Junkie Television in the Age of Total Information Awareness
by
Richard Wall
by Richard Wall
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Time,
mathematics and reality have all been overturned. Welcome to the
era of the post-9/11 anti-terrorism TV series.
In a few days
the Fox channel will start airing the Sixth Season of 24
in the United States. On its website
Fox has a live countdown to the opening night, and advertises that
"The Non-Stop Season begins with a 2 NIGHT 4 HOUR PREMIERE
on Sunday, January 14th and Monday, January 15th." Just in
case you don’t get it, that’s to remind you that 2+4=24. Math ain’t
what it used to be.
But first,
full disclosure. I am addicted to 24.
In late 2006,
I watched a few episodes and found them to be compulsive viewing.
The advent on our cable TV service of the Fox channel, showing the
Fourth
Season, had coincided with the decision by one of the two state
channels, RTP2, to air the Fifth
Season. I had also been intrigued by a few earlier references
to 24 on this website, especially Karen
Kwiatkowski’s enthusiasm and Dave
Trotter’s warnings about its potentially pernicious effects.
Finally, in a sustained high dosage over the 2 days of the New Year
weekend, RTP2 broadcast the entire 24 episodes of the Fifth Season
virtually non-stop. I had become a 24 junkie.
Aficionados
will have no need of explanations, but for the unconverted and unaddicted,
here’s some background.
Keifer Sutherland
stars as special agent Jack Bauer of CTU, a fictitious but highly
plausible federal government agency dedicated to countering the
threat of terrorism in America. Each series, of 24 episodes, covers
24 hours in Jack’s life in real time, beginning and ending at 7
a.m. CTU – the Counter-Terrorist Unit is located in Los Angeles,
where most of the action takes place, and the primary theme is that
terrorists with "weapons of mass destruction" are threatening
the lives of hundreds, thousands or even millions of Americans.
They have to be stopped, at all costs, before they can release their
deadly toxins/bombs/missiles/dirty nukes on an innocent and unsuspecting
consumer populace.
The
prevailing atmosphere is one of perpetual anticipatory fear. Characters
hardly ever sleep, eat, drink or perform any other of the bodily
functions required to enjoy life. Survival and the future
itself are wholly contingent on stopping the evil terrorists.
Instant, all-pervasive surveillance technology is CTU’s principal
weapon in this fight, apart from the more conventional stuff such
as guns, needles, helicopters and fancy automobiles (24 is
wholly sponsored by the Ford Motor Company). And Jack’s cellphone
never dies.
The show follows
the actions of terrorists and conspirators as well as of Jack’s
colleagues at CTU, and usually features a civilian family and a
political figure such as a senator or president. This is significant
in that it provides the writers and producers (Joel Surnow and Robert
Cochran) opportunities to have a go at the pious, cloying sentimentality
with which the political shibboleths of democracy, diversity and
national security are invoked by hypocritical office-holders. Contemplating
a rational course of action, one such office-holder might say, "This
will destroy the American people’s faith in their government"
or "This will tear the country apart."
The twist is
that in this world of total information and constant surveillance,
no-one is to be trusted. You never know who has employed or sponsored
the terrorists, nor who – whether on the inside or on the outside
is on your side. Polarity light and dark, good and
bad is the name of the game, but the wires sometimes get
crossed, and you don’t know who’s pulling the strings. Yet, in Jack’s
words, "You’re gonna have to trust me."

In the First
Season (which aired from November 2001) the plot to assassinate
black presidential candidate David Palmer is suspected to come "from
inside the agency." As if to confirm the suspicion, the bringer
of this news, an agency veteran, is assassinated shot by
an unidentified sniper right in front of Jack’s eyes. The agency
itself is being watched by its enemies and by some of its own current
and former members.
For
the government men and women in sharp suits, Jack Bauer himself
is a special danger, because he is "a loose canon," a
maverick, a man who doesn’t play by the rules. Rivals (in love as
well as in the bureaucratic hierarchy) deem him "out of control"
and, echoing the venomous wish fulfillment which is characteristic
of the show’s villains, let others know of their urgent conviction
that he is "going down."
The terrorists,
always bad by definition (and foreign, sometimes with a British
accent), are also "going down." But like Jack, and for
reasons of plot-making, they can never be allowed to do so. They
keep popping up like a jack-in-a-box (pun intended), and again like
Jack himself, are forever escaping from seemingly impossible situations.
These are the
primary plot devices used to sustain the tension. With the end of
each episode you are left on tenterhooks, wondering: how are you
going to deal with this one, Jack?
That unresolved
question is going to get you to watch the next episode – and accounts
for the phenomenal success of 24 in its DVD
format. This appears to offer the chance to satisfy your craving
to know the outcome without having to wait for next week’s show.
Jack, Houdini-like, usually extricates himself, and rides again.
But since each episode builds to a new climax, with a different
and even more impossible conundrum, true gratification is always
postponed.

In addition
to the clever, suspenseful pace of the show, and the effectiveness
of its pyrotechnics, clearly a huge amount of research and creativity
has gone into devising 24. So personally I think its success
is thoroughly deserved. But what actually interests me is what it
may be revealing about American society and the spirit of the times.
Paul Cantor
wrote recently about the value of improvisation in television production,
and how it contributes creatively to a spontaneous order in the
cultural domain analogous to the Hayekian concept of spontaneous
order in the economic sphere. This is the apparently chaotic,
but perhaps most natural, arrangement of human affairs. In his
article, he contrasted such rather rough-and-ready, improvised
forms with the romantic or utopian idea of perfectly crafted order
and the perfect artifact. With him, I believe that the effects and
impact of popular culture, like TV shows, are often underestimated
(and often entirely disregarded), because, being imperfect, often
improvised, and defying categorization, they are not taken seriously.
An additional
difficulty is that such popular artifacts may not be intelligently
perceived at the time of their initial appearance. The reason for
this is two-fold: first, the viewer has an up-close-and-personal
involvement (and take it from me, this is a truly addictive show),
which prevents him from establishing the necessary critical distance.
Secondly, he or she is often too concerned with the linear narrative
(what’s going to happen next) rather than with social, psychological
and cultural effects (underlying cultural assumptions and themes).
This state
of absorption in the entertainment leaves him or her open to a time-honored
technique of television its power to convey subliminal messages.
Which messages you as a viewer see and absorb then depends in part
on your preconceptions, in part on your openness to suggestion and
how in-tune with the Zeitgeist you happen to be – in short,
where you’re coming from. Thus:
-
In February
2003 Bill
Sardi wondered whether Hollywood scripts like 24,
which contain terrorist threats from foreign groups, were being
used "to keep American citizens on edge," so that
the terrorist threat could be kept alive in the minds of voters,
President Bush’s approval ratings improved, and an excuse found
for the then-upcoming invasion of Iraq.
-
In 2004
Karen
Kwiatkowski saw Jack’s bending of the rules as an example
of individual enterprise winning out over an ineffective state,
whose heavy-footed functionaries use the time-honored excuse
that they are "just following orders." This gave the
show, in her view, a libertarian cast.
-
In 2006
a more jaded Dave
Trotter, who no longer watches the whole of every episode
as he used to, saw the protagonists’ willingness to use torture
as a means, without any moral consideration of the ends
to which it is being applied, as a subtle propaganda ploy to
get the American public softened up for its future domestic
use to enforce politically correct attitudes in the US under
a potential "Clinton-analog presidency."
I can see all
this and more, and that is part of the show’s fascination. 24
is an explosive cocktail of the war on terror at home (including
all its hype), lethal privacy-invading technology, big money mainly
in the form of ransom demands and pay-offs, and individual heroism
alongside the power and corruption in government. All these evoke
strong American traditions and ever-present popular concerns: time
(the time is now, and we must make the most of it or die), corruption
from within (holders of power are suspect and must be held in check),
extortion, blackmail and justice (organized crime and how to deal
with it), and fear of contamination from without (alien "others"
have forever been coming to upset our demographics, but now they
bring an extreme threat to life itself).
Richly overlaid
on all this are two layers. The first is deception: nothing is what
it seems. The assassin you see may actually have stolen someone
else’s identity. This gives a whole new meaning to those perennial
organizational precautions: watch your back and cover your ass.
The
second layer is nostalgia. LA in 24 is really a new Wild
West, except that the corral and the gully have given way to the
concrete and glass of office blocks and the parking garage, and
gunmen fire from behind pillars and LCD screens rather than outcrops
of desert rock. But blood is still spilt, and guns still smoke.
Whether
consciously or not, 24 draws on a rich and authentically
American film and TV legacy, including series like The
High Chaparral (1967), and Fox’s own X-Files
(1993), which both suggests and questions conspiracy behind government,
as well as movies like Clint Eastwood’s 1976 The
Outlaw Josey Wales (for the shootouts, and the tradition
of the "honest outlaw" in the Western), and Alan J. Pakula’s
1976 All
the President’s Men (for political intrigue). Mission
Impossible (the TV
series and the movies)
is also in there (especially for its stolen identity theme), as
is an earlier Jack, Harrison Ford’s agent Jack Ryan in the Philip
Noyce films of Tom Clancy’s novels Patriot
Games (1992) and Clear
and Present Danger (1994). There’s also a debt to presidential
assassination movies, like Executive
Action (1973) and that other excellent Clint Eastwood film,
In
the Line of Fire (1993). And let’s not forget the dystopian,
time-shifted vision of Terry Gilliam in Twelve
Monkeys (1995), in which an unknown and lethal virus has
wiped out five billion people on earth. Readers will, I am sure,
be able to add more to this list.
A favored device
in 24 is the reference to the past, particularly the past
personal life of the main characters. This "past tense"
gives the show some historical depth and perspective, neatly compensating
for the hectic speed of the "real time" in which it is
filmed. For example, at the breakfast press conference given by
David Palmer on the day of the California presidential primary in
Season 1, Jack is accosted by an old flame from college days. She
hints they she might be open to renewing her friendship with him.
He gently puts her down with a reference to his daughter, which
both lets her know that he has been married for some time and tells
the audience that Jack is a good family man who doesn’t dally with
past acquaintance.
24
also has a nice take on the bureaucratic infighting at the heart
of government. In Season 5, the agency is compromised and infiltrated,
and is itself the victim of a terrorist attack, but still the ultimate
threat is none of these – it is the takeover of the agency by another
government department, Homeland Security, which has been called
in in light of CTU’s manifest inability to defend even itself. Thus,
as always, the government solution to government incompetence is
to bring in even bigger government.
The Fifth Season
also brought the theme of rottenness at the heart of the executive
to its high point. The corrupt, conspiratorial US president in this
series, Charles Logan (played by Gregory Itzin), who in the final
episode is unceremoniously escorted away (presumably into custody)
by secret service men, not only has a disyllabic surname, which
evokes Nixon, but is also made to look like him. It’s Watergate
all over again.
Is 24
a libertarian show? Sometimes I would like to think so. At one crisis
point, someone suggests that a particular action or strategy, if
pursued, "will damage the integrity of our government."
Jack Bauer, quick as a flash, responds: "Our government has
no integrity." Hope lights up, only to be dashed down when
he adds, "while the current president in still in office."
In other words, get a good man into the presidency, and all will
be well again with America.
Maybe
this is nostalgic wish for another Watergate, but Watergate has
been and gone, yet big government today is bigger than it ever has
been. 24 does not question the supposed virtues of democratically-elected
big government itself, and Jack the maverick is in the end its finest
exemplar. I can even hear the calls, "Jack Bauer for President."
If I had to
label the show’s politics I would say it is really small c
conservative. There’s a strong focus on the solidity and reliability
of the family, for example. This conservatism is overlaid with a
hefty dose of plausible conspiracy theory (President Logan at one
point gives a direct order for a plane full of passengers to be
shot down), which in turn reflects the panic and narcosis culture
of the cultivated, but unreal, post-9/11 state of permanent emergency.
The main reason
for concluding that the show is not really concerned with enlarging
the sphere of liberty is its attitude to ends and means. No clearer
message emerges from every episode than that the ends justify the
means. Torture is portrayed as an acceptable technique for extracting
information and forcing confessions – even from the innocent or
those not yet proven guilty. Significantly, CTU uses medical torture
on its own employees when these are suspected of treason.
Jack’s
unorthodox measures, including random and widespread killing, are
also not questioned on moral grounds – they justify themselves because
they are shown to be effective in a "real-world situation"
where there is no time to consider the issues. This is expediency,
which in turn breeds a kind of ferocious blood-lust for its own
sake: at a key moment in Season 5, when Jack and his girlfriend
and fellow-CTU worker Audrey Raines have hunted down and trapped
a traitorous former CTU chief, she exhorts him with the words, "Kill
him, Jack, Kill him!" – and you can be sure the audience is
right behind her.
Finally, the
easy assumption of the pervasiveness and reach of the mechanisms
of surveillance and invasion of privacy by all the characters has
to be deeply troubling to those concerned with the restoration of
civil liberty, and there is no suggestion that these mechanisms
will ever be reversed. In fact, they are the mainstay of the show,
as they are perhaps of any government seeking "total information
awareness" – but to what end?
This is dangerous
stuff, and if nothing else points to an uneasy emptiness ahead:
we are on the road, but we don’t know where we’re going.
But don’t let
that spoil your enjoyment of the show – for now. "You’re gonna
have to trust me on this."
January
10, 2007
Richard
Wall (send him mail) lives
in Portugal, and is currently reading for a PhD in American history
at the University of Birmingham, England.
Copyright ©
2007 LewRockwell.com
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