Showing posts with label Academic Reflection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Academic Reflection. Show all posts

Monday, 17 May 2021

Roel Puijk - Slow TV: An Analysis of Minute-by-Minute Television in Norway

Roel Puijk - Slow TV
ISBN 9781789382013

A dedicated book on Slow Television in Norway is being released by Intellect Books on 31st May 2021. By media scholar, Roel Puijk, it is the first dedicated publication to examine Norwegian Slow TV. The Minute-by-Minute projects remain some of the most surprisingly successful TV shows in Norway, with hit ratings and representing Norway around the world.

The cover shows the patriotic flag-waving which features in many of the Slow TV projects, the adventurer Lars Monsen on hike - showing the Norwegian love and participation in the great outdoors, and also the ferry line, Hurtigruten, whose voyage was covered from Bergen to Kirkenes in a record-breaking broadcast.

Intellect Books' entry reads, 

"Slow TV has become a familiar feature of broadcasting in Norway. It refers to a set of programmes produced by the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK) since 2009, starting out with a seven-hour broadcasting of the train ride between Bergen and Oslo. 

The concept of slow TV and ‘minute-by-minute’ broadcasting was developed so that the event on television lasts as long as in real time. Several broadcasters outside Norway, including BBC Four, YLE, SRF and Netflix, have now taken up the concept of slow TV.

The first study of this genre, this highly original book explores three different aspects of the phenomenon of slow TV: the perspective of the broadcaster, the perspective of the producers and other actors involved in the production of the programme, and that of the audience.

It goes beyond the question of genre and considers how slow TV fits into television scheduling and how the audience appeal can be understood within broader concepts such as media events, media tourism, reception and national identity. Public service broadcasters can be seen as having more opportunity to experiment, and slow TV can be seen as a good example of public service programming.  What attracts viewers to the programmes is that they invite a contemplative mode of watching: there is a chance to see something unexpected, or to be introduced to interesting new things.

Illustrated throughout in full colour, using stills from broadcast programmes.

This book will appeal primarily to an academic readership, both researchers and students. Most readers are likely to be involved with media and communication studies, cultural studies and film studies.  It will also be of interest more generally to the humanities and social sciences fields as it touches on topics such as national and local identity, popular culture, Nordic lifestyle, well-being, tradition, community and popular culture."


The book is available to order from the publisher and other retailers.


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Slow Television - The Slow TV Blog

Friday, 11 August 2017

Elisabeth Urdal on The Audience's Experience of watching Slow TV

Looking to Hjørundfjord from Slogen in Sunnmørsalpene
The Slow TV Blog is very pleased to welcome a guest author, Elisabeth Urdal from Bergen who has just this summer completed a Masters Degree in Media Science, with qualitative research contributing to Reception Studies on Slow TV. This also forms a unique club of two people who have studied Slow TV at Masters Degree level!


The Audience’s Experience of watching Slow TV


The Norwegian broadcaster NRK's ​​Slow TV programs have had a big audience both in their home country and abroad. But what experiences do the audience get by watching boat - and train journeys, hymn singing and knitting minute by minute?

A recently delivered Masters thesis in Media Science addresses this question. Elisabeth Urdal from the University of Bergen interviewed twelve viewers in two different age groups – between 18-29 years and 49 years and older. Her research showed that it was particularly five experiences Slow TV gave the Norwegian viewers:

  1. Travel experience


One experience the viewers expressed was that Slow TV gave them a travel experience. Several of the programs have been boat and train journeys, such as this summer's “Sommertoget minutt for minutt”. These TV programs showed the entire journey from A to B, allowing the audience to see the view along the way. In this way, the audience got the feeling of being a free passenger who joined the journey from start to finish, over as long time as the journey took.

“They bring us to fjords and mountains that we may not have seen”

  1. Relaxing and hypnotic


Another experience is perhaps the most obvious one – it's relaxing to watch Slow TV. It is a predictable TV genre with a lack of highlights, and most of the time nothing happens. Some of the viewers claimed that Slow TV could be so relaxing that it almost seemed hypnotic.

When they watched the waves or train rails go by, they got into a rhythm where they were "taken into the picture". Several people first discovered this "hypnosis" when they were interrupted by someone who spoke to them or by a ringing phone.

“It's good to relax with Slow TV and disconnect everything and everyone”

  1. Thought- and imagination provoking


A third experience was that Slow TV can evoke thoughts and imagination. No producer has cut out the boring parts, so the viewer himself must find out what's worth watching and what's not. The slow format also makes it possible to notice details that the viewers otherwise may not have seen in a traditional format. Some of the audience compared it to "people watching". In this "activity” you usually sit in a café and study people passing by and maybe fantasize about their lives.

"When you look at things slowly, you have more time to stimulate and find up stories yourself"

  1. “Live feeling”


A fourth experience was the live feeling – a feeling that what's happening, happens now.

Except for some of the broadcasts, the Slow TV productions have all been broadcasted live. The audience not only get to see a small excerpt of the journey or activity, but get to see the whole part, and in real time as it unfolds.

The viewers could probably guess what would happen in the next minutes, but they never knew for sure. This gave an extra thrill to a somewhat unexciting format. Several of the informants therefore sat longer than they indented to in the first place, in case something exciting could happen.

“It was hardly possible to believe, I could not take the time to eat or go to the toilet”

  1. National feeling and community


The experience most of the audience mentioned were the strong national feeling Slow TV provided.


Elisabeth in her Bunad on Norway Day, 17th May
Firstly, Slow TV was sent by the Norwegian public broadcaster, NRK.

Secondly the programs contained typically Norwegian topics, like high mountains and deep fjords, and traditional activities such as knitting, hymn singing and salmon fishing.

Thirdly, and not least, all the Norwegian flags were a symbol of Norway. Several of the viewers said this evoked patriotic feelings in them. In addition, the viewers described a form of national community with the whole population of Norway. The nation either watched the programs at home, or participate with flags and homemade posters in front of the camera.

“We were together on a common project, and you got the strong feeling of being one nation. You felt very Norwegian”


Elisabeth's whole master thesis “Suddenly it happened…nothing - a study of the audience's experience with Slow TV” can be read and downloaded here.

Copyright Elisabeth Urdal, 2017.

Friday, 28 November 2014

A history of the term "Slow TV"

Questions which have not been asked are:  When did slow TV first become Slow TV? In terms of the phrase - when did that first get used? And in what ways has Slow TV / Slow Television been used? It has meant different things at different times. When did the term “Slow TV” first emerge?
Its usage is an interesting concept to explore, for while it has indeed had different ways of being understood, there are significant nuances which make it very similar to what is now more popularly taken as Slow TV. For the sake of less confusion - Slow TV (upper case S) will refer to the style developed in Norway; slow TV (lower case s) will refer to the other way of understanding its use.
The most recent non-Norwegian slow TV reference is from an article on the BBC News website in November 2011 which remarks about “evidence of a shift towards long and glacially paced, small-screen drama”; it then poses the question, “So why has slow TV taken off?” (Kelly, 2011).
The piece reflects on the Danish series, “The Killing” and its ‘slowness’, that  "it’s not ‘slow’ in the normally derogatory sense, but slow in the sense of crescendoing”. As in it takes its time to get to where it’s going - not needlessly wasting time, but taking the amount of time it takes without pushing it along at unnecessary pace, too.
Kelly’s piece later qualifies slow TV to “Slow-tempo TV” where dramas play out over a long time, such as the Forsyte Saga, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Brideshead Revisited, The Jewel in the Crown and even Twin Peaks.
Surprise is articulated about the use of slower pace editing successfully engaging the audience, “...slow TV flies in the face of conventional wisdom about modern audiences demanding immediacy...”. Sounds like reactions to Norwegian Slow TV too (which had been being broadcast for two years at the time of Kelly’s article - including the behemoth of the five and a half day ferry trip aboard Hurtigruta).
Another similarity with the Norwegian documentary style is articulated by Dr Amy Holdsworth in the same article; she says, “...the pace of slow TV invites viewers to actively engage with the programme, rather than their normal treatment as passive... Part of the appeal is working things out for yourself... They allow the space for viewers to invest in them and make connections for themselves”. This is identical to the active mental participation the long sequences in Slow TV can evoke and which generate viewer curiosity to look out for changing small stories and not be spoon fed the big narrative.
Dr Holdsworth’s usage of ‘slow television’ goes back to 2008, with subsequent mentions in academia in 2009 and 2011 by other writers. It is a label which does not appear to have stuck in describing such programming and styles. In the 2008 paper, she quotes esteemed writer and director, Stephen Poliakoff, from a documentary about his fictional drama series “Shooting the Past” which concerns the unexpected closure of a vast photographic archive. Poliakoff choses to relay some images in the drama where they sometimes decelerate to a stillness which is representative of the still images the camera lingers over.
“‘Shooting the Past’ was written as a sort of experiment, really. I became very interested in how short scenes had become on television so I thought, right, I will slow television down to the point that it stops... I mean leave scenes so long that they seem ridiculous and try to compel people in that way”.  (Holdsworth, 2008, 129) Again, the likeness to Slow TV is clear. Interviewing one of the project leaders of Norwegian Slow TV, Thomas Hellum, he speaks of holding an image until your inner editor is almost screaming that you need to ‘cut’ - to contravene the received broadcast model that you need to move on to a different image every few seconds, and should you have a still image, that somehow it needs to be made more dynamic.
As Slow TV creates a very different visual and mental aesthetic which gives a different experience, “In Poliakoff’s desire to create a significant television experience, ‘slow television’ operates as an alternative way of absorbing the viewer.” (Holdsworth, 2008, 131) This is echoed by Christopher Hogg who cites Amy Holdsworth, that Poliakoff “...consciously works in opposition to the modern visual trend for fast-paced editing and rapid-fire narrative technique by slowing down his shots, creating spectacle not from rapid action but from the lingering impact of an image...” (Hogg, 2009, 438).
Poliakoff has a “... belief in foregrounding the intrinsic aesthetic and narrative worth of the televisual image, not as an ephemeral byte within a rapid-fire delivery of the plot to be instantly forgotten, but as something which deserves the viewer’s consideration and appreciation, and which has the potential to linger in the mind, while also contributing to a larger televisual experience”. (Hogg, 2009, 444). The viewing figures for the landscape based shows, with the ferry journey (Hurtigruta) becoming a national event show that some of these Slow TV productions do become an exceptional televisual experience, especially in the prominence of beautiful scenery as the principal visual element.
It is Helen Wheatley’s paper (2011) which considers landscape based documentaries and links them into a slow TV of sorts. She relates her reflections to such productions as Bird’s Eye View (BBC, 1969-71), A Picture of Britain (BBC, 2005), Coast (The Open University / BBC, 2005- ), Britain’s Favourite View (ITV, 2007) and the Wainwright Walks series (Skyworks for BBC4, 2007-09). (Wheatley, 2011, 233)
She proposes such shows  “...presume a contemplative mode of viewing more traditionally associated with the spectacular in fine art and photography, and at odds both with theories of the distracted viewer identified by early theories of television and with counter theories of ‘sit forward’ viewer engagement or enthralment...” (Wheatley, 2011, 237) and goes on to comment that this is ‘slow television’.
Another similarity with Slow TV is articulated here “In the contemporary landscape factual entertainment programme, then, narrative progression is frequently slowed or halted to enable contemplative viewing.” (Wheatley, 2011, 242) The absence of a driving enforced narrative allows a more mindful way for the viewer to come alive to the image, becoming more aware of the bigger picture and enquiring more on smaller stories in the details.
...the camera lingers, it meanders and rambles over this space, inviting a contemplative gaze. This is ‘slow television’ for the contemplative viewer, to borrow Steven Poliakoff’s phrase.” (Wheatley, 2011, 244). So there we have it: 1999 was the first implementation of slowing broadcast images to deliver a different aesthetic- a ‘slow television’, articulated in an interview in 2004.
Before pondering more the more recent usage of ‘slow TV’, there is one further likeness to identify; Wheatley used the term ‘Screensaver TV’ (2011, 244) as one way of describing the landscape documentary; it is a very similar notion to the ‘wallpaper TV’ that British Airways use to describe the usage of the Norwegian train journey Slow TV, the Bergensbanen film which started this all off.
A step forward before a further step back in time. It was during and following the Bergensbanen transmission that social media participation appears to give the first uses of ‘Slow TV’ in this context. The producers did not set out with something in mind called ‘Slow TV’ – just a way of telling the story of the line from Bergen to Oslo.
A search through twitter posts and conversations shows that three separate users applied the term ‘slow TV’ to the progressing train journey on the tv. Two of the accounts are no longer visible; the third is visible and it is this one that appears to have first used the phrase. Having interacted with them on twitter to ask of why they described it as ‘slow TV’, the reply was linked ‘slow-food I guess’(I will not post the link as although the tweet remains in the public domain, the enquiry was not as warmly received as I had envisaged).
Did the other two twitter users take it from this first? There appears to be not conversation between the accounts owing to the time difference in the tweets (and in twitter a tweet usually becomes so last minute very quickly); while they may have monitored what was said about the Bergensbanen broadcast via hashtags, #SlowTV or #SakteTV (Norwegian word of the year in 2013) they had not yet come into existence (obviously). 

It is suggested that each of these accounts with an awareness of the ‘slow movement’ recognised the characteristic of slowness in this TV. In almost synchronicity the term emerged on twitter. Supposing these three accounts separately formed a label to describe what they saw from concepts already out there, it is a reasonable progression of thought that others observing the same media, aware of the ‘slow’ activities also recognised this as ‘Slow TV’. It was a term impregnated but unarticulated in peoples’ minds, and when the time was right, it could be born and become an outside reality.

Another question, then, concerns the use of the word ‘slow’ used to describe activities done in real time without purposefully accelerating the activity to make it quick. When did ‘slow’ first become a ‘thing’? It all dates back to a reaction against the opening of a fast food chain in Rome in 1986. I’ll leave the history of the Slow Food Movement there, but as a conscious reaction to an accelerated form of human activity, Slow Food started it all. There was no 'slow anything' as a deliberate reaction to sped up life before 1986.

While Slow TV was not born as a deliberate reaction to the accelerated media we have today it has become reinforced as an identity because it is slow and stands out in the media environment. It embraces a growing awareness, an emergent zeitgeist, perhaps, that while speed has its place, we do need to have times when we choose to slow down. Food, life, and even television.
As for the idea of making a documentary into a real time broadcast marathon, reality tv on extended transmission, that is another question altogether.
So to recap, Slow Television has been used to describe a decelerated pace in image editing and narrative unfolding in drama; the undergirding awareness of slow movements informed the perception of the Bergensbanen programme and made possible the emergence of Slow TV as something distinct with a clear identity and a gradually manifested form. In some ways its discovery was accidental but seems to be scratching an itch we didn’t know was there. Like much of Slow TV, that is an area for further research.


Sources cited:
Hogg, C. (2009). Re-evaluating the Archive in Stephen Poliakoff's Shooting the Past. Journal of British Cinema and Television. 6 (3), 437-451.
Holdsworth, A. . (2008). ‘Slow Television’ and Stephen Poliakoff's Shooting the Past. Journal of British Cinema and Television. 3 (1), 128-133.
Kelly, R. (2011) Is slow TV taking over the airwaves? BBC News, 17th November 2011 [Online]. Available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15757413. Accessed on 11th October 2014, 9:10am.
Wheatley, H. (2011). Beautiful images in spectacular clarity: spectacular television, landscape programming and the question of (tele)visual pleasure. Screen. 52 (2), 233-248.

Grateful acknowledgement to Thomas Hellum and Rune Møklebust for research into the Bergensbanen tweets.

This blog entry is an original piece of work copyright Tim Prevett, November 2014.

Slow Television -The Slow TV Blog

Friday, 10 October 2014

CBC Podcast about Slow TV

CBC Radio's 'Spark' show with Nora Young carries an interview about Slow TV with Espen Ytreberg, professor of media and communications at Oslo University. The podcast is embedded on the page here.

Slow Television -The Slow TV Blog