The Coming Fight Over TV Violence
gollum123 writes "Time reports the guardians of decency are warning about new trouble, with a capital T, which rhymes with V, which stands for violence. The Parents Television Council (PTC), the group at the vanguard of the TV-sex wars, has lately focused on prime-time blood: power-tool torture on 24, serial killing on Criminal Minds, vivisection on Heroes. And the FCC has prepared a draft report suggesting that Congress authorize it to regulate broadcast violence, as it now does obscenity, and possibly force cable companies to let subscribers opt out of paying for channels that run brutal content. In short, torture is the new sex. Jack Bauer is the new Janet Jackson."
The PTC has been going after violence for years. Usually it's against pro-wrestling (specifically Smackdown on UPN) and they've been rather unsuccessful. They even lost a lawsuit to the WWF a few years ago for lying to advertisers.
"But if politicians simply respected the audience's choices, stopped posturing against theoretical violence and fictional bad guys, they would have to focus on, say, the thornier problems of stopping actual bloodshed in the real world."
'nuff said
"When in doubt, use brute force."
I have always been amazed that swearing, nudity and sex is heavily regulated on TV and violence is not. Surely showing someone killing or whatever is much worse than a bit a boob being shown.
What has condemning the use of torture have to do with regulating TV? Are you saying that allowing the showing of torture on TV means that you're in favour of torture in real life?
American politics always makes me chuckle.
I remember back in the 70s the Three Stooges were banned from TV in a lot of areas due to violent content. The original Baretta show died when it was on top because the standard was one violent act per half hour and Robert Blake refused to limit the shows based on the standard, definate hindsight irony. Europe tends to be far more sensitive to violence and far less sensitive to sex. The US has been the opposite traditionally but of late both tend to be red flags.
Just turn it on and let me enjoy my shows plz kthnxbai
perpetually dwelling in the -1 pits
Just let Jack Bauer torture some legislators into voting no.
Tsunami -- You can't bring a good wave down!
I propose a novel way to end the exposure of minors to television sex/violence:
The adult(s) in the household should slink their obese rear end off the couch, reach for the remote on the end table, and press the power/channel change button, thus eliminating objectionable programming being displayed on the TV monitor.
This will negate the need for more government censorship over the airwaves.
I'm not a proponent of censorship but if you really want to censor something, censor excessive graphical violence and not sex and nudity.
If the the coming fight over TV violence is violent, will we be allowed to see it?
Next up: The coming orgy over TV sex, and the coming euphoria over TV drug use!
eleven plus two / twelve plus one
So they might get forced to let people opt out of certain channels?
Oh, the horror! -sarcasm
I've got ~5 channels right now, because I refuse to pay for 20 crap channels in a "subscription package" when I want 3 or 4 of them!
Especially since I've got o subscribe to several packages to get the ones I want, leading me to pay for 30-40 channels to get the 3 or 4 channels I want.
We've got digital tv now. The technology to let subscribers pick and chose individual channels are there.
Screw the companies that won't let you choose which channels to subscribe to. Give them a big finger and choose *not* to subscribe to their crap!
/.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
Nine-year-olds have a right to turn on the teevee and watch people's eyeballs getting removed with power tools. Any attempt to restrict this important media content is a grave assault on our freedoms.
Information wants to be free!
If you're a bad parent, and you have an idiot kid, they're invariably going to grow up to be idiots.
If you're a bad parent, and you have a good kid, they'll know better than to kill someone because they saw it on TV.
If you're a good parent, and you have an idiot kid, you'll be able to regulate their exposure to violence. If you're concerned about TV violence, just don't let them have one in their room.
If you're a good parent, and you have a good kid, you'll be just fine.
The one thing those four have in common is that if the parent cares, the parent can act on their own. These parents need to stop regulating the world to make up for their lack of parenting. If anything, they need to regulate themselves. People shouldn't be allowed to have children if they're too stupid to handle them.
The Parents Television Council (PTC), the group at the vanguard of the TV-sex wars,
Whether it's sex education, abortion rights or teaching evolution in schools, the religious right won't ever quit. If they win in one area, they'll just start pushing their religious agenda in a different arena, and they'll keep it up until the government is enforcing religious principles. The American Taliban.
Pick your side because there's no compromise position they'll respect.
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
Reminds me of when the pool hall was being built, we good River City folk had to band together and get that stopped.
How many people have died because of violence on TV?
How many people have died because of violence in Iraq?
And lastly... How many children's lives have been ruined by the former and then the latter?
"I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
-Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
Perhaps the PTC should just adopt a new name and fully admit where they stand.
I suggest they call themselves Fundamentalist Victorian Americans. They seem to share the same extremist views that other fundamentalist groups share, but posture for a "value" set that seems to have only been held by the upper class of Victorian England.
Oh no! A child has been spanked somewhere!!! Quick, to the Lawmobile! We have to save them before they're scarred for life.
...that in the US, people don't seem to have a problem with a guy's brain blown out with a shotgun on TV, but when a nipple is shown, a big part of the US population is disgusted. It seems to me that some people in the US should check their moral and ethical priorities really.
It's not that different in your country. In fact I'm not from the USA either, but please, tell me what country does not censor anything on TV, the press or anywhere else.
Why, in the country of Slashdotia, of course!
Slashdotia, where the email is encrypted and spam is censored, but the TV is broadcast in the free and clear, with violence and boobies for all!
Slashdotia, where the minimum salary for perl haxors is eighty thou., and hiring Indian programmers is strictly prohibited!
Slashdotia, legendary home of untainted, uncorrupted, open-sourced elections, in which Democrats are elected every time!
Slashdotia, how I miss thee!
All I got was:
The ****** ***** over ** ********
I tried to post the entire article censored, but slashdot's "lameness filter" wouldn't let me. Honestly! I think that says it all.
Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
I was driving down my suburban street the other day when the car in front of me veered off the road. A gun battle ensued, and three cars caught fire (undoubtedly due to all the bullets flying). Then a gasoline truck happened to be driving by, and Kaboom!
Happily, my totally hot girlfriend and I made it out of there and to the orphanage, where we help feed very cute poor kids who are "trapped by the system". Disappointingly, the criminals were released due to a technicality.
The funny part: the same thing happened last month.
Just about all television programing sucks, with sparse few exceptions here and there. The easiest way to attract viewers to such a lousy program is to show a powerdrill going into a guy's brain, or a lady with revealing outfits, or the old car blowing up after a fender-bender.
If you can't attract viewers with quality, attract them with something that they'll remember: boobs, blood, and bombs.
If network TV continues to fail, it certainly won't be due to censorship - it will be due to the networks' inability to address their piss-poor programming.
I have to admit, I'm not a big fan of blaming any medium for the ills of society, but it's hard not to draw the conclusion that the message that some of our media sends us is less than unhealthy.
Commercial interests invariably mean that content creaters and broadcasters are almost always tunnel-visioned into producing content that is ever more graphic, explicit and/or biased. The result is a medium that too easily can either desensitise its audience or misrepresent facts. You'd have to be blind to miss that that's a serious problem.
Take just two examples: the fictional drama 24 and actual television news.
Firstly, 24. There's no doubt that 24 is one of the most popular US shows of the decade, and that Jack Bauer is a generational role model - a tough guy who'll do anything and everything in his power to do his job and protect his country - but it's almost impossible to imagine what 24 would have looked like even 10 or 20 years ago.
Compare the violence in 24 to that of, say, 1990s episodes of NYPD Blue or 1980s episodes of Miami Vice. It's like comparing chalk and cheese.
Then look at some of the dangerous messages that 24 sends us: torture is quick, torture is effective, and torture is fine when it's carried out for patriotic reasons. Whether you believe the last of these statements is down to your own moral compass (I can tell you that I certainly do not), but any expert will tell you that the first two are wishful thinking.
In fact, the show's messages on torture are so dangerous that "the US military has appealed to the producers of 24 to tone down the torture scenes because of the impact they are having both on troops in the field and America's reputation abroad." If even the US military can join the dots between Bauer's fictional planting a powerdrill into bad guys to get his info and the reality of Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo Bay, illegal killings, etc, then you know it's time to be worried.
But, hey, if you're a TV executive and it keeps the viewers glued to your channel and your ads, then it's all OK, right?
Secondly, television news. We live in a world of instant global news, and it's a good thing. Or it would be, if the news that we got wasn't so watered down and/or distorted. Wars are bloody and brutal things, but you wouldn't know it from the actual footage that you see on your evening news reports, which (on the few occasions that they do show footage from war zones) invariably show clean, precise military operations, which paint a picture that's rosier than a flower show.
The realities of war - the death, the destruction, the senseless waste of it all - are kept hidden away, because if you showed that stuff people would soon get turned off... and change the channel. And if you're a TV executive putting out news that's so real that it makes people so uncomfortable that they'll watch whatever the competition has to offer then you've lost your ratings war, which is the only war that counts when it comes to selling those ads.
So, clean-cut, folksy, sham news is good, and hard-hitting, real, tell-it-how-it-really-is news is bad. The ridiculous subliminal message that war is no big deal that this sends is so messed up: if you showed the naked truth then more people would really start to take an interest, rather than burying their heads in the sand about the issues that will possibly shape their children's lifetimes.
Of course, you'll always have people who'll deny everything. President Nixon believed that Nick Út's Pulitzer Prize winning photograph of the Napalm attack on Trang Bang was staged, despite there also being overwhelming supporting evidence, including television footage, that it was the simple truth. (A US President so out of touch with reality: who would have thought it possible?)
But without being shown the truth, how can
"Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
Your suggestion is absurd. For any substantial interrogation, there are "professionals" who do the interrogating. I don't know who they are or who they are with but I am certain the US Military/DOD has the foresight to look into the subject a train-up a few people to be experts in extracting useful information. I highly doubt they are influenced by 24. If anything, its the other way around.
Some private who finds a guy on the field and starts torturing him because his CO saw something cool on 24 and told him to -- is a crime. Nothing more, nothing less.
If there is too much risk in your child watching television, then I suggest, you utilize the two buttons on the television. One of them turns it off. And the other one changes the channel. You should just assume that EVERYTHING shown on TV is "bad", and therefore, too risky.
TV is not like walking down the street in your neighborhood. Television is a 100% voluntary action you and your kids engage in. You do not need it to survive and in fact, many people don't even own a television. Guess what? They still raise kids and they still survive quite nicely.
The idea that you should impart restrictions on what society can show on TV so your kid can "safely" watch TV, is ludicrous. You should not expect society to accommodate you so the TV can be your babysitter. If you think TV - as is, as well as whatever it becomes - is too risky for your child to view, then you should not participate. Just turn it off and assume that if you turn it back on, your child will burst into flames.
See how that works? You are happy because you have avoided risk. And we are happy because we get to see stuff blow up. If you do it the other way around, nobody is happy but you.
As a parent, frankly I don't care what is shown during prime-time hours...hell I would like some boobies on Scrubs or something myself once in a while....
BUT, the fact that they show CLIPS OF PRIMETIME stuff in their commercials during the DAY is driving me freaking nuts...I can't even sit down to watch a basketball game with my young son without the network putting clips full of sex, violence, guns etc in their commericals during the program.
ITS A JOKE.... The fact that a program can be rated as TV-G but hey can cut to a commercial rated TV-MA because they are totally unregulated is the single biggest thing that makes the rating system a waste. My TIVO still displays TV-G and on the screen is people shooting each other and naked people rolling around on a couch.
They need to make the COMMERCIALS have to also comply with the rating for that time period. If you can make THAT HAPPEN, then I say we can have a free-for-all after 9pm as far as I care.
-- Given enough time and money, Microsoft will eventualy invent UNIX.
I realize that this is Slashdot, so I'll get modded down, but graphic violence is getting worse on US prime time television.
It's gotten to the point that I don't even want to watch TV most days. I find that when I do, it is upsetting. The commercial networks are all busy chasing each other down the gory path. I don't see them finding anything better on thier own.
Everybody knows 3 people with my name.
People who feel powerless cling to icons like Jack Bauer. They can't affect changes in their own life, but they like to watch Jack break laws in his role as a US civil servant. They can't get ahead in life, but if they could become a 'secret agent' they would have authority for once, and would be able to abuse that authority to their own ends...just like Jack. Just like corrupt police forces. Hmm.
Blar.
It always cracks me up how many people will rant all day about the USA being "a Christian nation." It's also a nation with a murder rate vastly higher than places like Sweden or Japan, still loves capital punishment, isn't that great when it comes to infant mortality, and oh yeah, we are actually having conversations about whether or not torture is okay. That last bit really sticks. How can we actually be discussing the moral points of torture? Should we discuss the ethical nuances of lynching next?
Hello, has anyone watched TV lately? It is full of sex. Sex in the bedroom, sex on the couches, naked models painted like oversexed fruit (Honestly, I can't make this stuff up!), and so forth.
What you don't see is nipples and genitalia, because regardless of the context, you know, that'd be BAD!
So you can watch couples faking orgasm between the sheets, but it's apparently not SEX, because any thing so naughty as an ass crack is blurred out. Even better is when they do that for a completely non-sexual context, because:
nipples = sex
genitals = sex
buttocks = sex
sex != sex
Screwed up country.
"People who do stupid things with hazardous materials often die." -- Jim Davidson on alt.folklore.urban
Let me get this straight...
They are annoyed that they depict serial killers... in a show following FBI profilers. Isn't one of the core purposes for profiles to deal with serial killers? I know they have other roles, but come on.
I'm not a big fan of violence, I tend to stay away from gorey thrillers and horror movies, but "Criminal Minds" isn't bad. Most of the violent scenes are implicit: victim turns around to see man with knife, knife starts to swing through the air, end scene... protagonists find the body.
I will admit though that 24 has been a bit much, the whole power-drill thing was maybe taking things a little far.
But if this is a "think of the children" thing, then get a V-Chip or (God-forbid) keep an eye on your child and what he/she watches on TV.
[...]
a concerned group of citizens doing this PR work for the army. I considered 24 to be part of the pop-culture pro-torture propaganda. So I find it odd, not scary, that the pentagon is now telling them to cut it back...
I don't watch 24, but I did see a member of congress on tv (ok, the Daily Show) say that since so many people loved Jack Bauer, and that Jack Bauer uses torture, therefore the American people have spoken and declared torture to be fine. I'm thinking it's stuff like that that prompted the Pentagon's distancing. Getting people desensitized to the idea of torture in the name of national security is one thing, but that elected representative was taking it too far.
As for the pop-culture propaganda, I recently caught a bit of Enterprise (which I also never really watched) on rerun, from the season where the Enterprise is going deep in enemy territory to disarm a weapon of mass destruction that someone from the future told 'em about (ripped from 2003's headlines!) where captain Archer had an uncooperative POW, and he took him to an airlock to scare and hurt him into talking (an airlock with a convenient slow air drain).
Of course, Enterprise being a badly written show, his effort were transparent and you just know the guy will give in and Archer won't go through with it, but it struck me because it reminded me of Malcom Reynolds putting Jayne in the airlock on Firefly. The difference being, in Firefly you believed he would actually do it, but mostly that in Enterprise the airlock torture was glamourized as an effective way to get reliable information. Firefly never gave me the impression that torture was okay (in fact, it was shown in another ep as futile and sadistic). One show got shitcanned despite being the best sci-fi on TV at the time, the other dragged on long past the point where it was evident that it was a turd with a Federation isignia tacked on. I see the work of the media branch of the military-industry-congress complex here, funding a message and not another.
P.S. Galactica's version of that scenario was the most ambiguous, and arguably the better one: the torture wasn't working, the airlock was used to put a stop to it through summary execution, but the prisoner doesn't really die, being a downloadable conciousness... Galactica being Firefly's evolutionary descendant (hey, same SFX team, ship-cameo in the pilot episode), I'm not surprised they also take the non-apologetic stance on torture, but a more tv-friendly attitude towards summary execution (where would a how be without bad guys being killed off?)
You can't take the sky from me...
I've been reading a lot of comments about how the govt shouldn't be regulating content on TV, that parents should be more involved in their kids lives and use available technology to control their access to sexual and violent content. I certainly have no objection to parents being involved, but I do have an objection to the idea that govt shouldn't be regulating content on public airwaves. The airwaves belong to the people, and the content allowed on them should be determined by our democratic institutions. Every broadcaster has received a public subsidy in being allowed exclusive access to certain bandwidths in certain markets, and they are bound to follow whatever rules issue from the govt.
I also disagree with the "If you don't like it, turn if off" crowd. As an American, I have the right to speak out against those things in the culture I find offensive, and I also have the right to petition the govt. for redress. Since the govt is the owner of the airwaves (as custodian of the people) then it is a violation of my rights to say I cannot petition them. While I think the media reflects culture, not creates it, I still reserve the right to democratic change of our public institutions.
For those who think I'm a prude or a busy-body, I actually favor more sex to be allowed on TV, I think the current rules are dreadfully restrictive. However, the current rules have been arrived at in a democratic fashion (albeit imperfect), and I respect that.
Consider for a moment what liberals might think if one of the major networks went to "all white supremacist" content. How long would it take for them to try to get it shutdown? They are already trying to re-instate the fairness doctrine on radio due to the success of conservative talk radio (and the subsequent failure of liberal talk radio).
Good heavens Miss Sakamoto - you're beautiful!