Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Reality television generation suffering from 'Truman Show' Syndrome

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/3521150/Reality-television-generation-suffering-from-Truman-Show-Syndrome.html
excerpted from above link:


Reality television generation suffering from 'Truman Show' Syndrome
It is the perfect illness for the reality television generation – a paranoid fear of being stuck in a TV show.

By Tom Leonard in New York Published: 6:58PM GMT 25 Nov 2008

Psychiatric experts have identified a 21st century form of delusion – dubbed the 'Truman Show Syndrome' – whose sufferers are convinced their lives are being played out in front of an audience.
The self-exposure culture peddled by reality shows, internet sites such as Facebook and YouTube has provided a "perfect storm" for delusional people, encouraging them to put their fantasies on a global stage, say researchers.
Joel and Ian Gold, a New York psychiatrist and Montreal academic, say they have been inundated with cases of what they have dubbed the 'Truman Show Syndrome'.
The name refers to the 1998 film starring Jim Carey in which the main character gradually realises his humdrum life is being filmed as a reality television show and that everyone he knows is merely acting.
The condition might seem comical – one man went to a US government building and announced he wanted his show to end – but it tended to be "absolutely debilitating" as sufferers believed they could trust no one, said Dr Joel Gold, head of psychiatry at Bellevue Hospital in New York.
He said he had recently been contacted by the father of a girl who had contemplated suicide because she believed it was the only way of "getting out of the show".
It was also difficult to treat because, as he had found himself, sufferers will dismiss their doctors and psychiatrists as actors.
The existence of a specific Truman Syndrome has divided experts, with critics pointing out that delusional patients have long believed that friends or relatives have been replaced by impostors.
However, the Gold brothers counter that the Truman Syndrome is different because of the "sweeping" scope of the delusion, taking in society at large.
"We're not claiming it's a new form of mental illness and we're not suggesting these people would be well if there was no YouTube," said Dr Gold.
"But we've passed a watershed moment with respect to the internet, in which you can do something very silly and without skill, and yet become famous instantly.
"That can be very exciting for many people but for those who are at risk of this kind of paranoia, it can be very stressful."
Critics who dismissed sufferers as narcissists were missing the point, he said. "These are not people who want to be famous. Quite the contrary, they want to be left alone."
He said they so far had evidence of between 50 and 75 cases, many provided by other psychiatrists.
Ian Gold, a professor at McGill University in Montreal, said that the ability of reality shows and the internet to transform strangers into intimates may compound psychological pressure on people who have underlying problems dealing with others.
Researchers in London described a "Truman Syndrome" patient in the British Journal of Psychiatry in August. The 26-year-old postman "had a sense the world was slightly unreal, as if he was the eponymous hero in the film", they wrote.
Other academics have suggested that culture and technology can influence delusions. A study in Austria identified a woman who believed she had become a walking webcam.
Her psychiatrists concluded that reality television may help such patients convince themselves that their experiences are plausible.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Followers