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Friday, October 30, 2009
Brent Bozell :: Townhall.com Columnist
TV's Increasing Female Body Count
by Brent Bozell
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Violence -- especially grotesque, gory or bloody violence -- has become a staple of network television during sweeps periods. But there's a new kind of violence surging -- violence against women. A new study by the Parents Television Council called "Women in Peril" reveals that between 2004 and 2009, CBS, NBC, and Fox (but not ABC) all green-lighted a significant increase in the incidents -- and degree -- of violence against women.

Arguing with Idiots By Glenn Beck

On average, during the five-year span, there was a 2 percent increase in overall violence during the primetime viewing hours. But during the same time period, there was a 120 percent increase in the number of times the audience would be exposed to a violent scene with a female victim.

CBS, the "CSI" network, led with 118 violent storylines on women, but NBC had the largest increase, at 192 percent. The forms of violence depicted included rape, stabbing, dismemberment, electrocution, poisoning, shooting, beating and torture. Death was regularly a result of the violence.

This stat tells it all: In a complete reversal of tradition, network programmers strongly favored violence depicted on screen (92 percent) rather than implied (5 percent) or merely described (3 percent).

Flipping channels in primetime can be a scary proposition with children in the room. Viewers of the NBC comic-strip-themed show "Heroes" saw images in flashback of the villain Sylar's evil deeds, including a scene of him stabbing a woman in the chest with scissors. On ABC's popular and sleazy "Desperate Housewives," viewers were shocked when one of the main female characters was shot in the chest while camping in the woods. It turned out to be a murderer's daydream, and his plot was conveniently foiled before he could kill off a major character.

Nothing's sacred. A smaller but growing category in network sensationalism is violence against female children, virtually unseen in the past (six incidents in the 2004 February and May sweeps). There were 30 such scenes on the same networks during the same time slots in 2009. CBS's "CSI" featured a plot about a teenaged girl found dead in a parking lot (with the corpse shown several times), and in flashback scenes, viewers saw her assaulted by a friend's father. For good measure, there was an attempted sexual assault while she was unconscious. A gorier scene aired on NBC's "Medium," where a suspect was shown photos of a teenage girl whose throat was slit and covered in blood.

The acceptable rules of engagement for female characters keep expanding. Chivalry is dead and so are lots of women on television, splayed in all kinds of horrific poses. Graphic violence and bloody crime scenes were not necessary for people to enjoy "Police Woman" or "Hill Street Blues." Now it's seemingly essential. It makes you sentimental for the days of shows like "Mannix," where people would get shot and fall down. Was it realistic? No. Neither was it horrific. Continued...

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About The Author
Founder and President of the Media Research Center, Brent Bozell runs the largest media watchdog organization in America.
 
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Is this actually bad though?
Here in the UK I meet tedious feminists who constantly play out their life script of achieving parity in all respects with men. They seem to think that this is somehow worthwhile. In the summer we had a case of a 20-yr old woman who thought it would be fun to spray a man, who was a stranger, in the park with a can of Coke and she had her friend video it to catch the amusing incident. The man just swung round and punched her in the face so hard she was lifted off her feet. Still, that is equality for you.

1991 TV Movies were 50% women as victim
In 1992, Charles J. Sykes a journalist specializing in educational issues and a fellow at the Wisconsin Policy Research Institute wrote A Nation of Victims: The Decay of the American Character. Page 177 reports that half of the 250 made for TV movies in 1991 depicted women being mistreated physically or psychologically. Studies find people watching such dramas overestimate their own chances of being victimized.
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