Has TV Gone Too Far?

PositionEditorial

Marrying millionaires--and other stupid people tricks

YES

It should not be too surprising that the marriage of two strangers on Fox's Who Wants to Marry a Multimillionaire? foundered before the honeymoon was over. After flying into the sunset, the bride and groom came home separately, the groom facing questions about a police restraining order against him nine years ago.

More distressing than the matrimonial flop is the news that the television industry seems to adore this kind of entertainment. Company lawyers may fear the potential for a multi-million-dollar lawsuit in every participant's disappointment. But network programmers see these shows as a ratings- and revenue-producing bonanza at a time when their less flamboyant shows are losing ground to cable and the Internet.

There's more. A Dutch program, Big Brother, featured the unscripted saga of 10 young people living in a house wired with cameras. A CBS version is due this summer. More troubling is another CBS show called Survivor, which will take contestants to Borneo for a survival course. The group will vote to exclude one person in each round until the survivor wins $1 million. A Swedish version of this show resulted in the suicide of one dismissed contestant.

If the appeal to good taste is fruitless, perhaps the only hope for discerning viewers is the zapper, the off button, or the liability lawyers, who may give the networks pause.

--EDITORIAL The New York Times

NO

You thought Multimillionaire was weird? Just wait. This summer, CBS will introduce a couple of creepy, voyeuristic series, Survivor and Big Brother, that promise to make MTV's The Real World seem like Masterpiece Theatre. The professor half of me is disgusted by this development...

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