Academia Buffy is notable for attracting the interest of scholars of popular culture, as a subset of
popular culture studies, and some academic settings include the show as a topic of literary study and analysis.
National Public Radio describes
Buffy as having a "special following among academics, some of whom have staked a claim in what they call 'Buffy Studies.'" Though not widely recognized as a distinct discipline, the term "Buffy studies" is commonly used amongst the peer-reviewed academic
Buffy-related writings. The influence of
Buffy on the depiction of vampires across popular culture has also been noted by anthropologists such as A. Asbjørn Jøn. Popular media researcher
Rob Cover argued that Buffy and Angel speak to contemporary attitudes to identity, inclusion, and diversity, and that critiquing the characters' long-narrative stories lends insight into the complexity of identity in the current era and the landscape of social issues in which those identities are performed. Critics have responded to the academic attention the series has received. For example, Jes Battis, who authored
Blood Relations in Buffy and Angel, admits that study of the Buffyverse "invokes an uneasy combination of enthusiasm and ire", and meets "a certain amount of disdain from within the halls of the academy". Nonetheless,
Buffy eventually led to the publication of around twenty books and hundreds of articles examining the themes of the show from a wide range of disciplinary perspectives, including
sociology,
Speech Communication,
psychology,
philosophy, and
women's studies. In a 2012 study by
Slate,
Buffy the Vampire Slayer was named the most studied pop culture work by academics, with more than 200 papers, essays, and books devoted to the series. The Whedon Studies Association produces the online academic journal
Slayage and sponsors a biennial academic conference on the works of Whedon. The sixth "Biennial Slayage Conference", titled "Much Ado About Whedon", was held at
California State University-Sacramento in late June 2014.
Fandom and fan films The popularity of
Buffy has led to the creation of websites, online discussion forums, works of
Buffy fan fiction, and several
unofficial fan-made productions. Since the end of the series, Whedon has stated that his intention was to produce a
cult television series and has acknowledged the "rabid, almost insane fan base" that the show has created. In 2017 the 20th anniversary of the show attracted even more writers to create their own adventures of the series' characters.
Buffy in popular culture The series employed
pop culture references as a frequent humorous device, and has itself become a frequent pop culture reference in video games, comics and television shows. The series has also been parodied and spoofed. Sarah Michelle Gellar has participated in several parody sketches, including a
Saturday Night Live sketch in which the Slayer is relocated to the
Seinfeld universe, and adding her voice to an episode of
Robot Chicken that parodied a would-be eighth season of
Buffy. "Buffy" was the code-name used for an early
HTC mobile phone which integrated the
social networking website
Facebook. In March 2017, in honor of ''Buffy the Vampire Slayer's
20th anniversary, Entertainment Weekly'' reunited Joss Whedon and the whole cast for their first joint interview and photo shoot in over a decade.
U.S. television ratings Buffy helped put
The WB on the ratings map, but by the time the series landed on
UPN in 2001, viewing figures had fallen. The series' high came during the third season, with 5.3 million viewers (including repeats), possibly due to the fact that both Gellar and Hannigan had hit movies out during the season (
Cruel Intentions and
American Pie respectively). The series' low came in season one at 3.7 million. The series finale "
Chosen" pulled in a season high of 4.9 million viewers on the UPN network. The WB was impressed with the young audience the show was bringing in, and ordered a full season of 22 episodes for season two.
Buffy was moved from Monday at 9:00 pm to launch The WB's new night of programming on Tuesday, starting with the episode "
Innocence", watched by 8.2 million people. Due to its success in that time slot, it remained on Tuesdays at 8:00 pm for the remainder of its original run, and became one of the network's highest-rated shows. In the 2001–2002 season, the show moved to UPN after a negotiation dispute with The WB. While it was still one of the highest rated shows on their network, The WB felt that it had peaked and thus declined a salary increase to the cast and crew. UPN then picked the series up for a two-season renewal, dedicating a two-hour premiere to help re-launch it. The following season premiere attracted the second highest rating of the series, with 7.7 million viewers.
Impact on television Buffy the Vampire Slayer became a
pop culture phenomenon and is considered as iconic. Commentators of the entertainment industry including
AllMovie,
The Hollywood Reporter,
PopMatters,
The Village Voice, and
The Washington Post cite
Buffy as "influential",
Stephanie Zacharek, in the
Village Voice, wrote, "If we really are in a golden age of television,
Buffy the Vampire Slayer was a harbinger." Robert Moore of
PopMatters expressed similar sentiments, writing "TV was not art before
Buffy, but it was afterwards", suggesting that it was responsible for re-popularizing
long story arcs on primetime television. The show is often seen as one of the greatest shows of all-time and for being groundbreaking and influential for the landscape of television.
David Simon, creator of
The Wire, considered
Buffy as "the best show in years". Stephen Daisley of
The Spectator stated that
Buffy was a "generation-defining TV hit", following this by saying that "
Buffy was steeped in literary allusions and crackled with pop culture references and became the first TV series to attract serious scholarship." He also wrote, "Renowned professors wrestled with this high school set study of the human condition while linguists tried to pin down Buffy Speak, the distinctive and playful grammar which animated Whedon's dialogue. (Inventive, much?)".
Buffys effect on programming was quickly evident. Autumn 2003 saw several new shows going into production in the U.S. that featured strong females forced to come to terms with supernatural power or destiny while trying to maintain a normal life. These post-
Buffy shows include
Dead Like Me,
Joan of Arcadia,
Tru Calling,
Veronica Mars and
Teen Wolf.
Bryan Fuller, the creator of
Dead Like Me, said that "
Buffy showed that young women could be in situations that were both fantastic and relatable, and instead of shunting women off to the side, it puts them at the center." as well as its spinoff series
Torchwood. Reviewers noted that shows such as
Legacies and
Riverdale took inspiration from
Buffy involving the "Dark Willow" story arc. Adam B. Vary of
Variety, by talking about the potential
reboot of the show, wrote how "
Buffy presaged the next 25 years of genre-bending entertainment.
Supernatural,
True Blood,
Alias,
Once Upon a Time,
The Vampire Diaries,
Veronica Mars,
Teen Wolf,
The Magicians,
Jessica Jones,
Orphan Black,
Chilling Adventures of Sabrina,
Wynonna Earp,
Riverdale, Wednesday,
Game of Thrones — none of these shows, and many more besides, would be what they are without
Buffy. Several
Buffy alumni have gone on to write for or create other shows. Such endeavors include
Tru Calling (
Douglas Petrie,
Jane Espenson and lead actress
Eliza Dushku),
Wonderfalls (
Tim Minear),
Point Pleasant (
Marti Noxon),
Jake 2.0 (
David Greenwalt),
The Inside (Tim Minear),
Smallville (
Steven S. DeKnight),
Once Upon a Time (
Jane Espenson),
Lost (
Drew Goddard and
David Fury), and
Daredevil (Goddard, DeKnight, and Petrie).
TV Tropes, a website devoted to pop culture tropes, claimed that
Buffy the Vampire Slayer is the reason why the site exists. The show also had a significant impact on
slang in popular culture. The series also served as inspiration for television writers such as
Shonda Rhimes,
Eric Kripke,
Rob Thomas and
Amy Sherman-Palladino. In 2015,
The Atlantic wrote that
Buffy is "still revolutionary" and "subversive".
The Daily Orange wrote "Buffy led the third-wave feminist movement in pop culture", talking about how the series led the cause for women leads on TV. Several critics have noted series such as
Orphan Black,
The Magicians,
Jessica Jones and
Wynonna Earp as being worthy successors to
Buffy. At the 2015
San Diego Comic-Con, the authors
Rachel Hawkins,
Kiersten White,
Rae Carson, Brittany Geragotelis and Valerie Tejeda talked about the Buffy effect on heroines in fiction and how Buffy was a big influence on writing their books. Meanwhile, the
Parents Television Council complained of efforts to "deluge their young viewing audiences with adult themes". The U.S.
Federal Communications Commission (FCC), however, rejected the council's indecency complaint concerning the violent sex scene between Buffy and Spike in "
Smashed". The BBC, however, chose to censor some of the more controversial sexual content when it was shown on the pre-
watershed 6:45 pm slot. Show characters Willow Rosenberg and Tara Maclay were one of the first lesbian couples to be shown on public broadcast television. This was important representation at the time, as it challenged many social stereotypes about gay women. It did not over-sexualize them and instead allowed them to be seen as independent people in a fairly healthy relationship. Creator Joss Whedon has said in interviews that he was initially told by the network he could not include a bisexual character in the show, however, in later seasons as cultural opinions on
LGBT issues began to shift, he was allowed to introduce Willow and Tara as being in a relationship with one another. At first they were only seen talking and holding hands as they were not allowed to be shown kissing, until in 2002, the show showed the girlfriends in bed together, which though not a sex scene was considered the first scene of its kind for a broadcast network series. The following year, the show featured the first lesbian sex scene in broadcast TV history.
Awards and nominations Buffy has gathered a number of awards and nominations which include an
Emmy Award nomination for the 1999 episode "
Hush," which featured an extended sequence with no character dialogue. It since was featured on ''
Channel 4's "100 Greatest Musicals"''. In 2001, Sarah Michelle Gellar received a
Golden Globe-nomination for Best Actress in a TV Series-Drama for her role in the show, as well nominations for the Teen Choice Awards and the Saturn Award for Best Genre TV Actress. The series won the Drama Category for Television's Most Memorable Moment at the
60th Primetime Emmy Awards for "
The Gift" beating
The X-Files, ''
Grey's Anatomy, Brian's Song and Dallas'', although the sequence for this award was not aired. It was nominated for
Emmy and
Golden Globe awards, winning a total of three Emmys. However, snubs in lead Emmy categories resulted in outrage among TV critics and the decision by the academy to hold a tribute event in honor of the series after it had gone off the air in 2003.
"Best of" lists • Ranked #2 on
Empires "50 Greatest TV Shows of All Time" • Ranked #2 on
Entertainment Weeklys "50 Best Teen Shows of All Time" • Voted #3 in 2004 and 2007 on
TV Guides "Top Cult Shows Ever" • Named the third Best School Show of All Time by
AOL TV • Ranked #7 on
TV Guides list of "The 60 Greatest Sci-Fi Shows of All Time" • 27th on
The Hollywood Reporters "Hollywood's 100 Favorite TV Shows" • Ranked #38 in 2016 on
Rolling Stones list of 100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time • Ranked #38 in
TV Guides list of the "60 Best Series of All Time" • Ranked #40 in
Screen Rant's "The 50 Best TV Shows Of All Time, Ranked" • Ranked #40 in
Varietys "100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time" • Ranked #41 on
TV Guides list of
50 Greatest TV Shows of All Time • Ranked #49 by
Writers Guild of America on their list of the "101 Best Written TV Series Of All Time" • Listed in
Time magazine's "100 Best TV Shows of All-
Time" • Included in
TV Guides 2013 list of "The 60 Greatest Dramas of All Time" • Included on
Syfy's list of "The 25 best fantasy series of the past 25 years" ==Home media==