G
grasscutter
Guest
Consumerism. And low, low prices.
So how is what I wrote a conspiracy theory at all? You’ve provided the confirmation people need - the truth. The company I work for is in contact with one of the largest entertainment companies in the world. I used to own stock in them. And we had a guest from another name Hollywood entertainment company at our office. He and I exchanged stories about both being editors for fiction. We matched up pretty well.I think this is the driver more than anything else. People are deathly uncomfortable with silence so the “rectangle” is always talking to them. Whether it’s the big rectangle in the living room, the smaller one in the bedroom, the even smaller one in their backpack or the mini version in their pocket-every moment is filled with programming from the rectangle.
Now that the rectangle can bring you programming everywhere, waiting in line at the grocery store, riding the bus, at the MD’s office…everywhere people are faced with free time-out comes the rectangle.
And you’re right-not everyone is discerning about what they watch. They’ll watch whatever is on, they’ll watch what the rectangle says all the “cool kids” are watching-and the people who make the rectangles and the programming that goes on them are laughing all the way to the bank.
I still believe, even after reading Ed’s conspiracy theory a number of times that the real driver is money. The reason we get shock is because shock sells. There was a time when wholesome sold-the Little House, Highway to Heaven and Touched by an Angel era-but the pendulum has shifted. One show came on that was shocking, all the “cool kids” watched it and then the copycats arrived.
And as someone who works for one of the biggest, richest entertainment companies in the world-I can tell you that OUR biggest sellers are sports and kids movies not the sitcom pushing the envelope. Yes, Modern Family makes us some money…but nowhere near what ESPN and Pixar bring in. Modern Family could go off the air tomorrow and we’d barely notice.
Yes, I agree we ought to choose with care those things that we will spend lots of time doing. I use some things that way, as an antidote to the world. That’s why I spent a lot of time for several years trying to read spiritual books, just to create in my mind an alternative viewpoint from the one of my youth.For me - I would say that the appeal is that it is religion. We all choose to “fill time”…the question is what we choose to fill time with.
Peace
James
What you say that Noam said, that is indeed what it seems like. And you are right, the agenda of an EWTN is quite different.One way of differentiating on this might be to consider the different agenda of EWTN vs that of corporate sponsored media.
EWTN is in the business of saving souls.
Noam Choamsky has contended that the media is in the business of selling consumers (viewers) to advertisers.
From a Catholic perspective we can pull together the arguments of KRKH, Seeker1961 and Ed West2 by pointing to an intersection between profit and concupiscence.
I’m saying we falsely worship worthless things, with TV and football as examples. For the average person, their minds are occupied from the time they wake up until the time they go to sleep. No time for God. Prayer, meditation, and just plain reflection are not to be found in the average person. We live is a society driven by mass trivia. Religion is the only escape!I’m not clear here…Are you saying that we are falsely worshiping football or TV in general??
Peace
James
I’m not clear here…Are you saying that we are falsely worshiping football or TV in general??
Peace
James
Thanks for the clarification Robert. I agree…I’m saying we falsely worship worthless things, with TV and football as examples. For the average person, their minds are occupied from the time they wake up until the time they go to sleep. No time for God. Prayer, meditation, and just plain reflection are not to be found in the average person. We live is a society driven by mass trivia. Religion is the only escape!
Walk down the halls of any major university and you will see ‘professors’ with their eyes fixed on their computer. It takes daily spiritual struggle to know God better.
From your post earlier:So how is what I wrote a conspiracy theory at all? You’ve provided the confirmation people need - the truth. The company I work for is in contact with one of the largest entertainment companies in the world. I used to own stock in them. And we had a guest from another name Hollywood entertainment company at our office. He and I exchanged stories about both being editors for fiction. We matched up pretty well.
I think people need to meet people and have something other than a quick, easy, no strings attached relationship.
To my fellow Catholics. Get rid of the rectangles. Go to your priest and ask him how you can help real people. Gadgets don’t care - they don’t have feelings - and giant media companies have their own agendas. Real people can care for other people.
amazon.com/Alone-Together-Expect-Technology-Other/dp/0465031463
Put that silence to work for you. Relax or do things with your family. Turn off the box or throw it away. Don’t waste your time with anything that makes you less than what God intended.
Peace,
Ed
You can have a look at The Creation of the Media - Political Origins of Modern Communications, by Pulitzer Prize winning author, Paul Starr.From your post earlier:
"They wanted to push the envelope, break down barriers and erase taboos. In plain English, they wanted all the perversity and soft porn on TV and in the movies we have now.
They consciously chose to move in this direction - not us. Oh no. They dripped the poison into our veins a few drops at a time and as the decades passed, it consistently got worse.
Do you think powerful media executives who own TV stations, magazines and newspapers are content to just give the public what they want? No. They have power and they can tell their writers: “Write about this and do TV shows about that.” It would be fantasy to think that they just check to see how much money is coming in. They have agendas, and they believe in “issue advocacy.” That means, “I’m ridiculously wealthy and I’m going to do things my way.” And if their current crop of writers and actors don’t like it, they can leave."
I don’t buy the agenda as being anything other than making more and more money…you do.
I have a friend who uses the word “screens” to describe the same.My Pastor would say it is “the rectangle”. It comes in all sizes so we never have to be without it. We carry it in our pockets, we act instantly when it contacts us, we place it in every room in our homes, we look to it to tell us what to eat, what to drive, what to wear and how to think.
Yep, “News” too. If it bleeds, it leads.I work in the media. The media purposely glamorizes or makes us indifferent to bad behavior. Did anyone ASK for porn on cable when it first started? WAKE UP PEOPLE. THE MEDIA IS NOT YOUR FRIEND. It is the dirty, filthy, foul-mouthed, sex outside of marriage pimp for everything that is wrong.
You think those people walk into their jobs every day - writers, producers, actors - and think: I’M FORCED TO GIVE THE PUBLIC WHAT THEY WANT???
Wake up, please. The New Normal is on TV right now, or perhaps you prefer a TV show about a slightly disturbed man whose hobby is kidnapping people and cutting them up in his spare time? I hear you can pick up the last season of Dexter at Target.
Sheesh,
Ed
Undoubtedly. I cannot hardly sit through an entire game of whatever anymore and consider myself fortunate to not be addicted to sports.Amen. I’d like to give a shout out as well for sports- both youth and adult, armchair and active.
Yes, but it’s with a cynical view of humanity – appealing to the worst, not the best.I don’t buy the agenda as being anything other than making more and more money…
Best answer.My Pastor would say it is “the rectangle”. It comes in all sizes so we never have to be without it. We carry it in our pockets, we act instantly when it contacts us, we place it in every room in our homes, we look to it to tell us what to eat, what to drive, what to wear and how to think.
I’m really starting to doubt these views. No offense but as much as I used to buy them, I’ve been on the other end. Is it really the smartphone/cellphone’s fault that the person on the other end is more interesting to talk to?But it was sad that they were more interested in other distant people rather than the group they were with.
You can love your “rectangles” and enjoy your time with them without making them Lord of your life. I think we all know people who can’t control their addiction and others who have their priorities in order.I’m really starting to doubt these views. No offense but as much as I used to buy them, I’ve been on the other end. Is it really the smartphone/cellphone’s fault that the person on the other end is more interesting to talk to?
People make connections with those they find common ground with. If a person on FB or better yet, CAF makes for a better conversation about religion compared to the folks at the gym or at work, is it technology’s fault?
As I read through this thread, I can’t help but see the irony of people taking a whack at today’s tech yet do so using the very medium that tech is responsible for bringing.
You can love your “rectangles” and enjoy your time with them without making them Lord of your life. I think we all know people who can’t control their addiction and others who have their priorities in order.
We have fired people at my company because they cannot control their addiction to the rectangle and use it at the wrong times. When you get to the point that you’ll choose your rectangle over your job, you’ve crossed the line.