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March 10, 2006
Entertainment
as Indoctrination
From The Federalist
Patriot
Ah yes, the Academy Awards gala -- that annual
confab of Hollywonk glitterati promoting silly hair
and partial wardrobes -- has come and gone. In its
wake, there is good news and bad news.
The good news first: Despite the ignorati, er,
glitterati balloting for the best films of the
year, the only votes that really mattered were
those Americans cast at the box office.
In Hollywood's estimation, the "Best Picture"
nominees were Brokeback Mountain (26th), Crash
(49th), Munich (64th), Good Night, and Good Luck
(89th) and Capote (100th), in order of each movie's
box office gross -- in other words, America's
opinion of these pictures. In all, Hollywood's Fab
Five grossed $235,643,912 and averaged $26.3
million in profits.
On the other hand, the top five picks according
to the rest of America were Star Wars: Revenge of
the Sith, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, The
Chronicles of Narnia (The Lion, the Witch and the
Wardrobe), War of the Worlds and King Kong. These
films grossed $1.41 billion and averaged $125.4
million in profits.
In fact, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, a
film based on one of Christian writer C.S. Lewis's
Narnia books, grossed more than all five of the
Academy's nominees combined.
Film critic Dr. Marc T. Newman notes, "Instead
of fretting over the agenda of Academy
Award-nominated films...we should pay closer
attention to the vote that really counts. The
election that gets the attention of studios is the
one that occurs at the ticket booth. Eighty percent
of this year's Best Picture nominees are rated R,
but 90 percent of the top-20 grossing films were
rated G, PG, or PG-13. Many of those films opened
opportunities to talk about virtues, the darkness
of sin, and the importance of family and
sacrifice."
Indeed, when asked about top-grossing films
versus nominated films, Academy spokesperson Ms.
Leslie Unger responded, "What we do and how our
awards are determined has absolutely nothing to do
with how a film does in terms of box office."
"I'm proud to be out of touch." -- George
Clooney
Apparently, George Clooney was right on the
money when he declared to his Academy colleagues,
"We are a little bit out of touch in Hollywood
every once in a while. I think it is probably a
good thing... I'm proud to be out of
touch."
Fortunately, every once in a while, Hollywood
and the rest of America concur on a film. Some
major box office hits have been selected by the
Academy for Best Picture. Lord of the Rings: Return
of the King, based on the series by C.S. Lewis's
Christian colleague, J.R.R. Tolkien, was a major
hit in 2003 and swept the awards, winning all 11 of
the categories for which it was
nominated.
Of course, that is not to suggest that all box
office hits are great movies (Titanic) or that all
low grossing films are not (The Patriot). Clearly,
timing and marketing are major factors in a film's
success.
Unfortunately, in a year like the one just
passed, in which a major film promotes Hollywood's
favorite cause celebre, gender disorientation, a
large cadre of Academy members invariably tout that
film above all others. This year it was Brokeback
Mountain, which, much to the shock and dismay of
Hollywood's cultural fascists, lost out to the film
Crash.
Heterosexual promiscuity and marital infidelity
are passè.
So, why Brokeback Mountain? For Hollywood's
fashionable elite, promoting heterosexual
promiscuity and marital infidelity is passè
-- those subjects are already prevalent in theater
and TV entertainment. Instead, for the past decade,
the glitterati have been advocating for the
normalization of gender disorientation pathology --
the promotion of homosexual relationships as
equivalent to those ordained by the laws of nature
(not to mention every religion of the
world).
Amazingly, Brokeback did not win Best Picture.
Joe Solmonese, president of the so-called "Human
Rights Campaign," the nation's largest
homosexual-advocacy group, said, "I was certainly
disappointed, but I would not trade that Oscar for
all the positive conversations [about
homosexuality] this movie spurred." (Surely no
pun intended.) Jennifer Morris, co-director of the
San Francisco International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual
& Transgendered Film Festival, concurred,
"That's the best thing about these films... This
really was a groundbreaking year."
Entertainment is the most effective means of
ideological indoctrinating.
On that note, here is the bad news:
entertainment is the subtlest and most effective
means of ideological indoctrinating. It creates a
psychological opening through which cultural
messages bypass the intellectual filters that
arrest most input for critical analysis. Because
the context for these messages is "entertainment,"
they get a free pass into the mind's cultural
context, where they compete, at a subconscious
level, with established ethical and moral
standards.
Those at greatest risk for this form of
indoctrination are adults, whose behavior is
strongly characterized by their emotions (you know
who you are), and all children.
If emotive adults are not constantly vigilant
about screening ethical and moral messages from TV,
theater, music, books, magazines, infotainment
programs, etc. -- and deliberate about evaluating
that communication -- they risk having these
messages not only encroach upon, but, over time,
actually displace the source code for wholesome
values.
Adults notwithstanding, this point cannot be
emphasized strongly enough: Children, who do not
have the sturdy character foundation that only time
and good parenting can provide, are at very high
risk of indoctrination through entertainment media.
The only means of avoiding such indoctrination in
children and highly emotive adults is to avoid
exposure to entertainment media with harmful
messages.
Of course, for emotive adults and older
children, the purposeful vetting of challenging
entertainment messages with the deliberate
objective of intellectualizing them -- in effect,
shuttering the emotional window into the
subconscious -- is a useful means of strengthening
one's filter on such messages.
Many entertainment consumers don't filter
critically what they see, hear and read.
At the Academy podium last Sunday, one of the
glitterlings professed, "Art is not a mirror to
hold up to society, but a hammer with which to
shape it." Unfortunately, far too many
entertainment consumers lack the ability to filter
critically what they see, hear and read. For them,
no hammer is necessary.
Source: The
Federalist Patriot
Copyright 2006 by Publius Press, Inc. and
reprinted with permission.
Because
The Radical Academy publishes essays and articles
on its website does not imply acceptance or
approval of the comments or opinions expressed by
the author of the material. Nor is the Academy
responsible for any misrepresentation of the facts
included. It is your job to be a critical
reader.
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