Normally, when I think about “other people”, what comes to
mind are people articulating loudly into their iPhones, invariably for attention – “”I am too good an agent to
take the offer currently on the table.” Or they are sitting in front of me in the
theater and they’re tall. Without other
people, I would always be the first person in line. Also, technically, the last person in line. But who
cares? I’m
“Next.”
“Next.”
Occasionally, however, someone who is not me will say
something that, though perhaps not a “game changer”, at least gets me thinking
in a direction I had previously overlooked.
It’s good not to have to depend on yourself for every illuminating
insight. For obvious reasons. You eventually – in some cases speedily eventually – run out. My last illuminating insight… if you leave
cheese out of the refrigerator for a while, it’ll be softer when you spread it
on crackers – does that count?
Okay, it’s hardly “Newtonian.” But if I can’t come up with them myself, at least
I am alert to an illuminating insight when I hear one. And I heard this one just recently, although
I do not remember from whom. It’s better
than way. Less smart people to envy.
I was bloviating at the time on a topic I believe I have mentioned
previously in these quarters, about the changing nature of our entertainment,
now grimmer and grittier, previously – “previously” traditionally meaning “before
the sixties” – lighter and more upbeat.
I wondered, “Why the difference?” Was it merely, “Simpler times, simpler
content?”
That’s not precisely
what it was about, but if I recount my recollection precisely, this paragraph
would start and finish with the words,
“I do not entirely remember.”
It was something
of that nature. That, or thereabouts.
In our discussion on the matter, the person who I was
speaking to then said this. Or, again, thereabouts.
“Back then, the message was controlled.”
I felt like I’d been run over by a “Smart Train.”
“Back then, the message was controlled.”
That is indisputably correct. There was the “Motion Picture Production Code.” Tough “Standards and Practices” regulations
in television. Strictly enforced “obscenity”
laws in night clubs. (Comedian Lenny
Bruce was frequently arrested just for saying
stuff.) It wasn’t a choice, making breezier entertainment. The alternatives were “Off Limits.”
Arguably, entertainment was like it was because the message
was controlled.
Meaning, what remained in our entertainment, what was
permissible, the rest of the apple after you cut away the “bad part”, which then
made it, by default, the entire available apple, was relentlessly and without
exception…
Optimistic. (With
exceptions, of course.)
Inevitably fostering the belief that we lived in a happy, functioning,
positive society, and that life as we experienced it was actually quite good.
But was it? Or was it just the stories they were permitted
to tell? I mean, if it wasn’t those
censorial limitations, if the entertainment simply reflected the times, then
What happened to the times?
Is it really possible to believe that at some discernible
juncture our society could have abruptly turned horrible? Can something like that actually happen? Or was it that, when the restrictions were
loosened and the opportunities expanded, our entertainment depicted what was
always there and we were previously forbidden to see?
I mean think about it.
Could “evil” have really originated in 1968?
(A provocative side-question is, “Does a positive message make
you generically feel better even though it’s distorted, or does it just make
you docile and accepting, impeding your commitment to ameliorating change?” It’s a challenging question, worth
mentioning, but here only in brackets.)
Consider two courtroom-based television shows, one on each
side of the “Morning In America” – “We’re going to hell in a hand basket”
dividing line – Perry Mason and Law & Order (pick a franchise, any franchise.)
Perry Mason,
portraying a brilliant defense attorney who got everyone off. And in the coolest possible way. Exposing the murderer, Mason got the wrongly
accused defendant acquitted while sending the actual perpetrator to the slammer.
How “pure justice” is that!
Also, on Perry Mason,
the murderers had clear and understandable motives – jealousy, avarice,
revenge. They were a threat only to their intended victims (and
occasionally a witness.) The viewer
could thus follow the proceedings, feeling no personal jeopardy whatsoever.
By contrast, in an era after the “content rules” were
abolished or at least considerably relaxed, there’s
Law & Order
Mass murderers.
Subway bombers. They bump off the
wrong person. Radical therapies, medical
and psychological, the best of
intentions – the patient is dead. You
walk your dog, if you’re lucky the dog
makes it home.
Mayhem in every direction.
And oh yeah. Sometimes, the bad
guy gets off.
You see the difference?
Nobody’s safe. And life is not simple.
But what if life itself
didn’t change, only our shows did?
They controlled the message.
And we felt blissfully secure.
They relax the restrictions…
It feels like Sodom and Gomorrah.
Suggestion: It’s not
what’s “out there.” It’s our perception of what’s “out there.”
We long for simpler times.
Which may have existed only in fiction.
Though I wonder, as Fagin sang in Oliver!, if things are really as black as the paint.
Could today’s fiction be equally
distorted…
But in the other direction?
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