Color
Me Confused
by
Ed Cobb
From
all appearances, America is a nation of exhibitionists and voyeurs.
It has become our culture. It is everywhere. Once upon a time we
guarded our privacy jealously. When we told someone that something
was none of his business, we meant it. No one even says that anymore.
We regard everything as everyone’s business. Everyone seems to want
to tell us everything about himself.
I
think it started in 1973 with Bill and Pat Loud in "An American
Family." That show ran for 12 weeks on PBS, the PR firm for
it-takes-a-village collectivism. "An American Family"
was a media phenomenon in the days when that meant something. Before
that we only had "Queen For A Day." This was a daytime
game show that I remember watching with my grandmother back in 1950’s.
Ladies would appear on that show, they were still called ladies
in those days, and tell their sob stories. "Ralph, my husband
hasn’t worked in a year. My kids only leave the house on alternate
days so they can share the pants. And my athlete’s foot is killing
me. I need a new washing machine." The one with the most pathetic
story was crowned Queen and got the washer, which still had a wringer
on it back then.
"Queen
For A Day" conjures great memories of Grandma and me sitting
behind closed blinds so the insurance man and his payment book would
think no one was home. It was unique in the 50’s. In the 70’s, the
Loud family stood out because they were different. Really different.
Today we are awash is the detritus and minutia of everyone’s personal
life through reality TV like Real Life, Survivor, Big Brother and
Making the Band, the tell-all talk shows like Jerry Springer, Oprah,
Jenny Jones and Sally Jesse and the reality style game shows like
Who Wants To Be A Millionaire and Weakest Link. Life in America
has become one big show-me-yours-and-I’ll-show-you-mine festival.
We have given up the right not to know.
As
a side note to this, you have to feel kind of sorry for PBS. Cable
and satellite TV have pretty much eliminated any reason for them
to exist. The History and Discovery Channels, AMC, TMC and the rest
do more programming and do it better than PBS ever could. Their
only remaining reason for continued existence is to spread left
wing, state loving propaganda and CNN and MSNBC even do that better
and they do it 24X7. As if all of that weren’t bad enough it now
turns out that PBS’s lasting contribution to the medium is being
the grandfather of MTV’s Real Life. Talk about adding insult to
injury. Pitiable if not down right pitiful, you know?
Anyway,
all of this struck me the other day when I read a story about a
pro-life web site being sued by a woman for posting details about
her abortion. It just seemed odd that the details of something as
commonplace as an abortion should become an emotional and legal
bone of contention in the land of women-who-love-men-who-love-Chihuahuas-and-the-men-who-love-to-love-them-and-are-more-than-happy-to-tell-you-about-it.
People
go on national TV to tell other people about kinks and foibles that
I could not even begin to invent on my worst day. And then they
get upset when someone holds up a picture of post-abortive surgical
remainder material (dismembered infants). Go figure.
Operations
are shown on TV with a regularity that still has me diving for the
remote with one hand and the wastebasket with the other. People
love them. My brother-in-law will stay up late for a good hip replacement.
He’ll go out and buy a fresh blank tape for a nice gastric bypass.
So why is abortion such a big secret?
The
right to abortion on demand is the proudest accomplishment of modern
era femi-nazi-ism and the most zealously defended tenet of that
faith. But no one takes pictures. Does that make sense? Abortion
is the most common surgical procedure in the United States, 1.5
million abortions every year and counting, yet we never televise
it. Why not? Folks, we are missing a chance to tell even more people
even more stuff about ourselves not to mention letting a major marketing
opportunity pass us by. It’s positively un-American.
Think
of all the cable channels we have. Think of CSPAN and CSPAN-II.
People actually watch Washington blowhards pretending there is more
to their phony baloney jobs than just the obvious bloodsucking parasitism.
That bit of programming excitement turned out to be so popular that
they had add another one so we could also see people from think
tanks give speeches to other people from other think tanks. Is this
a great country, or what?
What
about Court-TV, for crying out loud? If the poor, misunderstood
Menendez boys (Orphans, you know. So sad.) and the still-searching-for-the-real-killer
OJ Simpson can put that on the Nielsen map think of what a good
DC intern pregnancy termination or a celebrity partial birth abortion
could do for ABORT-TV! "57 Channels And Nothing On" would
fall right out of the Boss’ concert lineup because there would always
be something on and it won’t be poor old Teddy Kennedy looking like
he wishes he could remember where he put the Glenlivet.
Once
you make the conceptual leap and start down the path, programming
possibilities jump out at you. ABORT-TV can launch with something
prestigious like a documentary shot in gritty, faux realistic, black
and white. Maybe "A Day In The Life Of A Heroic Abortionist."
He would be 50ish, fatherly and ruggedly handsome; Marcus Welby,
without the caffeine. The camera would follow him as he heroically
drives his Mercedes through the rainy city streets, past the mean
spirited right wing anti-abortion nuts and their picket signs.
We
see him counsel the poor but spirited inner city women about their
right to choose and the therapeutic value of "controlling your
own body," not to mention ending someone else’s life. In the
overdub we hear him wisely decide not to mention the abortion-breast
cancer link because it would just confuse these poor, simple people.
The highlight comes when another doctor botches a partial birth
abortion and our hero has the presence of mind to make sure the
escaped post-abortive material only leaves the hospital as spare
parts. We close as he goes home to his 23-year-old trophy wife.
Or
perhaps something pseudo-scientific, glitzy and NOVA-like would
be a better kickoff. It is too bad Carl Sagan is dead because he
would be just the one to work himself into rapture pontificating
on the medical, psychological, societal and economic benefits of
choice. "Millions and millions of choices.." Of course,
if the Supreme Court had invented Roe v. Wade a generation earlier
there might never have been a Carl Sagan for us to wish we could
have hired him. But that’s another question. You take the good with
the bad, I guess.
All
of this should happen during pledge week. Think of the NARAL matching
grant challenges they could mount. The Ford Foundation will love
it too. After the big launch, ABORT-TV will settle down to the day-to-day
business of prime time programming. Here are just a few of the shows
we can look forward to seeing:
Pro-Choice
Queen For A Day: "Ralph, my husband hasn’t touched me since
he lost his job a year ago and I have been working late at the office
a lot. He ain’t much but he can add and subtract in single digits
and this pregnancy might just put a strain on our relationship.
Talk about inconvenient! I need an abortion."
RU
Being 486’d?: This is a sophisticated British entry where the
wacky staff of a slightly seedy "women’s reproductive health
center" (Nudge, nudge. Wink, wink) trade barbs with each other
while making sure that Young Mr. Blair and his naughty escapades
do not cause undue embarrassment or put too great a strain on the
National Health.
Survivor
The Third Trimester: Fetuses separated from their mothers
are stranded in a makeshift "women’s reproductive health center"
(Know what I mean? Know what I mean?) on an island in the South
China Sea. This begins the Darwinian struggle to determine which
one gets to "leave the hospital." Barbara Boxer hosts.
Dr.
Buffy, The Embryo Slayer: Buffy graduates from Sunnydale Medical
and embarks on a new career eliminating rogue zygotes who are attaching
themselves to the wombs of the innocent women of the Hellmouth who,
after all, only want a choice. Along the way, she stakes a few pro-life
fanatics picketing 499 feet from the entrance of the "women's reproductive
health center" (A nod's as good as a wink.).
MTV’s
Stick A Fork In It: The most fly coeds from the latest run of
MTV’s Spring Break are illin’ and it’s time to begin those back
to school preparations. The girls are 4 ½ months pregnant now, by
who knows whom, and you know how those inconvenient and unsightly
bulges can hamper the rush process.
Can
you see it, America? How come no one has done it before? We televise
everything but we don’t televise abortions. This inexplicable oversight
should be rectified immediately. Let’s show everyone exactly how
honorable and therapeutic a thing abortion truly is and let’s do
it during prime time, in stereo. And none of that cheesy pay-per-view
stuff either. PBS should reinvent itself as ABORT-TV. It’s the right
ting to do.
Judging,
and I know that judging is a bad thing, by the way we act no TV,
no videos, not even posters or T-shirts) someone might conclude
that we are ashamed of our 1.5 million yearly abortions, and that
can’t be right. Can it? Someone might conclude that somewhere deep
inside we think there is something wrong with sticking a fork in
a baby’s skull and sucking out his brain. Can you imagine? Fanatics.
Let’s prove them wrong, America. Bring on ABORT-TV. After all, we
are Americans and we are proud of our right to a dead baby. Aren’t
we?
Cue
the abortionists! Fire up the klieg lights! Roll cameras! Action!
Pass
the fork.
July
14, 2001
Ed
Cobb [send him mail] is
a printer in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley. He is a northerner by
birth, a southerner by choice, and a Catholic by the grace of God.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
Ed
Cobb Archives
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