By John H. Fund on 7.20.04 @ 12:04AM
Raunchy CBS president Les Moonves’ dream series is about to launch.
There are innumerable reasons why much of the country is in
political revolt against media elites. Exhibit A: Has Viacom, the
corporate behemoth that owns both the CBS and UPN television
networks, no sense of shame?
First, CBS had to dump its four-hour miniseries on Ronald and
Nancy Reagan onto its sister cable network Showtime because CBS
president Les Moonves admitted it had gone "too far" in bashing the
First Couple. Then it outraged millions by carrying Janet Jackson's
infamous MTV-produced Super Bowl halftime show.
Now UPN has decided to single out the beliefs and practices of a
religious group for humor. This summer [starting on July 28] it
will air a reality show called Amish in the City, in which
five 16-year-old kids are plucked out of their cloistered world and
put like "fish out of water" in some big city where they will
interact with the outside world and all its temptations.
UPN's executives claim they "have every intention of treating
the Amish and their beliefs and their heritage with the utmost
respect and decency." Right. "That's as ludicrous a statement as
ever passed the pen of a corporate shill," says Robert Schroeder, a
Pennsylvania journalist. He isn't comforted by the fact that two of
the show's executive producers worked on Devil's
Playground, a 2002 documentary on the Amish that ran on
Cinemax. It featured the son of an Amish preacher who becomes
addicted to crystal meth and then becomes a dealer to support his
habit.
Amish in the City does have some basis in fact. Amish
teenagers often go through a rite of passage called "rumspringa" in
which they are allowed to date, engage in mostly harmless forms of
partying, and test their faith before taking up adult
responsibilities. Some 90 percent remain with the church.
Nonetheless, TV critics were stunned last January when the show's
concept was unveiled at a press tour in Los Angeles. One asked
Moonves why Viacom would allow UPN to manipulate and possibly alter
a ceremony that could literally transform the lives of
impressionable teenagers.
Moonves enjoyed the question. "Well, we couldn't do the Beverly
Hillbillies," he quipped. "The Amish don't have as good a lobbying
group."
The reference was to Moonves's aborted plans to launch a reality
series called "The Real Beverly Hillbillies." Using so-called "hick
hunts," the network intended to move an uneducated Appalachian
family into an opulent West Coast mansion and invite the nation to
laugh at their bumbling ways. He finally had to shelve the show
after union leaders and 43 members of Congress complained.
Democratic Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia suggested that,
instead, Moonves program a reality show that relocated network
executives to "the sticks," where they would have to find a job.
Moonves admitted the "phenomenal" opposition to the show left him
"pretty surprised."
That makes his willingness to plunge ahead with the Amish
project all the more surprising. A total of 51 members of Congress,
including Senators Arlen Specter and Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania,
sent Viacom a letter saying "we find it hard to imagine that anyone
would single out five Native American teenagers in a similar
fashion, making light of the process of defining their personal and
religious identity in a world often at odds with their own
culture."
The Amish are a Christian sect whose 200,000 members are
concentrated in Indiana, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. They stress
humility, family, and community, and live separated from the rest
of the world. For that reason they don't use telephones, cars, and
electricity.
Their lifestyle intrigued UPN executives into concocting a show
in which they would put five Amish teens into a house with five
"mainstream" teens. Audiences would watch the teens venture into
the "outside" world. Then, in front of millions of viewers, the
Amish teens would make the life-determining decision about whether
to keep their faith. They say it could be a hit along the lines of
The Simple Life, in which society girls Paris Hilton and
Nicole Richie lived with an Arkansas farm family for a month.
But the Amish don't think the idea of treating them like a
circus carnival act is very funny. "Where does a giant corporation
get off thinking that it's entertaining to try to tempt young
people to leave their religion?" asked Dee Davis, president of the
Center for Rural Strategies.
THIS IS NOT THE FIRST time Les Moonves and Viacom have been
exposed as culturally tone-deaf. In 1998, CBS canceled the
family-friendly Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman, even though it
dominated its time slot. Moonves felt its audience was too female
and too old. Last year, he admitted that the No. 1 viewer complaint
to CBS remains his cancellation of Dr. Quinn. "They want
it back," he says. He dismissed the success of the religious show
Touched by an Angel as a "fluke" and presided over an
ill-fated effort to bring radio's raunchy Howard Stern to
television. In 2002, he was ridiculed by David Letterman on his own
network for a four-day junket to Cuba during which he hobnobbed
with Fidel Castro and got the dictator's autograph on a cigar
box.
By comparison with the lifestyle of the jet-setting Moonves, the
Amish's innocence and morality do appear pretty boring. But some of
their practices would be a much better model for American families.
The Amish worship God in each other's homes, and care for a
disabled neighbor's crops and health in time of illness. They
provide their own food, shelter, and clothing, but collect no
welfare.
"You'd have to be an idiot not to hear what is going on in this
country," Moonves said back in 1996. But clearly his mental radio
receiver can't pick up cultural signals in certain regions of
America. His missteps have alienated older viewers and made
advertisers nervous about what cultural trap he might fall into
next. Making sport of the Amish community, where crime rates,
abortion rates, divorce rates, and bankruptcy rates are minimal
isn't something most Americans would view as funny. They would view
it as progress.
topics:
Television, Religion, Abortion, NATO