The Ashlee Simpson Show is a television reality show about the life of Ashlee
Simpson. The first season, taped from 2003 to mid-2004, focused on the beginnings
of her career as a singer and the recording of her debut album, Autobiography;
a second season is currently being taped and is scheduled to begin airing in the
United States in early 2005.
Consisting of eight half-hour episodes, the first season ran on MTV in the
U.S. in the summer of 2004, debuting on June 16 and airing every Wednesday until
the last episode on August 4. The show proved quite successful, airing at 10:30
PM Eastern Standard Time—the time slot just after Ashlee's sister Jessica
Simpson's already successful reality show Newlyweds—and helping to establish
widespread recognition for Ashlee, whose album debuted on July 20 at number one
in sales. Jordan Schur, the president of Simpson's record label, Geffen—who
is himself is seen at several points in the show—said that "There's
no question that it really helped expose her and her music. She's got a tremendous
personality; people gravitate toward that. They want to watch her and listen to
her music." [1] (http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5736482/)
In Canada, The Ashlee Simpson Show began showing on MTV Canada on July 1, 2004,
airing on Thursdays at 9:00 EST. Also in Canada, it later began airing on MuchMusic,
beginning on November 14, 2004 at 4:30 PM EST (having been moved up from the previously
planned date of November 21). [2] (http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/November2004/04/c8967.html)
In the United Kingdom, the first episode aired on September 27, 2004.
About the show
The show begins with Simpson signing her record deal with Geffen and ends with
the U.S. release of her album. Simpson's song "Autobiography", the title
track from her album, plays during the show's opening, which is composed of clips
of Simpson from the show mixed with brightly colored backgrounds and handwritten
lyrics, words and scribblings. The show itself does not consist entirely of reality
footage, but also includes clips of Simpson talking to the camera about herself
and about the various events in the show.
Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow.
Much of the show deals with the process of writing and recording songs. Episode
one shows some of the early stages of songwriting, and in episode two Simpson
records some demos which are not received favorably by Schur—"Jordan
wasn't feeling the demos", she says. Schur wants Simpson to work with other
people, and she is seen meeting with several in episode three: John Feldmann of
the band Goldfinger, who went on to cowrite the Autobiography track "Giving
It All Away" with Simpson (his name is spelled "Feldman" on the
show), Guy Chambers, and the producing team The Matrix. Later in the same episode,
Simpson first works with John Shanks, who became the producer of Autobiography,
and who had previously worked with Alanis Morissette, Sheryl Crow, and Michelle
Branch. Simpson and Shanks work together on a song called "Surrender":
"The first time I worked with John," she says during the show, "we
wrote a song called 'Surrender', and we did it in like two hours, something like
that, and it was just so short, and like, a great song." Later, however,
Simpson becomes upset because she thinks Schur wants the song to have more of
a "pop" sound. She is told by Thom Panunzio that Schur thinks she should
sound "prettier", although at the same time Panunzio tells her that
it's "probably good" that Schur compared what he heard to the music
of the band Garbage. Throughout the show, Simpson makes clear her preference for
rock music and that she wants her album to reflect that; she says she does not
want her album to sound like the pop music of Hilary Duff or her sister Jessica.
At one point, when she is very upset after talking with Panunzio, she says while
talking on the phone: "I'm out if he's gonna have me do something that I
don't wanna do. I don't wanna have a record, then." However, Simpson and
her father Joe Simpson (who is also her manager) subsequently discuss the matter
with Schur, and things are worked out.
The recording of "Pieces of Me", the album's first single, features
in episode four. At one point, she is singing a line from the song, "Then
the phone rings, I hear you", but her voice stumbles at "hear you",
and she says: "Damn it! I don't know why I keep on messing that up."
As she says at one point in episode three: "It's hard in the recording studio
to make sure my vocals are good and to get all the right harmonies". The
show does not shy away from displaying the difficulties that Simpson faces in
recording her album, and she has emphasized that the process of recording is seen
as it really is: "...I show lots of imperfections. People will see me in
the studio for days when it's not going so great. Usually when you watch the making
of an album it's like, "Oh yeah! I'm doing my album and it's perfect!"
But on my MTV show you can see me trying to sing on the days when I can't hit
those notes."
In episode five, Simpson's backing band is formed and they begin to rehearse
for live performances, but Simpson begins to have problems with her vocal cords;
this makes it difficult for her to sing and causes her a great deal of anxiety.
She wonders if her vocal problems will disrupt her music career, and if the reality
show will have to be cancelled. She goes to see a doctor, who diagnoses her with
acid reflux and a deviated septum and prescribes remedies including vocal rest
and changes to her diet. She even has to wear a device in her nose at night, which
she says makes her look "like the biggest dork ever". Despite all this,
Simpson successfully pulls off her first live performance at the end of episode
six, but not without much nervousness beforehand. She stumbles (literally) during
her first song, "Autobiography" ("I'm a dork," she jokes),
but her performance of the second song, "La La", an energetic rocker
with sexual lyrics, goes much better ("OK, I like this," she says).
She concludes the show with the emotional "Shadow", which later became
her album's second single. Backstage after the show, she is congratuated on her
performance by everyone from her father to her boyfriend, musician Ryan Cabrera,
to her sister Jessica (who is present despite having just had laser eye surgery,
and wearing goggles as a result—the eye surgery actually features in an
episode of Newlyweds).
Another aspect to the show is Simpson's personal life. Much of the first episode
deals with her relationship with her boyfriend, Josh Henderson; the two seem very
affectionate, and Simpson says in her car that she likes to wonder what Josh is
thinking about and then turn to a radio station to get an answer from a random
song—for example, she asks, "Is Josh having fun tonight?" and
a song on the radio replies "Yeah!", and she laughs. As it turns out,
though, immediately after this the two break up—apparently at Josh's instigation.
By episode three, Simpson begins a new relationship with Ryan Cabrera and appears
in his music video for "On the Way Down". At first he was just a friend
("he actually lived in my house with my family for, like, a year and a half,
and he's my best friend also", she says), but romance between them is seen
beginning during the filming of the video. At one point in the filming, she pushes
Cabrera against a wall and starts kissing him ("He was in so much shock",
she says). "I was like a little nervous because he's like my dorky brother
that I go rollerblading with, and all that kind of stuff," she says, "but
after that, you know, it kind of like, broke the barrier." Later, as they
are kissing for a shot that constitutes the ending of the video, they continue
kissing even after the filming is over: "you guys, we cut like two minutes
ago," they are told. In episode four, Cabrera disappoints Simpson on Valentine's
Day by not playing a song he wrote for her at a concert, and Simpson says that
he's the worst Valentine ever: not only did he not give her a single flower, she
tells him, he didn't even give her a dying flower. But as it turns out, he did
get flowers for her after all, and she realizes, with some embarrassment, that
she "blew it out of proportion so bad".
The show ties her music together with her personal life in that many of the
songs are inspired by events in her personal life, both good and bad: "Pieces
of Me" was inspired by Ryan, "Unreachable" was inspired by Josh,
and "Shadow" is about the feeling she had when she was younger of being
in the shadow of her sister, and about emerging from that shadow and finding her
identity.
Aside from music and romance, the show also chronicles minor but often humorous
tribulations of Simpson's life: for example, in episode two she locks her keys
in her car, and in episode three she is revealed to be chronically late—"I
am so late to every single meeting I go to," she says—and she gets
lost despite her car having a navigational system, which seems to be of little
help. In episode six, she is late again—through no fault of her own, though,
since her mother was driving—this time for her first show. (She arrives
in time for the performance itself, but doesn't get as much time for rehearsal
as had been intended.)
In episode four, Simpson goes to a ballet class with a friend because she wants
to get in shape, but she and her friend can't help laughing through the class;
eventually she concludes that she'll have to find some other way to get her workout,
even though she was a dancer for years and was admitted to the School of American
Ballet at the young age of 11. "Shadow" is introduced at the beginning
of episode five, when she talks with John Shanks about the song and then begins
to sing it while Shanks plays guitar; this segues into a series of video clips
of Simpson's life from her childhood up to the present day, and while these play,
Simpson talks about growing up in Texas and being a dancer. Later in the episode,
after a photoshoot (which she describes as her first "as an artist"),
she dyes her previously blonde hair dark, but says she did not do it to distinguish
herself from her sister, who is blonde. At the beginning of episode six, in the
midst of her problems with her voice, she films a Pizza Hut commercial with Jessica;
she becomes upset because Jessica wears a sexy outfit in the commercial while
she is made to look more drab and "like a boy" by comparison. She mocks
the situation by deepening her voice in a humorous way and saying, "Jessica,
buffalos don't have wings"—the commercial's joke refers to Jessica's
mistake in thinking that buffalo wings were actually made of buffalo instead of
chicken in an episode from the first season of Newlyweds.
In episode seven, she poses for the photoshoot for her album; some of the pictures
from the photoshoot, such as those used for the front and back album cover, feature
Simpson in a dark setting with graffiti-style writing scrawled behind her, while
other shots show her posing with a microphone in front of a white background.
In the same episode, she records the video for her second single, "Shadow",
in which she plays two different versions of herself, blonde and brunette; at
one point in the filming, her blonde wig slips off, and everyone laughs, including
her. Simpson also gives two live performances in episode seven. She is dissatisfied
with the first of these, in which she sings "Pieces of Me" at Summer
Music Mania 2004 (which was held on May 20, 2004, and aired on FOX on June 1);
Jessica introduces her to the crowd and enthusiastically enjoys the performance,
but Ashlee herself is left hoping that her next performance will go better. It
does—she sings "La La" in a performance at the end of episode
seven and is congratulated by Jordan Schur. Episode eight begins with a performance
of "Pieces of Me" on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (which occurred
on May 24, 2004), and she appears on MTV's Total Request Live to promote her album
on July 20, the day of its U.S. release. At TRL, she talks with P. Diddy, who
asks her for an autograph, and causes herself much embarrassment when she, upon
meeting the rapper Jay Z, tells him that she loves his song; when Jay Z asks which
song, she begins rapping a line from his song "99 Problems", which makes
her feel foolish, and she laughs at herself about it. Also in episode eight, she
visits Target House, a place for children with suppressed immune systems, and
sings "Pieces of Me" for the children. The last episode ends with a
montage of clips from the show as the song "Autobiography" plays, and
the clips correspond to the lyrics: for example, at the line "You want my
history", she and Josh are seen walking away from each other, and at the
line "Well, it's my turn now, I'm talking back", Simpson is seen "talking
back" to her father (from an argument over rehearsing in episode seven).
Simpson's parents, Joe and Tina, appear frequently on the show. Her sister
Jessica also makes a number of appearances, although not as many. Simpson has
said that she was initially reluctant to do a reality show when her father approached
her with the idea: "...I saw how the cameras were always around my sister.
It seemed so hectic and crazy, and I was sure I wasn't ready to deal with that."
She was, however, persuaded when her father said that the show would be about
her album and music, which she thought was "kind of cool": "You're
actually seeing a deeper look into how this album got made." She also wanted
to prevent people from thinking that she was "just like Jessica", so
she thought the show "was the smartest way to put an end to the comparisons."2
She said in one interview: "I chose to do it because it's like a making of
the album but at the same time they come into my real life too. And you kind of
get to see everything I go through in the process. Sometimes there's stress and
sometimes there are these amazing moments." [3] (http://www.kidzworld.com/site/p4459.htm)
Responding to a question from Charles Gibson on Good Morning America about
the show—"Is it really real?"—Simpson said: "It's very
real, it's very real, um, but the only time where it's a little awkward is, like,
when you look up, after you just said something, and it's like, 'Oh, there's the
camera, in my face, and I just said that'". She continued: "A lot of
times, I'm like, oh, Lord, did I really just say that?" (July 19, 2004) Regarding
the camera crews taping her, she has said: "The MTV crew became my close
friends so we had a lot of fun." [4] (http://chat.msn.com/msnlive_feature.msnw?id=artist/ashleesimpson)
Simpson said initially that she would only do one season of the show, and in
an interview with Blender magazine she said: "Jessica may be happy having
cameras in her life 24/7, but not me. It's not natural; it ain't healthy."3
However, she has since said that there will be a second season in the future,
possibly because of the considerable success of the first season. In an episode
of MTV's Making the Video on November 23, which documented the making of Simpson's
music video for "La La" (Autobiography's third single) and then premiered
it, Simpson mentioned that cameras were there filming for the second season of
The Ashlee Simpson Show. On Making the Video, she also said: "It's been really
cool having The Ashlee Simpson Show; I had no clue how the first season was gonna
turn out whenever they were taping me, and I was really excited because it was
something my fans could relate to. So whenever I run into my fans, it feels like,
you know, they know me, so it's cool."
The new season is currently scheduled to begin airing on January 26, 2005;
[5] (http://www.mtv.com/onair/dyn/ashlee/about.jhtml) according to one source,
it will feature "her preparations to go on the road", "culminating
with the launch of her tour". [6] (http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1494296/20041130/simpson_ashlee.jhtml?)
The tour is currently scheduled to begin on February 18, 2005. [7] (http://www.ashleesimpsonmusic.com/events/default.asp)