The FCC's not our mommy or daddy: let parents be parents when it comes to TV violence.

AuthorGillespie, Nick
PositionRant - Federal Communications Commission

IN LATE APRIL the Federal Communications Commission issued a report on "violent television programming and its impact on children" that calls not just for expanding the government's oversight of broadcast TV but extending content regulation to cable and satellite channels. The FCC also recommended that some shows be banned from time slots when children might be watching and that cable operators be forced to offer "a la carte" service in which subscribers would pick and choose among individual channels.

The report rests on the demonstrably false premise that violence on TV breeds violence in reality, and it gives short shrift to the vast increase in child-friendly programming and parent-empowering viewing tools. The result is a document as cartoonish and absurd as the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (whom the FCC decries as small-screen hooligans).

"America is hooked on violence," laments Commissioner Jonathan S. Adelstein. "Particularly in light of the spasm of unconscionable violence at Virginia Tech," he says, "but just as importantly in light of the excessive violent crime that daily afflicts our nation, there is a basis for appropriate federal action to curb violence in the media." Yet the report itself cites a 2001 U.S. surgeon general's report that concluded "many questions remain regarding the short- and long-term effects of media violence, especially on violent behavior."

More to the point, if Adelstein is right that fantasy violence translates readily into real-world violence, that effect should be reflected in crime statistics. There seems little question that depictions of violence in popular culture, including TV, movies, music, and video games, have become more frequent and more graphic during the last decade or so. Yet juvenile violent crime arrests have dropped steadily since 1994, falling "to a level not seen since at least the 1970s," according to the U.S. Justice Department. A similar trend can be seen among adults.

But the FCC commissioners speak less as social scientists than as parents. "I am deeply concerned about the negative effects violent programming appears to have on our children," writes Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate. "Many of us, as...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT