Abstract
Western visual entertainment media’s preference for entertainment over
accuracy has produced distorted portrayals of counselling and
counsellors. Therefore, the main objective of the present study was to
identify whether it was possible for portrayals of counselling in the
entertainment media to be realistic while also being entertaining;
entertainment being imperative to the entertainment industry. It was
hypothesized that if television series were realistic then the counsellor
would be shown as using a positive, ethical contemporary counselling
approach to dealing with typical client problems. It was also
hypothesized that YouTube videos would be more closely representative
of actual counselling than television. Two visual entertainment forms
were sampled for analyses, a 43 episode television series focussed on a
counsellor and 80 counselling videos from YouTube. The study utilised a
quantitative exploratory archival survey design that analysed and
categorised existing data. Based on set evaluation criteria, analysis
indicated that the tendency for television producers to lapse into
inaccuracies for dramatic effect appeared irresistible. In contrast,
YouTube allowed counsellors to post an unlimited number of accurate
representations of counselling videos online, although the entertainment
value and popularity was more difficult to assess.
Brett Furlonger, Alexandra Papadopoulos, Andrea Ping Chow, Yusi Zhu. (2015) The Portrayal of Counselling on Television and YouTube: Implications for Professional Counsellors, Journal of Behavioural Sciences, Volume 25, Issue 2.
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