Hollyork Nation
by
Fred Reed
by Fred Reed
Denunciations
of television have become as routine as breathing: the programming
is crass, stupid, propagandistic, so bad that only an idiot would
watch it yet everybody does. Actually things are worse. They are
much worse.
To
see what is happening, start with what may be the crucial truth
of our times: People will watch a screen. They will watch anything
in preference to nothing, watch programs they don’t really like,
comedies so unfunny that only the laugh track tells them when to
respond. The bright know that the fare is witless, that it is directed
at fools. The ads irritate them. Yet they too watch.
People
cannot not watch television.
The
flickering screen is everywhere. In millions of living rooms the
lobotomy box rattles, often not consciously watched, hardly noticed,
but always on. Every bar has at least one television, often several,
sometimes with the sound turned off, but always there. Television
is the national babysitter, more important than absentee parents
in shaping the young. The chattering tube sits in the lobbies of
hotels, the rooms of hotels, in barber shops, in restaurants and
dorm rooms. In my gym in suburban Washington, rows of screens hung
on pipes in front of the exercise bicycles. The box is everywhere,
whispering, babbling, urging, suggesting.
Watch
the eyes of a man quietly having a drink in a bar. Often his gaze
wanders to the screen because it moves, it changes. Even if the
sound is down and he cannot follow what is happening, even if he
isn’t interested, he watches. People cannot not watch a screen.
No
dictator has every enjoyed such a tool for social control, for near
absolute power over what people see, over the news, over a culture.
Like the bite of a leech, television is painless. Two decades later,
the country is unrecognizable.
We
underestimate the box. It is tasteless, dumbed-down, and commercial,
yes, yes. All the adjectives apply. We have heard them. We agree
with them. But we miss the point. We miss the point because the
fare is so contemptible: Nothing that stupid can be dangerous.
Oh
yes it can.
The
lobotomy box gives to Hollywood and New York limitless sculpting
access to the minds of our children, limitless power to condition
all of us. For hours a day, week after month after year after decade,
each generation sees what the two cities wants it to see. It sees
nothing else. Because the programming does not come from the formal
government, because it seems to counsel only the purchase of New!
Improved! Whatever! because we hold it in contempt while spending
our lives before it, we many of us do not see what it really is.
The
content of television is neither merely banal nor merely commercial.
This would not matter. Instead it is subliminally didactic, unendingly
instructive. It has agendas unrelated to soap. Remember that the
advertising and television industries are tightly entwined. Those
commercials, seemingly almost invertebrate in their tiresomeness,
in fact are the product of decades of manipulative experience by
highly intelligent people who have studied the psychology of the
audience.
If
you want to change the behavior of an audience or a country, if
you want to replace their deeply held values with your own, you
don’t tell them what to do or what to believe. They might resist.
We do not like getting orders. No, you show the things being done over
and over and over. In the beginning you only imply the desired behavior
or point of view, leave it in the background so that it is hardly
noticed. Over and over and over you imply it. Gradually you make
it more explicit. It takes years, but people come to accept whatever
they see, and then to imitate it.
They
cannot resist any more than a paralyzed caterpillar can resist being
eaten by a wasp’s larva. They cannot do without the electric babysitter,
cannot toss the damned thing out the window.
They
cannot not watch a screen.
What
does Hollyork promote? Toleration of foul language and a concomitant
coarsening of society; hostility between men and women; truculent
illiteracy and the values of the black ghetto; the elevation of
homosexuality and promiscuity; disdain for religion; use of drugs,
interracial sex, destructive feminism, eradication of the remnants
of Anglo-European Christian civilization. It is not accidental.
Do
I exaggerate? Think. Every night you see blonde women reading the
news. When did you last see a blond man on the screen? Do you think
this a coincidence in an industry that calculates motivations to
four decimal places? Consider the constant scenes in which women
slap men around, kick them in the crotch, participate in gunfights
while men cower. Can you believe that the sudden disappearance of
the word "Christmas" from permissible discourse wasn’t
deliberate? That the rigid exclusion of any but politically correct
views from discussion is a coincidence?
My
point is not that all these things are in all respects bad, but
rather that they are being decided remotely and imposed without
consent. American society is being carefully, calculatedly sculpted.
A small group of unelected people, having no obvious qualifications
of morality or taste, now control the culture of the United States.
Our souls belong to Ted Turner and Jane Fonda.
But
things are yet worse.
Television
is infinitely scaleable. With satellites, Hollywood bathes the world
in the same mire. In Mexico, where I live, television and cine are
heavily American. A month ago I was in Chile for a couple of weeks.
Television was heavily, heavily American CNN in Spanish, for example.
Crossing into Argentina at Bariloche, I found the same. In Thailand,
things are little better.
In
the living rooms of the whole world, Hollywood has a little window
open to the minds of the people. Nobody can escape. In remote towns
in the Bolivian altiplano, the values of Hollyork dance on screens.
Children in India, in Iran and Uruguay, day after day gradually
become what Barbra Streisand and Sylvester Stallone think they should
be. Such people know and care nothing for civilizations that have
existed for thousands of years.
Other
nations know what is happening. The Thais are not happy at the slow,
relentless imposition of the tastes of the slums of Brooklyn. But
they can do nothing.
How
perfectly incredible that a group of what? A hundred producers,
studio heads, and network CEOs? A thousand to be conservative? can
bypass governments, subvert ancient cultures, and make the world
as unhappy and divided as they have made the United States.
August
17, 2004
Fred
Reed [send him mail]
is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well.
Copyright
© 2004 Fred Reed
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