LOS ANGELES, August 6, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - The Parents
Television Council released a new study, Happily Never After:
How Hollywood Favors Adultery and Promiscuity Over Marital
Intimacy on Prime Time Broadcast Television, which revealed that
broadcast networks depict sex in the context of marriage as
either non-existent or burdensome, while showing positive
depictions of extra-marital or adulterous sexual relationships
with alarming frequency.
Across the broadcast networks, the new PTC report found that
verbal references to non-marital sex outnumbered references to
sex in the context of marriage by nearly 3 to 1, and scenes
depicting or implying sex between non-married partners
outnumbered similar scenes between married couples by a ratio of
nearly 4 to 1.
"These study results suggest that many in Hollywood are actively
seeking to undermine marriage by consistently showing it in a
negative manner. Even more troubling than the marginalization of
marriage and glorification of non-marital sex on television is
TV's recent obsession with outré sexual expression. Children and
teens are now exposed to a host of sexual behaviors that less
than a generation ago would have been considered off-limits for
broadcast television," said PTC President Tim Winter.
According to the PTC study, some of the once-taboo-for-TV sexual
behaviors that are now found on prime time television include
threesomes, partner swapping, pedophilia, necrophilia,
bestiality, and sex with prostitutes, in addition to depictions
of strippers, references to masturbation, pornography, sex toys,
and kinky or fetishistic behaviors.
"Behaviors that were once seen as fringe, immoral, or socially
destructive have been given the stamp of approval by the
television industry. And recent studies show that children are
influenced by those messages. Throughout much of the history of
broadcast television, the networks adhered to a voluntary code
of conduct which stipulated that respect should be maintained
for the sanctity of marriage and the value of the home. Our
report finds that not only are the boundaries no longer
respected - they have been obliterated," Winter continued.
The PTC examined all scripted prime time entertainment programs
on the major broadcast television networks (ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC,
and the CW) during four weeks at the beginning of the 2007-2008
television season (September 23-October 22, 2007) for a total of
207.5 programming hours. Television broadcasts of movies, news,
sports programs, reality and game shows were not included in
this analysis. My Network TV did not air programming that
matched this study's criteria within the study period.
The study found, amongst other things, that references to
adultery outnumbered references to marital sex 2 to 1.
Although the networks shied away from talking about sex in the
context of marriage, they did not shy away from discussions of
masturbation, oral sex, anal sex, manual stimulation, sex toys,
bondage or kinky or fetishistic sex - there were 74 such
references during the study period.
The Family Hour - the time slot with the largest audience of
young viewers - contained the highest frequency of references to
non-married sex. Family Hour references to non-marital sex
outnumbered references to sex in marriage by a ratio of 3.9 to
1. During the 9:00 pm and 10:00 pm hours, the references to
non-marital versus marital sex averaged 2.5 to 1.
Visual references to voyeurism (a third party present, watching
or taping while sex takes place), transvestites/transsexuals,
threesomes, kinky sex, bondage, sado-masochism, and prostitution
outnumbered visual references to sex in marriage by a ratio of
2.7 to 1.
Content descriptors, which are intended to alert parents to
inappropriate content and work in conjunction with the V-Chip to
block such content that parents may find unsuitable for their
children, were often lacking or inadequate. For example, on ABC,
38% of programs airing during the Family Hour that contained
sexual content did not receive the "S" descriptor and during the
9:00 pm hour, 71% of programs containing sexual dialogue did not
carry a "D" descriptor. Every network had problems with the
consistent application of "S" and/or "D" descriptors during
every time slot.
Of all the networks, ABC had the most references to marital sex,
but many of the references were negative. References to
non-marital sex, by contrast, were almost universally positive
or neutral.
In 46 hours of programming, NBC contained only one reference to
marital sex, but 11 references to non-marital sex and one
reference to adultery were made.
References to incest, pedophilia, partner swapping,
prostitution, threesomes, transsexuals/transvestites,
bestiality, and necrophilia combined outnumbered references to
sex in marriage on NBC by a ratio of 27 to 1.
On NBC, there were as many depictions of adults having sex with
minors as there were scenes implying or depicting sex between
married partners.
Michael Medved, Nationally Syndicated Talk Radio Host and PTC
Advisory Board Member, remarked, "For many years, parents have
worried about television's glamorization of destructive sexual
behavior. This important new report suggests another cause for
concern: the de-glamorization of marriage. Statistics show that
the overwhelming majority of Americans feel satisfied and
fulfilled by their marriages. The notion that sex outside of
marriage is inherently more exciting, more important, more
worthy as the subject of story-telling, is a toxic message for
parents and children alike."
Mr. Winter continued, "Broadcasters, knowing television's
ability to influence behavior, must exercise greater
responsibility when handling sexual situations during primetime
hours - opting for less graphic visual content, and favoring
storylines that don't celebrate promiscuity, glamorize
criminality, or denigrate monogamy.
"The American people need to hold the networks and their local
broadcast affiliates accountable for pushing questionable
content into their homes over the publicly-owned broadcast
airwaves. In addition, advertisers need to reconsider their role
as underwriters of such material, and whether they want to
continue associating their brand names and hard-earned corporate
images with salacious sexual content. While the Supreme Court
awaits its next legal review of indecency on television, now is
the time for families to raise their collective voice against
the tide of graphic sexual content invading their homes."
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