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By Rusty Benson
| AFA Journal
Associate Editor
Despite its vulgarity, the recent Super Bowl half-time show, which
climaxed with a stunt that revealed singer Janet Jacksons
right breast, may have been a wake-up call for American families
and a boon for the cause of decency on TV.
In the midst of countless replays and news coverage, the curtain
has been drawn back on the sex-saturated world of the cable television
network MTV. Its a domain that adults over 35 are likely only
vaguely aware of, but to many teens and young adults, its
territory as familiar as their own backyards.
Its not that parents havent heard of MTV. Many were
among its early viewers when the network began some 22 years ago.
At that time, programming on Music Television consisted of wall-to-wall
record company promotional videos. This older MTV generation watched
as the network redefined pop culture and spawned an industry that
made cable hook-up essential for most American families.
But todays MTV has little resemblance to the networks
early days. In fact, music videos comprise only a small part of
the programming. Now soap operas, reality shows, beach specials
and decidedly left-slanted news dominate. In the words of a recent
commentary by Laurence Herman in USA Today,
the innocence
of its early programming [has been] replaced by a prurient broadcasting
hodgepodge with a message subversive to basic values.
Today MTV invades more than 140 countries and 350 million homes,
with 80 million of those in the United States. Its a billion-dollar
cash cow for its parent company, media conglomerate Viacom, which
also owns CBS, the network that aired the Super Bowl. At the request
of CBS, the NFL hired MTV to produce the raunchy half-time spectacle.
What do you expect?
Christians across the nation were collectively shocked and surprised
by MTVs Super Bowl prank using Janet Jackson. But should we
have been?
Not according to Al Menconi, whose ministry for over 20 years has
been to help Christian parents and children think Biblically about
the entertainment media. What do you expect from MTV?
he asks. Their shows like Real World, Road Rules, Spring
Break and others regularly feature nude and nearly nude young
people simulating sex in their dance routines and other sexually
charged behavior. The Super Bowl program was no different.
Bob DeMoss, senior writer with FamilyLife of Little Rock, Arkansas,
summarizes MTVs underlying message to its 12-24 year old target
demographic: Above all else, satisfy any and all hormonal
impulses for any reason at any time, without any thought for the
implications or wisdom of such actions; and, encourage others to
do likewise, without passing judgment. Lyrics and choreography
from the Super Bowl half-time show certainly validate DeMoss
assessment.
With a stage full of striptease cheerleaders and gyrating dancers
dressed as transvestities, Janet Jacksons opening number was
All For You. Lyrics include: All my girls at the party / Look
at his body / Shakin that thing / Like I never did see / Got
a nice package alright / Guess Im gonna have to ride it tonight.
(Package is a contemporary euphemism for male genitalia.)
Hip-hop artist P. Diddy followed with Bad Boy for Life: Im
the definition of, half man, half drugs / Ask the clubs, Bad Boy
- thats whassup / After bucks, crush cruise after us / No
gaze, we aint laughin much / Nothin but big thangs,
check the hitlist / How we twist s--t, what change but the name?
Bad Boy segued into Hot in Herre by rapper Nelly: I was
like, good gracious a-- bodacious / Flirtatious, tryin to
show faces / Lookin for the right time to shoot my steam (you
know) / Lookin for the right time to flash them Gs
I need you to get up on the dance floor / Give that man what he
askin for / Cuz I feel like bustin loose and I feel
like touchin you / And cant nobody stop the juice so
baby tell me whats the use / (I said) Its getting
hot in here (so hot) / So take off all your clothes / I am getting
so hot, I wanna take my clothes off.
Nellys presentation also included the requisite hip-hop crotch-grabbing
move.
Next, Kid Rock, wearing an American flag poncho, offered his rock/rap
compositions Bawitdaba and Cowboy. Lyrics celebrate
crackheads, crooked cops, hookers,
and pornography.
Jacksons infamous duet with Justin Timberlake was the finale.
Rock Your Body included choreographed groping, simulated
lesbian sex and these lyrics: Are you feeling me? / Lets
do something / Lets make a bet / Cause I, bet Ill have
you naked by the end of this song. As the last line was delivered
Timberlake reached across Jackson to rip off a black leather bodice
and reveal her breast. The broadcast immediately cut to commercial
without a comment.
Assuming the public would find the stunt edgy and cool, MTV gloated
at their Web site, Janet Gets Nasty. But when the public
indignation became evident even MTV, along with CBS, the NFL, Timberlake
and Jackson, scrambled to offer explanations and measured apologies.
Timberlake claimed wardrobe malfunction.
However even before the game, MTV had promised shocking moments.
Rolling Stone magazine, long a major voice of pop culture,
reported that MTV insiders said a tearaway finale, in which
Jacksons skirt would be ripped off to reveal a sexy undergarment
was considered.
In any case, Americans got an eye full and ear full of what MTV
is all about marketing cool in the form of sexual
immorality and debauchery to teens and young adults.
Merchants of Cool
MTV provides the parameters of cool, Menconi explains.
Teens must find out what is cool. This is basic. Menconi
says MTV dictates what it is to be a teenager what is
funny, what is fashionable and what is interesting.
Cool may be the reason millions of teens tune in to
MTV like earlier generations did radio, but to corporate America,
its all about money $150 billion per year in disposable
income that teens spend.
A segment of the compelling news documentary The Merchants of
Cool, which originally aired on PBS on the Frontlines
series, is devoted to demonstrating the extent to which MTV goes
to stay cool and sell cool. Its all a very calculated marketing
effort.
According to Merchants of Cool producer Douglas Rushkoff,
MTV and other marketers monitor teens in real life in order to sell
them an image of themselves. Then those teens watch those images
and aspire to conform to what they see on MTV. The marketers watch
the whole process in order to craft new images. Rushkoff calls it
a giant feedback loop.
The trick for marketers is to recognize when whats currently
cool is old, and move on to something else. Right now whats
cool is raunchy sex and rebellion.
My guess would be that weve been through a fairly serious
anti-drug and alcohol movement in the country, says DeMoss.
The same is true with the rash of violent lyrics in the late 80s.
Whats left? Sex. Oh, and anger. Anger is okay, but sex seems
to have more in it for the performer.
Money has always been the most effective leverage for Christian
activists, says AFA President Tim Wildmon. Weve
always said the entertainment companies respond to one thing
money. And thats certainly true of MTV. Wildmon says
if Christians can get the attention of advertisers on MTV, programming
changes are possible.
AFA has identified five major companies whose advertising regularly
apprears on MTV. For more information about actions against MTV,
see the front page story or go to www.boycottMTV.com.
Next month: Protecting your kids from the influence of MTV.
RESOURCES
Get involved
and informed. Monitor this issue: www.boycottMTV.net
For articles,
books and teaching tapes on the influence of media: www.almenconi.com
Not Even A
Hint: Guarding Your Heart Against Lust, by Joshua Harris.
Straightforward talk about sexual sin without being graphic, this
PG-rated book will speak to the person deeply entrenched
in lust, as well as to those just flirting with temptation. Available
at www.sovereigngracestore.com/notevenhint.html
or local Christian book stores.
To order The
Merchants of Cool: www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/cool/etc/tapes.html
Plugged In Online
and Plugged In magazine Focus on the Family publications
designed to help equip parents, youth leaders, ministers and teens
with essential tools that will enable them to understand, navigate
and impact pop culture: www.fotf.org
For a variety
of articles and information on family and parenting issues: www.familylife.com.
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