| As
we were editing the account of a young alumnus' Bachelorette pursuits,
reality--or reality TV--struck again. Word came that Andrew Schuler,
assistant professor of civil engineering in Duke's Pratt School
of Engineering, had been cast as "The Professor" for
a new reality show, The Real Gilligan's Island. The show started
in June. "Like a lot of people in my generation, I grew up
watching too many bad sitcoms," he says.
Schuler volunteered for the part after an open casting call last
summer on--of all places--the listserv of the Association of Environmental
Engineering Scientists and Professors. He was flown to Hollywood
for a screen test; he clinched it, he says, after he took out a guitar
and sang his own song inspired by Gilligan's Island. Last fall, he
joined the cast and crew at an undisclosed tropical location, though
he allows that it was "a very nice place" somewhere south
of Cancun. He says he enjoyed the company of his fellow castaways,
and, from the island lifestyle, lost ten pounds and gained a suntan.
People are bound to wonder, as he put it in the North Carolina Independent,
why he'd agree "to be televised nationally in coconut-oriented
competitions with people in feather boas and sequined dresses." He
says he did get to live out a fantasy--makeup people, producers hanging
on his every word, camera crews that came running "every time
I cracked a coconut."
But what made the experience meaningful was the potential to promote
an environmental agenda, to be a public personality drawing connections
between island survival and scarce natural resources. He has used
his pseudo-celebrity status to gain access to radio talk shows and
newspaper opinion pages, advocating for environmental sensitivity
on issues like global warming.
So reality TV may appeal not just to the bachelorette-crazed and
the island-enamored, but also to those who want to reshape the global
reality. That's the hope of the professor--or "The Professor."
--Robert J. Bliwise, Editor
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