Synopses & Reviews
Premiering in 2006, the stylish and award winning US hit show Ugly Betty, about kind-hearted ugly duckling Betty Suarez (America Ferrera), is the latest incarnation of a truly global phenomenon that started life as a Colombian telenovela, Yo soy Betty, la fea, back in 1999. The tale has since taken an extraordinary journey around the globe, from the original Colombian Beatriz, Indian Jassi, Chinese Wudi and Israeli Esti to the Flemish Sara, Spanish Bea, Greek Maria and Dutch Lotte as well as Czech Katka, Russian Katka and Turkish Gönül. This groundbreaking book about how television formats go global asks what the Betty phenomenon can tell us about the international circulation of locally produced TV fictions as the Latin American telenovela is sold to, and/or re-made for, different national contexts. The contributors explore what Betty says about the tensions between multimedia conglomerates' commercial demands and the regulatory forces of national broadcasters, about national TV industries' struggle in competitive markets, and about what this international trade reveals about cultural storytelling and audience experience, as well as ideologies of feminine beauty. The book features original interviews with buyers and schedulers, writers, story editors and directors, including the creator of Yo soy Betty, la fea, Fernando Gaitán.
Synopsis
Premiering in 2006, Ugly Betty, the award-winning US hit show about unglamorous but kind-hearted Betty Suarez (America Ferrera), is the latest incarnation of a worldwide phenomenon that started life as a Colombian telenovela, Yo soy Betty, la fea, back in 1999. The tale of the ugly duckling has since taken an extraordinary global journey and become the most successful telenovela to date. This groundbreaking book asks what the Yo soy Betty, la fea/Ugly Betty phenomenon can tell us about the international circulation of locally produced TV fictions as the Latin American telenovela is sold to, and/or re-made-officially and unofficially-for different national contexts. The contributors explore what Betty has to say about the tensions between the commercial demands of multimedia conglomerates and the regulatory forces of national broadcasters as well as the international ambitions of national TV industries and their struggle in competitive markets. They also investigate what this international trade tells us about cultural storytelling and audience experience, as well as ideologies of feminine beauty and myths of female desire and aspiration.
TV's Betty Goes Global features original interviews with buyers and schedulers, writers, story editors and directors, including the creator of Yo soy Betty, la fea, Fernando
About the Author
Janet McCabe is Honorary Research Fellow in TV Drama at Birkbeck, University of London. She is author of The West Wing and Feminist Film Studies. She has co-edited collections on contemporary US television including Reading Sex and the City and Quality TV: Contemporary American TV and Beyond (2007, both I.B.Tauris). She is a co-founding editor as well as managing editor of Critical Studies in Television journal. Along with Kim Akass, she is series editor of Tauris' Reading Contemporary Television series. Kim Akass is Lecturer in Cultural and Contextual Studies (Film and TV), University of Hertfordshire. Among the books in contemporary television she has co-edited are Reading Six Feet Under (2005), and Quality TV: Contemporary American TV and Beyond (2007, both I.B.Tauris). She is the author of Telematernity: Watching Mothers on Television (I.B. Tauris forthcoming). She is a co-founding editor and managing editor of Critical Studies in Television, as well as series editor, with Janet McCabe, of Reading Contemporary Television series.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements * Contributors * Introduction: 'Oh Betty, You're So Beautiful' * The Whole World's Unlikely Heroine: Ugly Betty as Transnational Phenomenon * Our Betty: The Legacy of Yo soy Betty, la fea's Success in Colombia * Interview with Jeff Ford on the purchase of Ugly Betty for Channel 4 * Interviews with TV Executives involved in the German Adaptation, Verliebt in Berlin * Betty and Lisa: Alternating Between Sameness and Uniqueness * Ugly Betty, Flemish Sara: Telenovela Adaptation and Generic Expectations * Re-Creating Betty's World in Spain * Towards a Cultural Economy of Chou Nu (Nv) Wu Di: The Ugly Betty franchise in the People's Republic of China * How Ugly Can Betty Be in India? * Ugly Betty on Turkish Television: Updating Popular Cinema * Esti Ha'mechoeret: The Israeli Ugly Betty * The Greek Maria The Ugly: The Never-Ending Journey of a Myth * Czech Ugly Katka: Global Homogenization and Local Invention * Glamorously (Post) Soviet: Reading Yo soy Betty, la fea in Russia * Traveling Narratives and Transitional Life Strategies: Yo soy Bea and Ugly Betty * Our Betties, Ourselves