TV Violence
TV is often accused of showing too much violence or mayhem: scenes of fights, assaults, murder and so on. Violence on TV and in films is often referred to as gore, especially when blood is visible. A film with a lot of violence and blood in it is gory. The US cable television industry announced a major new initiative to deal with the problem of violence in American television programming. At two Capitol Hill news conferences, cable television executives, joined by concerned legislators, discussed specific ways the industry can help reduce the level of violence as portrayed in TV entertainment programs – including using available technology to block violent shows from homes. Their proposals include: · using cable programming to stimulate a national discussion on violence and ways to curb it; · developing a violence ratings system to give viewers more information and control over what they watch; · forming an industry group to monitor programmes; · prefacing violent programmes with a parental advisory; · providing television sets with viewer discretion technology to enable parents to block violent programmes. Cable programmers “have united to lead the television industry in the effort to combat the epidemic of violence in America,” added Winston Cox, chairman and head of Showtime Networks Inc. “We are taking action to give viewers more control over what they are watching, and on a long-term basis, seeking to reduce the level of gratuitous violence on television,” said Cox. Congressman Edward Markey says Cox’s efforts have helped produce an agreement among cable stations nationwide “which many would have predicted impossible to reach just three or four months ago.” Nonetheless, he explained, the major networks “have continued to resist” the efforts to rate their broadcast programmes and efforts to install circuitry into the TV set to enable parents to block objectionable programmes. That “V-chip” technology, he said, is already being used to transmit and display closed caption information to deaf viewers for a few dollars per set and could be adapted cheaply “to block any of the programming that is sent with a V by the cable or television industry.” All television sets sold since last July now include the chip. According to Byron Dorgan, who introduced Markey’s legislation in the Senate, “Study after study demonstrates that children watching television violence, become more aggressive.” “No one is here suggesting that there ought to be a thought police, suggesting there ought to be censorship of any kind,” he added. “What we are suggesting is to use technological means to give parents the opportunity to better supervise their children viewing habits. It’s that simple.” Text F
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