- Published: December 22, 2021
- Updated: December 22, 2021
- University / College: Rice University
- Language: English
- Downloads: 9
Boink! Boom! Crack! The sounds of the fight scene rage on. Many have fallen in
this particularly bloody battle. The good guys have taken their losses but
struggle on to what is seemingly a victory. Their aggression is fierce and helps
them. Fires consume the background; men and women lie on the ground in pain.
Even if it weren’t for the bombs, missiles, bullets, etc. that are flying
around, hand-to-hand combat would have got the better of them. It was a classic
battle scene when looking back at it, a true testament of blood, hell, and gore.
This may sound like a heroic made-for-TV movie shown only on primetime in the
hopes of recruiting a mature audience. But it is not. In fact, it is just
another Saturday-morning special of GI Joe, “ The Real American Hero,” that I
watched with my brother and cousins. We were religious followers of the show,
tuning in every week to see how Sergeant Slaughter, Duke and the rest of the
gang would handle the likes of King Cobra and his cronies. GI Joe’s early
morning time slot encouraged kids, like us, to tune in every weekend. While
eating our CheeriosTM and Frosted FlakesTM we got a dose of some real fightin’
action, in excess of fifty violent scenes for the morning: there is more than
enough to fill the appetite. The truth is, violence on television is on every
single day. It takes its toll on society, especially children. The damage done
by violence on television is detrimental and confirmed by statistics, case
studies, and personal experiences. Fistfights, shootouts, car crashes, rapes…
Take your pick. Violence is everywhere on television, sometimes gory and
gruesome, other times clean and remote. It is not just the Saturday morning
cartoons; clips from action-adventure series, the nightly news and MTV are
interwoven with violence and extremely mature content. Prime-time programs can
average eight hostile acts per hour; children’s shows four times as much (Bajpai,
1996, ps. 45-52). To television Programmers, violence is depicted as a normal,
justified response to conflict and threat. They will encourage identification
with the aggressor; domination and submission, to them, are often equated with
pleasure and worth. Yet numerous researchers have put much time into discovering
why children are so attached by the television and the action that takes place
within it. They prove that it is definitely a major source of violent behavior
in children. Their research proves time and time again that aggression and
television viewing do go hand in hand. The truth about television violence and
children has been shown. Many people and critics try to ignore it and hope that
it will go away. Others do not even seem to care and try to attack these ideas.
However, the facts are undeniable and all the results point to one conclusion:
Television violence causes children to be violent and the effects can be
life-long. The effects of the television are first visible even at the most
basic level of life, children and adolescents. The modern-day extent of viewing
by humans, especially Americans, is astronomical. Children begin to watch
television at very early ages, often when they are newborns. At this time they
are obviously not able to follow along or be influenced by it, but they are
subjected to it nevertheless. This early start will lead most childhood viewers
into a cult-like trance by the time they reach the age of three. In between
breakfast and lunch, playtime and naptime, class and dinner, all children find a
way to watch the tube. The typical American household has the television set on
for more than seven hours each day and children ages two to eleven spend an
average of twenty-eight hours per week viewing (Murray, 1996, p. 1). Some
research has also estimated that by the time a child or teen of today’s
generation reaches the age of seventy, he will have spent nearly seven years of
his life watching television. That is nearly ten percent of one’s life lives
watching television. That is insane; to say that you and I will spend years upon
years, watching television. There is so much that people, even we, could do in a
seven-year period. Entire wars can be fought in seven years, college educations
can be attained, millions of people will be born and millions will die, many
things can happen that have more significance than seven years of television.
That is a very large percentage of time to be doing solely one thing, and the
fact that that one thing is watching television, is very, very unfortunate. The
television, as said before, is a very influential object. Being worse for
children, we see that at the later stages in life (ie: eighteen and over,
approximately adulthood) most people will not be swayed too much by the hypnotic
powers of the television. This is not to say that it cannot happen, but studies
show that most people are fairly set in their ways, especially mentally, once
they reach adulthood and it takes a lot for them to be affected. Children, on
the other hand, are prime candidates to the influences of the television. They
are the most avid viewers and the most vulnerable. It is here where most violent
tendencies, if any, are fostered. With the addition of cable television to
broadcast television, a recent survey by the Center for Media and Public Affairs
identified 1, 846 violent scenes broadcast and cablecast between 6 a. m. to
midnight on one day in Washington, D. C. The most violent periods were between 6
to 9 a. m. with 497 violent scenes (165. 7 per hour) and between 2 to 5 p. m. with
609 violent scenes (203 per hour) (Murray, 1996, p. 2). This statistic probably
seems quite outrageous, but it is true and there are numbers even higher than
that on given days. Two hundred violent scenes per hour are gaudy numbers, yet
the even more baffling but more concealed truism is the time slots of these
major occurrences. The times: 6 to 9 a. m. and 2 to 5 p. m. are the most popular
times for child and adolescent viewers. These are the times in the morning when
young children will watch most avidly and in the afternoon after school when
school-aged children are most attentive to it. This just goes to show that the
children, already established as the most vulnerable, are also the ones
subjected to the most violent scenes. This is a bad combination and it
stimulates bad tendencies and violence in the children. Now that the extent to
which the television is being watched has been established, and with some idea
of just how much violence there is on an average day, it is time to look at an
even more telling tale. Yes, we said that children may be subjected to more than
six hundred acts of violence in a three-hour time period, but who’s to say
that these acts are in any way severe? Well, the truth is that while many acts
are subtle in their appearance, they still have an overwhelming effect over
time. This is not to mention the fact that the major acts of violence add up as
well. By the time a child of today’s world reaches the age of eighteen he will
have witnessed over 8, 000 simulated murders on the television. That is an
average of 1. 22 murders per day, counted from birth. What you see here is a
repetitive bombardment of violence and violent material upon children. Seeing
this every day gives it the same effect as eating, or sleeping; it’s nearly
habitual, which is a truly sad state of affairs. Getting into a habit of seeing
murders and violence on television, is an obvious sign that should lead us to
believe that it will influence children in a negative way. Numbers are easily
crunched and manipulated by both sides of the argument. I see that there are
quite a few numbers involved here in the argument. They are mostly in favor of
violence being a bad influence, making these facts hard to ignore. Especially
when they are as blatant and obvious as they appear. Statistics, when used
responsibly, are perhaps some of the best insights we have into helping us
discover problems and their solutions. As helpful as they may be, there are
still other kinds of information even as persuasive as statistics. What I have
to show now are case studies. There have been numerous case studies performed
over the past few decades involving children and television. I can throw out
statistics all day at people in the hopes that they will see that violence on
television is bad. While it is effective, my argument is much like any claim a
scientist would make: it is not truly valid until tested. With this in mind, we
see testing the real influence of violence on television shows that it is
dangerously harmful. For an example, there is a case of a study done by a group
Stein and Friedrich for the Surgeon General’s project in 1972 (Murray, 1996,
p. 3). Their study consisted of taking 97 preschool children and exposing one
third of them to a television diet consisting of Batman and Superman cartoons.
The middle third were exposed to a diet of Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood, while the
final third were exposed to neutral programming (neither antisocial or
pro-social). These children watched over twelve half-hour episodes of their
respective programs over a four-week period. They were then observed in their
classroom and playroom environments. The psychologists running the study found
that the children who watched the Batman and Superman cartoons were remarkably
aggressive and not very apt to share and interact. While on the other hand, the
children who watched Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood were more social, and more
likely to share and interact. The middle third remained close to the same as
they were before. There are many more studies just like this previous one, and
all of them lead to the same conclusion: violent television does foster more
aggressive and violent behavior in children. It feels like just yesterday that I
was sitting down to watch my Saturday morning cartoons on my family room
television. Every Saturday was like clockwork for me. I would always eat my
cereal and toast and then watch my GI Joe and Transformers. I was so in love
with GI Joe, I can remember always wanting to re-enact the scenes with my
plastic toy soldiers. Explosions, death, and carnage were my rations on Saturday
and I loved every minute of it. In fact, although this is embarrassing, I still
remember to this day getting in trouble at pre-school for hitting a classmate
who took a toy away from a friend of mine. Why? You might ask. Well, it was
because I saw on GI Joe that your supposed to stick up for your friends and
protect them from the enemy at all costs. So me, being the noble and
“ informed” friend that I was, carried-out the mission and took the heat for
my violent actions. I received timeout for the rest of the day. This may seem a
little preposterous, or maybe even dumb. Regardless, the truth is that GI Joe
partly formed my identity as a young child and the only reason I was able to
later tell the right from wrong was because I had parents to tell me. My parents
would often try to sit with me and watch a few shows, not for just their
pleasure but rather to tell me what was fake and not to be repeated. Many
children go without the parental supervision when watching television, and it
leads to a lack of knowledge from determining right from wrong. They eventually
forget the real and the fantasy, the violent and the non-violent. Now do not get
me wrong, there are measures that prove and a few studies that show that with
proper supervision children will not be affected by television violence. Case
studies are out now that show children being unaffected by television violence
as a whole. I previously mentioned a study done for a Surgeon General’s
Project, which acknowledged an existence of non-violent cases. When I read this
information, I thought to myself, “ that’s awesome, if children are not
really affected by the television.” Only, I found but one or two instances of
these reports meaning that they were few and very far between. Leading me to
conclude that it was merely wishful thinking to be able to reverse my study and
maybe argue from the other side. The amount of studies showing that violence is
a factor in the lives of children is just too large in number to even compare
the reports that oppose it. To be honest, I have only shared a few statistics
and studies with you. I could have rattled off a thousand; it is just not
necessary though. I believe that you can agree with me when I say that violence
on television is detrimental to the lives of children and that it has a bad
influence upon them. You should agree with me, and if you do not, well I can not
wait to hear about your child in the police blotter.
Bibliography1. Bajpai, S., & Unnikrishnan, N. (1996). The Impact of Television
Advertising on Children. London: Sage Publications. 2. Murray, John P. (1996)
Impact of Televised Violence [Online]. Available via Kansas State University