Archive
Newswire
Subscribe
Links
Quotes
Letters
Search
Favorite Features!
The Wit and Wisdom (NOT) of Ann Coulter
Paul Wellstone 1944-2002
Investigate September 11th -- must reads
Julie Hiatt Steele's
Report on the Office of Independent Counsel
The 2002 Boycott List
How Al Gore Won In 2000: links to the best coverage

Steve's Morality News of the Day:



Steve Young
Who Are We Protecting?
Indecency Gets a Bad Rap
by Steve Young

Nov. 21, 2004 -- HOLLYWOOD (apj.us) -- As a TV writer, critic, and living and breathing male, I think it's time to respond to the deluge of bad press that radio, television and good old American licentiousness has been receiving.

First came the Janet Jackson Super Bowl reveal, which became the most clicked into Internet moment in history. Word is, during the week following, the clip provided more computer crashes and VCR breakdowns due to overworked "pause" buttons since the Madonna-Spears kiss. Was that a tongue? Oo-ooh.

Then there was the (successful) attempt to shove the anti-what-is-right-about-America, indecent Howard Stern off the AM/FM dial -- while ignoring the charm and humanity of the decent Michael Savage and the rest of the chaste gods of the Right who sell their soul and divide their country 24/7 for ratings and book sales.

Then we have TV stations who chose not to air "Saving Private Ryan" because of its... its... darn language.

Now it's Monday Night Football and the opening sketch between (and I mean "between") Philadelphia Eagles highly-rated receiver, Terrell Owens, and "Desperate Housewives'" even higher-rated tight end, Nicolette Sheridan.

In the skit, Owens is persuaded by Sheridan's dropping of her towel to take a pass on the game and instead take Nicolette's pass. At that moment, Sheridan's naked (can I still say "naked" in a newspaper) back was seen, waist up. Hokey-smokey. Get the children out of the room. A back. Naked, yet!

You would think that those who say that teaching the existence of homosexuality in a school health class will cause our young-uns to "go" gay would appreciate the shoving of a rather attractive naked female back in the face of our children as a great foundation for "going" heterosexual -- unless, of course, there were a plethora of female children watching MNF.

Thank God these family associations who are watching out for us weren't around during the explicitness of my National Geographic's topless aborigines days, to say nothing of my dear, dear Sears lingerie catalogs.

As soon as I saw the ABC apology regretting the explicit incident, I had the same thought as most of you. The real apology was due to the huge majority of the MNF demographic (males, puberty-to-forever) for the incidency NOT being explicit enough! As far as that group is concerned, the shot which revealed Sheridan's waist-up back would have been more appreciated if the cameraman had the foresight to drop the shot to knee and above. I'm a knee man. And let's be honest, how far through the roof would the ratings go if next weeks MNF game offered full frontal and actual intercourse in the opening sketch?

But the real question is, was is really indecent?

If you actually saw the Eagles-Cowboy game, the most indecent aspect of the show was the Cowboy's dreadful performance (they lost 49-21). If you want to complain about indecency in television, I say, get rid of "Fear Factor." The reason you can't? too many of you are watching it. Bad taste is the right of every American. Jerry Springer... need I say more?

And isn't the real problem the histrionics of the "decency" police, a small number of people telling the rest of us what we can and cannot watch, in attempts to censor decisions that should be ours?

How can a small group decide for the majority what we should watch, or, in Howard Stern's case, listen to? If that was the rule of decision, John Kerry would be getting ready to move into the White House. Actually, decency-police to the rest-of-us percentages applied, come January, Ralph Nader would be parking his hybrid at 1600 Pennsylvania.

Some may say that, at the very least, a warning should be given if something risque is to be shown -- but how soon will that lead to "Worthless, Ill-Written Show To Follow?" And who will judge that?

I for one would like to outlaw every show that has a writer on staff under the age of forty. You know what I find indecent? Those guys take my job. But just because I feel that way (and hope you do too), I can't make that decision for the rest of you. If you don't want to watch things you find disturbing... don't. Don't let others take away your right to watch, or not watch, what you want.

Then again, if they can get rid of those under-forty TV writer kids, perhaps I'll rethink the issue.


Steve Young, political editor of National Lampoon and the genius behind National Lampoon's MoveOnPlease.org, is also the author of "Great Failures of the Extremely Successful" and "Winchell Mink...The Misadventure Begins" (Harper Collins), and writes about politics for AlbionMonitor.net and AmericanPolitics.com.
David Bossie,most liberal senator,Swift Boat Veterans,Swift Boat Veterans for Truth,Eugene Gaudette,Democratic National Convention,Gene Gaudette, Compassionate conservatism,Chris Ruddy,Christopher Ruddy,TrustE,Jeff Koopersmith,Ed Gillespie, fourth most liberal member of the Senate,Unelectable,Herpes,Jerome Corsi,Miserable Failure,Venereal Disease,Stupid,Tammy Bruce
APJ
Super
Search
+ Include Stop-Terms
Sort by Display Case Sensitive Whole Words Only
Search Content
Body Title URL Alt-Text Links Default
Meta-Description Meta-Keywords Meta-Authors
Copyright © 2004, 1996-2003, American Politics Journal Publications, Inc.
All rights reserved.

Read our privacy policy. Contact us.
Operating software by Underwriters Digital Research.
Data development by Gaudette & Associates.
ISSN No. 1523-1690