Tinselectomy: how much bad behavior does Hollywood cause?

AuthorGillespie, Nick
PositionRant

IN A COURAGEOUS admission that they no longer have any serious work left to do, attorneys general in two dozen states recently sent a letter to the Motion Picture Association of America asking that Hollywood minimize smoking in movies so youngsters won't be gulled into lighting up. Taking a page from movie gangsters, who tend to threaten vaguely rather than make explicit demands, the attorneys general didn't insist on a specific remedy. Rather, said a spokesman for California Attorney General Bill Lockyer, they were merely expressing "concern for the health of our kids."

The attorneys general cited a June study from Dartmouth Medical School that claimed 10-to-14-year-olds who watched movies with a lot of smoking were more likely to smoke than those who viewed less on-screen puffing. Whether this study actually proves anything is beside the point. Everyone already knows that movies are the main source of bad behavior in contemporary society. Just like novels used to be.

Which makes you wonder: Why are the attorneys general dealing only with smoking? There are any number of other equally destructive social lessons taught by movies that need to be addressed. The list is endless, but it certainly includes the following:

* Car chases solve problems. At least since the chase in 1968's Bullitt--in which Steve McQueen also dangerously glamorizes cops who play by their own rules--virtually every movie has featured the sort of unsafe motoring that keeps driver ed teachers up at night. Only a tool of the automotive industry would deny that even adults ranging from O. J. Simpson to South Dakota Congressman Bill Janklow have been influenced by bad big screen driving.

* Mutation is aviable path to self-improvement. In movies ranging from Spider-Mats to The Hulk to Daredevil, heroes benefit from exposure to radioactivity. If TV shows/films such as jackass routinely induce high school honor students to roll down concrete embankments in shopping carts--and by all accounts they do--then how long is it before we read about valedictorians bombarding themselves with home-brewed gamma rays?

* Career criminals can pull off one last heist before retiring. How many youngsters have...

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