By: Nicole D'Andria
Buffy the Vampire Slayer has had a huge impact on pop culture and the real world. Don’t believe me? Sink your teeth into this.
Starting as a movie in 1992, then a television show five years later that ran for seven seasons and now a comic book series, Buffy the Vampire Slayer has been around for over two decades. By far the most popular of the three was the critically acclaimed television show, and it’s almost scary how much Buffy has influenced not just pop culture but academia too!
Slate did a study of
popular TV shows, including the likes of The Wire, Alien, The Simpsons and a couple of other
shows. Who came out on top?
No contest. Slate found that twice as many
papers, essays, and books have been written about the vampire slayer. The show
even has its own journal, Slayage, which
was created by the Whedon Studies Association, named after Buffy’s creator Joss
Whedon (who also directed The Avengers
and Firefly).
Buffy
the Vampire Slayer is so popular it inspired “Buffy Studies,” a
collection
of scholarly writings all about the TV series. The topics ranged from feminism
to the allegorical and philosophical elements in the show. It’s even been used
by professors to teach entire courses
about the show.
I think there are several major reasons Buffy
revolutionized pop culture. For one, when Buffy first aired back in 1997 genres
were pretty rigid. Buffy made use of several genres. The series was considered
a drama but dabbled in several genres. There were episodes like “Band Candy,”
where all the adults in Sunnydale acted like teenagers after eating band candy,
which was generally comedic. Then there are truly heartbreaking episodes like
“The Body,” when Buffy finds her mother dead and has to wait for the paramedics
to remove her body. There were award-winning episodes like “Hush,” an episode
that did the unthinkable by being completely silent almost the entire time. Popular shows like LOST and Battlestar Galactica
followed in the show’s footsteps. Which isn’t surprising considering the
writers of Buffy also wrote those
shows. Yes, thanks to its popularity, writers from Buffy were able to land jobs they might not have gotten on without
shows like Alias, Rome, and Dexter.
At the time, most television shows were very episodic.
Stories usually wouldn’t carry over from episode to episode. Continuity would
reset and a new story would continue. Buffy
made long story arcs popular. Whedon would also make seasons more distinct by
creating a different theme each year – from surviving high school in season 1
to surviving college in season 4. There would also be a new main antagonist
from season to season, like the demonic Master from season 1 and the vampiric
and wise-cracking Spike (accompanied by Angelus and Drusilla) from season 2. Main
characters were also added, like Buffy’s sister Dawn, her new Watcher Wesley
and a new vampire hunter with an attitude by the name of Faith.
Then there was the dialogue in the show. Pop culture
references may be big now, but they were relatively new when Buffy and the rest
of the scoobies started throwing out one-liners. These terms were later used in
TV shows like Veronica Mars. But TV
shows didn’t just use Buffy’s slang, they would literally talk about the show.
Here’s a video that shows just some references
TV shows have made to Buffy, which clocks in at over 12 minutes.
Comic books have also made reference to Buffy the Vampire Slayer. To name a few:
Betty in Archie Comics dressed up as
Bunny the Vampire Slayer for a Halloween costume party; in Young Justice the characters often watch the TV show Wendy the Werewolf Stalker and Young Justice #33-34 the heroines of the series go to Hollywood and take part in
an episode, during which it is revealed that the show’s creator (“Joe Westin”
instead of “Joss Whedon”) is actually a vampire; in The Simpsons comic book there is a parody of Buffy in another
fictional TV show called "Lisa the Vampire Slayer;" there have also
been parodies of the show made into full comics, like Vampirella vs. Fluffy the Vampire Slayer One-Shot.
Eventually the slang even found its way into the real
world. Michael Adam’s wrote an entire book, Slayer Slang, A Buffy the Vampire Slayer Lexicon,
about how Buffy has influenced our
language. Some examples Adams mentions are how the characters change nouns like
Keysar Soze (a character from The Unusual
Suspects), guinea pig and psych 101 into verbs and how characters add the
word much after verbs, such as “Overestimate much?” and “Procrastinate much?”
Usually the cast will make up their own words using familiar phrases, like
Xander’s term ‘Guiltapalooza.’ The use of these words may have faded today but
back in the day they were much more common.
Also, while I’m sure shows in the past have continued in comic book form, Buffy the Vampire Slayer seemed to make the trend more public. Now, shows like Smallville continue on as comics. Buffy's comic book series even managed to break boundaries the show couldn't cross, such as turning Dawn into a giant or tackling the controversial issue of abortion.
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References
Mishler, Beth. "15 Years afterBuffy: She Influenced Pop Culture. A Lot." SparkNotes. SparkNotes, 8 Aug. 2012. Web. 28
Mar. 2014.
Moore, Robert. "When TV BecameArt: What We Owe to Buffy." PopMatters. PopMatters, 17 Dec. 2009. Web. 28 Mar. 2014.
Ula, Neda. "'BuffyStudies'" NPR. NPR, 13 May 2003. Web. 28 Mar. 2014.
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