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- <text id=93TT2073>
- <title>
- Aug. 02, 1993: The Networks Run For Cover
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 02, 1993 Big Shots:America's Kids and Their Guns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TELEVISION, Page 52
- The Networks Run for Cover
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>To avoid a warning label, violent shows are getting toned down--or dropped
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN--With reporting by Georgia Harbison/New York and Jeffrey Ressner/Los
- Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Producer John Langley was screening a rough cut of his new
- Fox network show Cop Files a couple of weeks ago, and he wasn't
- happy. In one scene, a female police officer surprises a burglary
- suspect in a warehouse; he attacks her savagely, then she shoots
- him in self-defense. When Fox censors objected to the violence,
- Langley was forced to make drastic excisions. "It was absurd,"
- he says. "The pressure was on us to de-emphasize the attack,
- so you wound up showing her shooting him without any motivation."
- Langley, like many others in Hollywood, knows the reason for
- this outbreak of squeamishness: the networks have suddenly got
- religion on the subject of violence.
- </p>
- <p> After several rounds of congressional hearings that aired concerns
- about violence on TV, the four networks last month announced
- a joint response. Starting in September, they will attach a
- warning label--DUE TO SOME VIOLENT CONTENT, PARENTAL DISCRETION
- ADVISED--to shows with high levels of mayhem. Over the past
- two weeks, network executives have trooped before junketing
- TV journalists in Los Angeles to stress their concerns about
- violence--and assert that they aren't the only ones to blame.
- Next Monday a heavyweight lineup of TV producers, network executives
- and other industry bigwigs will meet to explore the violence
- issue at a daylong "summit conference" sponsored by the National
- Council for Families and Television.
- </p>
- <p> Initial reaction to the networks' labeling plan was predictably
- skeptical. Critics, from conservative watchdog Terry Rakolta
- to earnest newspaper columnists, complained that the warning
- label was a cop-out, a Band-Aid solution that would not reduce
- violence but would simply point out more clearly where to find
- it. But as production for the new season gets under way, the
- impact of the new label is shaping up as substantial, maybe
- even crippling. The Clean Up Your Network campaign may help
- make TV safer for kids, but it will almost certainly make network
- programming even blander than it already is.
- </p>
- <p> The irony of the current outcry is that it comes at a time when
- violence on the networks is at a low ebb. Five, 10 or 15 years
- ago, the prime-time schedules were packed with turbulent crime
- shows like The A-Team, Miami Vice, Hunter and Hill Street Blues.
- These have all but disappeared, replaced by sitcoms, magazine
- shows and "soft" dramas like L.A. Law and Northern Exposure.
- Violence is largely confined to a few reality shows, Cops, America's
- Most Wanted, and true-crime TV movies--which are abundant
- but whose violence looks positively prim beside the brutality
- of any Lethal Weapon sequel or Schwarzenegger extravaganza.
- </p>
- <p> Still, faced with public concern about the effect TV violence
- might be having on young viewers, the networks have vowed to
- scrub their houses even cleaner. The label itself may turn out
- to be sparingly used. Network officials say few, if any, of
- their regular series will be so branded; only Steven Bochco's
- racy new cop show for ABC, NYPD Blue, has been singled out as
- likely to get a weekly warning. In general, the label will be
- applied on a case-by-case basis to certain TV movies and individual
- episodes of regular series.
- </p>
- <p> The real question is whether a "V" label--like an R or NC-17
- rating for feature films--will become a stigma to be avoided
- at almost all costs. The fear is that advertisers, always skittish
- about controversial programs that might inspire a letter-writing
- campaign or an advertiser boycott, will be scared off by any
- show that carries the label. Madison Avenue veterans think they
- will. "Advertisers will be lemming-like in their avoidance of
- these programs," says Gene DeWitt, president of his own New
- York City media management firm, "because advertising on them
- will just be asking for trouble." Asserts Betsy Frank, a senior
- vice president of Saatchi & Saatchi: "You are shining a spotlight
- on certain programs and on advertisers who are supporting those
- programs. In effect, it's saying these advertisers support violence."
- </p>
- <p> Producers are justifiably worried about the chilling effect
- this could have on provocative programming. "Once you get advertising
- redlining, you'll have a debilitating effect on some of TV's
- most powerful dramas," says Dick Wolf, executive producer of
- NBC's Law & Order. "When Law & Order started, we did episodes
- on subjects like abortion-clinic bombings. In this current environment,
- I don't know if those would ever have gotten made." The network
- standards-and-practices departments are already increasing their
- vigilance. "We're used to dealing with Standards & Practices
- on a daily basis in terms of language and violence," says Langley
- of Cop Files. "But they've become even more cautious recently."
- ABC Entertainment chief Ted Harbert, speaking to affiliates
- in June, promised that the network would "work to keep the violence
- to the absolute minimum" this fall. George Vradenburg 3d, executive
- vice president of Fox Inc., vows "increased attention not only
- to the depiction of violence but also to whether there are appropriate
- ways to resolve conflicts without using violence." One CBS show
- has already been affected: Walker, Texas Ranger, a western starring
- Chuck Norris that premiered in the spring, will be less violent
- when it returns to the fall schedule, network programmers say.
- </p>
- <p> The program drawing the most scrutiny is NYPD Blue; it is an
- admitted effort by Bochco, creator of Hill Street Blues, to
- do network TV's first R-rated series. The pilot episode contains
- a steamy sex scene with rear nudity, relatively rough language
- ("You pissy little bitch"), and some strong violence. In the
- face of affiliate discomfort--roughly a third of ABC station
- executives polled at a recent network meeting said they might
- not run the show--Bochco said he would consider making some
- changes: "I'm trying to be sensitive to the concerns without
- compromising the show."
- </p>
- <p> The anti-violence campaign may have an even greater impact in
- the shows that viewers won't see. All three networks have said
- they will back off from their overzealous pursuit of true-crime
- movies of the week. ABC, which drew fire for its two-parter
- in May about 1950s mass murderer Charles Starkweather, has turned
- down a proposed TV movie about 1960s mass murderer Richard Speck.
- Critics may cheer at the demise of this tawdry TV-movie crime
- wave, but good films may get hurt in the process. ABC had planned
- to air the explosively violent (and Oscar-winning) film Goodfellas
- this season, complete with an introduction by director Martin
- Scorsese in which he asserts the film is not a glorification
- of violence. In the current climate, the network has decided
- to pull the film from this season's schedule.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, network executives are complaining loudly about being
- made scapegoats for a larger problem in society. "The TV networks
- are a lot easier target than the National Rifle Association,"
- notes CBS Entertainment president Jeff Sagansky. He and others
- point out that most TV violence is found not on the networks
- but on syndicated shows like The Untouchables and Highlander,
- and on cable channels, which are still free to air whatever
- they want. Not to mention video games, rented movies--and,
- of course, real life. "There's nothing more violent than watching
- the 11 o'clock news at night, and nothing more toxic," contends
- Peter Gu ber, chairman of Sony Pictures Entertainment. "Baby
- Falls Out of Window! Tune in at 11! We have to apply the same
- standards to all visual images--not just what we call entertainment,
- but news, information and reality-based programs."
- </p>
- <p> The controversy over whether TV violence truly affects the way
- people act will continue to roil, with little chance of being
- resolved conclusively. For now, however, those alarmed by violence
- have the upper hand. Until viewers raise new alarms by tuning
- out in search of more stimulating entertainment, network TV
- seems headed for a dull, discreet stretch.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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