Townhall... MTV, Both Sleazy and Sour
by Brent Bozell
Dec 10, 2011
Once
upon a time, women were
considered the “fairer sex,” the “better half.” Stewardesses were
talented and
beautiful. Wives were softer and gentler. Men fought for their honor.
Feminism
crushed all of that.
It
is a testimony to their movement
that in today’s post-feminist entertainment media, part of what makes
television so corrosive and sour is just how piggish the women have
become.
The
latest study from the Parents
Television Council drives this concept home by going to the ugly center
of pop
culture: MTV “reality” programming. After studying entire seasons of
four MTV
shows, the PTC concludes: “Females talked about sex acts more than men,
talked
about sex more graphically than men, mentioned sexual body parts more
than men,
and talked about intercourse and preliminaries to intercourse more than
men.”
Translation:
TVs women are society’s
truck drivers. That doesn’t sound like “reality.” It sounds carefully
cartooned
to attract viewers.
Sadly,
it follows that PTC found that
on MTV male cast members referred to females as “cool” and viewed them
more
favorably when women displayed characteristics attributed to men (not
wanting
tolinger after sex, not viewing sex as any proof of commitment, not
requiring
romance prior to sex and indifference to cheating).
But
that emotionally arid and
recklessly lascivious behavior naturally also leads to demeaning
remarks. On
“Jersey Shore,” Mike “The Situation” sneers, “Deena calls herself ‘The
Holiday.’ I like to call her ‘The Holiday Inn.’”
After
reviewing the ratings data, PTC
picked the four most popular programs in 2011 on cable among the 12 to
17
demographic, which included that detestable sleazefest “Jersey Shore.”
Analysts
also viewed “The Real World,” “Teen Mom,” and “16 and Pregnant.”
The
PTCs critics in the press have
mocked the idea that anyone would need to study “Jersey Shore” to find
it
sleazy. The New York Daily News joked, “In equally shocking news,
bananas were
found at the Chiquita factory.” But what’s new in this study is that
not only
do the men speak badly of the women on these shows, but also the women
speak
badly of each other and of themselves.
The
overarching purpose for the study
was to explore what messages young viewers are receiving through
“reality”
television. What they’re getting isn’t just non-stop scenes of drinking
and
premarital sex, but an overwhelming dose of insulting negativity. The
top three
derogatory terms for women were the B-word, “stupid” and “dirty.” Those
often
came attached with profanities. Females were the recipients of an
F-word or
S-word 662 times, or on average, once every 4 minutes and 10 seconds.
While
terms men used for each other
were often viewed as complimentary -- big man, dawg, superhero,
MacGyver,
winner. Women used far more degrading language when talking about other
females
-- rodent, skank, slut, ho and much worse.
In
a PTC video accompanying the study,
web surfers can view the poisonous princesses of MTV refer to one
another as
“trash bags,” “the furniture,” and one woman sneering at another woman
is a
“dirty Chihuahua” whom she wants to “smack to
the side.” Only 24 percent of what females said about themselves was
positive.
The
PTC also verified (yet again) that
all this sex and sex chatter has nothing resembling caution in it.
Although 88
percent of the sexual dialogue between men and women across all the
shows
focused on intercourse and its preludes, the topics of virginity (0.2
percent),
contraceptives (1.4 percent) and sexually transmitted diseases (2
percent) were
barely mentioned on these programs. MTV can’t even live up to its own
“safe
sex” ideology.
MTV
doesn’t make these shows to expose
“reality” or be educational. They’re quite anti-educational,
glamorizing
stupidity and paving a way to fame through anti-social behavior.
They’re
attracting school-age viewers by the millions by highlighting the most
demeaning and crass behavior they can capture on camera
In
an interview with GQ magazine,
“Jersey Shore” star Snooki Polizzi lamented that the show leaves a lot
of
“reality” out of its eyeball-dragging mess every week. “I wouldn’t show
as much
drinking and partying. I would show more of us chilling out and having
a good
time, which they don’t show,” she complained. “We don’t even drink
those
nights, but we laugh all night. They don’t show anything but us
drinking and
hooking up.”
This
is not to say MTV would end up
with C-SPAN if they manufactured this pap with a little more civility.
But the
network’s callous distortions of “reality” are twisting the minds of
young
people into avoiding manners, romance, commitment, decency, modesty and
empathy. They’re teaching our children to become mean-spirited,
backstabbing,
bed-hopping villains. This Chiquita factory needs to be denounced for
putting
rot in the bananas.
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this and other columns at
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