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Hypocrisy and right-wing politics fuel furor over Super Bowl
episode
By David Walsh
5 February 2004
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The baring of pop singer Janet Jacksons breast during
the halftime show at Sundays Super Bowl football game has
become the occasion for a vast and hypocritical outpouring of
official moral outrage in the US. It has given rise to demands
for further censoring the television airwaves and provided yet
another opportunity for whipping up the Christian fundamentalist
base of the Republican Party.
The guardians of American decency are up in arms, including
National Football League (NFL) commissioner Paul Tagliabue, Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) chairman Michael Powell, the religious
right, the Wall Street Journal editorial page and executives
from corporate giants PepsiCo, America Online and CBS.
Tagliabue, who presides over a multi-billion dollar sport-business
that more and more seems to recapture the spirit of Roman gladiatorial
contests, called the MTV-produced halftime show offensive,
inappropriate and embarrassing to us and our fans. We will change
our policy, our people and our processes for managing the halftime
entertainment in the future. Before the game, the NFL commissioner
posed on the sidelines for photographs with former president George
Bush.
Powellthe son of Secretary of State Colin Powell, a Bush
appointee as FCC chairman and an advocate of even more concentrated
corporate ownership of the American mediadeclared: Like
millions of Americans, my family and I gathered around the television
for a celebration. Instead, that celebration was tainted by a
classless, crass and deplorable stunt. Powell promised an
investigation of the episode. The FCC could fine CBS and its approximately
200 affiliates $27,500 per station.
Right-wing family groups had a field day piously
denouncing Jacksons nationally televised exposure. Focus
on the Familys James C. Dobson noted that the FCC threat
to punish CBS was encouraging, but it is even
more encouraging to see moms and dads rise up in defense of their
sons and daughters to say Enough is enough. That reaction,
more than any government agencys action, has the greatest
potential to clean up what passes for popular entertainment these
days. (This rising up has the usual character
of such stage-managed affairs. Extreme right web sites and radio
talk-show hosts call on their readers and listeners to bombard
the corporation or government body in question with protests and
the media obediently describes the public outrage.)
The Wall Street Journals editorial (Viacoms
Porn Channel) is so sex-obsessed that it raises questions
all on its own. In a handful of paragraphs, the Journal
editors refer with apparently considerable relish to simulated
masturbation, simulated sex, breast-baring
incident, scantily clad nymphettes, casual
sexual hookups, triple-X stars and the
daily sex diet [on MTV]. The editorial calls on the Viacom
entertainment conglomerate (owner of CBS) to rein in its subsidiary,
MTV, and fire the latters president, Judy McGrath.
Executives at soft-drink manufacturer PepsiCo, who buy millions
of dollars of advertising during the football championship game
(this year such advertising cost $76,666 a second), are
threatening to pull out of next years Super Bowl if they
are not given assurances that there will be no repetition of the
Jackson incident. PepsiCo spokesman Mark Dollins told the media,
We are very serious about this.
America Online (AOL) is demanding a $7.5 million refund from
Viacom after announcing plans to cancel its on-demand streaming
of the halftime show. Like the NFL, the Time Warner-owned
firm said, we were surprised and disappointed with certain
elements of the show. In deference to our membership and fans,
AOL and AOL.com will not be presenting the halftime show online
as originally planned.
CBS chief Leslie Moonves, last seen in public suppressing the
unflattering mini-series portrait of former president Ronald Reagan
in response to a right-wing clamor, sent out a memo to employees:
I want to offer my personal assurances that we are looking
into this matter and will do everything we can to get to the bottom
of it.
One might be forgiven in the face of this moral effluvia for
thinking that something quite atrocious had occurred on national
television. In fact, a womans breast was uncovered. Worse
things have happened, and even on American television.
No doubt the Jackson-Justin Timberlake number was tasteless,
as was the entire Super Bowl program, as it has been every year.
Interestingly, neither the Journal nor the Christian fundamentalists
criticized the halftime performance by the talentless rapper Kid
Rock, an avowed supporter of George W. Bush and the Iraq war,
who wrapped himself in an American flag, flanked by a pair
of shapely women gyrating in halter-tops while waving the stars-and-stripes,
in a crass pandering to patriotism, noted a columnist
for the Buffalo News.
Nor did they make mention of the patriotic display during the
singing of The Star-Spangled Banner, when the 71,000
or so fans in attendance were asked to hold up placards of the
American flag. Another highlight of the pre-game show was the
planting of a US flag on a mock moon surface.
The drawing back in horror at the appearance of a naked breast
is particularly hypocritical and odious. American professional
football is increasingly violent, played at many positions by
almost freakish human specimens. Its jargon consciously echoes
that of the military: blitz, bomb, the
trenches, aerial assault, quick strike,
etc. The violence continues off the field. Pros and Cons: The
Criminals Who Play in the NFL (1998) alleged that one in five
NFL players during the 1996-97 season had been charged with a
serious crime at one time or another.
(In more general terms, the National Coalition on Television
Violence estimates that American children witness 8,000 murders
and 100,000 acts of violence on television by the time they finish
elementary school.)
The ritualized violence in pro football is accompanied by fetishized
sexuality. Scantily-clad cheerleaders are a fixture at NFL games.
Ian OConnor in USA Today points out, The NFLs
beer sponsor, Coors Light, spent the postseason blitzing viewers
with yet another mindless commercial featuring buxom barmaids
and cheerleaders, an ad hardening the notion that women who dare
to step inside Americas testosterone-crazed football culture
are to be seen exclusively as sexual playthings. ... Last year
Miller Lites Tastes-Great, Less-Filling mud
wrestlers were paraded around the Super Bowl as if they were the
games official hostesses.
The entire professional football experience in the US is increasingly
debased. It has less and less to do with play, and
more and more to do with distracting a discontented and alienated
population, providing it with vicarious thrills and encouraging
its very worst instincts.
The general political and social context in which the breast-baring
episode takes place makes it all the more obscene. Outraged by
Janet Jacksons fleeting partial nudity, the American political
and media establishment has no difficulty accepting as par
for the course the looting of the national economyto
the tune of trillions of dollarsby corporate criminals with
the closest connections to the Bush administration, and the launching
of a war in Iraq, which has already killed and maimed tens of
thousands, on the basis of outright lies. There is something extraordinarily
sick about this state of affairs.
The outcome of the Super Bowl incident will no doubt be even
greater pressure on the television networks to avoid controversy,
produce bland family fare and more strictly adhere
to the official line in every way.
CBS executives have already promised that there will be no
repeat of the Jackson unveiling or any other untoward occurrence
at the Grammy Awards February 8. The network has long used a five-second
delay to cut audio from the live broadcast. It will
lengthen this delay and introduce new technology making possible
split-second video editing. This creates the possibility of entirely
eliminating unwanted interventions of all types at so-called live
events.
CBS and the other television networks are being called to order
at a time of increasing political volatility and flux. The FCC
investigation of the Super Bowl stunt will no doubt provide a
new forum in which to discipline and intimidate the entertainment
industry. For the Bush administration and the extreme right, the
supposed need to protect the American family from smut
on television will merely be one of the useful pretexts for the
generalized assault on free speech and democratic rights.
It is worth noting that CBS, in a direct violation of democratic
rights, refused to air a 30-second spot during the Super Bowl
from the liberal MoveOn Voter Fund critical of the Bush administrations
economic policies, on the grounds that it rejects all such controversial
advertising. Viacom, a private corporation, thereby determined
what millions of Americans could or could not see.
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