manuscript to hundreds of publishers and agents before finding a taker in Milner Crest Publishing. Like a similar publication, The Devil Wears Prada, he believes people in the business were afraid to get their hands dirty.

“This publisher believes in me,” Smith offered, “He thinks the book will be hugely successful. Public interest could create enough buzz for a screenplay.”

Screenplay or not, true embellishment or credible fiction, I can’t wait to get my hands on it. From everything I’ve gleaned, Stage 46: The Reality of Reality Television has the makings of a real page turner.

 
People who like this article will also enjoy:
 
 
 
 
 

 

Comments

Name:


Comments:
characters left

NOTE: Do Not Alter These Fields:

Recent Articles

Monday, November 9, 2009
Sesame Street begins its 41st season on public television tomorrow in a premiere episode featuring First Lady Michelle Obama. With new focus on going …
Monday, November 9, 2009
Normal 0 Today’s gossip that tickles my fancy features a pair of pants that would make your hair curl. Normal 0 …

Things to see and do

Fee Free Park Day
11 Nov 2009 - 8 am
USS Arizona
More special event »
Fee Free Park Day
Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
Tot Spot
Children's Discovery Center

Favorite Celebrity Encounters

Connect With Me on:

CELEBRITY DEATH MEMORIALS: November 10th

  • Chuck Connors, age 71, in 1992, Los Angeles, CA - lung cancer
  • Jack Palance, age 87, in 2006, Montecito, CA - natural causes
  • Ken Kesey, age 66, in 2001, Pleasant Hill, OR - surgery to remove a tumor
  • Laraine Day, age 87, in 2007, Ivins, UT - natural causes
  • Norman Mailer, age 84, in 2007, New York, NY - acute renal failure
  • view article: New Weekday Feature

Why Baltimore Celebrity Examiner?

  • Readers sometimes ask what these articles have to do with Baltimore. To them I say consider the following:
  • To the extent possible, these articles discuss local and visiting celebrities, as well as celebrities with a local connection.
  • Local includes areas near Baltimore.
  • Baltimore is my hometown. When an article contains commentary or opinion, that in itself is the Baltimore connection.
  • Like it or leave it, hon. Baltimore isn't exactly a celebrity town. Hopefully, you'll get it and come back for more.
  • Read My Other Celebrity Articles