Dishonest
Youth Videos
By Mike Males
The avalanche of videos and
program materials proposing to deter American youths from acting like American
adults--that is, indulging sex, drinking, bullying, consumerism,
self-medicating, etc.--routinely deploy wild exaggerations and alarmism to sell
their sponsors’ political, educational and commercial agendas. Reviewers typically address how hard-hitting
these materials are but rarely examine their basic factuality.
Space precludes indicting
everyone, so let’s take on a biggie. The Media Education Foundation (MEF) bills
itself as “the nation’s leading producer and distributor of educational videos
designed to inspire students and others to reflect critically” on “the media
industry and the content it produces.” MEF promises “cutting-edge academic
research . . . challenging media”
violence, alcohol and tobacco promotion, sexism and similar images commonly
addressed in teen-fixing videos and materials.
Unfortunately, MEF’s experts
– communication professor Sut Jhally and educators Jackson Katz and Jean
Kilbourne – break that promise. While MEF’s media criticism is cogent, its
videos regurgitate the mass media’s worst myths and phoniest statistics misrepresenting
today’s youth as the most addicted, troubled, dangerous, endangered generation
ever.
In MEF’s mean video world,
media-incited boys and young men perpetrate a rising “epidemic of violence,”
including rape and bullying (Wrestling
with Manhood: Boys, Bullying, and Battering). Experts in MEF’s Game Over:
Gender, Race & Violence in Video Games warn: “Video games give youths
the skill and the will to kill” with “unprecedented” brutality. Spin the Bottle: Sex, Lies & Alcohol
pronounces alcohol-fueled violence on campus “out of control.”
MEF recklessly inflames fear
that today’s girls and women are menaced by ever more violent boys. Deadly Persuasion: The Advertising of
Alcohol and Tobacco, like Wrestling
with Manhood, warns of “increasing violence against women.”
MEF’s claims are ridiculous.
In fact, teens are the only age group
to show drops in violence and serious
crime rates over the past 30 years. The FBI reports that in the past decade,
even as violent media proliferated, youths’ rates of murder plummeted by 76
percent, rape by 42 percent and all violent crime by 46 percent. These
unprecedented declines brought rates of youth murder and rape to among the
lowest levels ever recorded.
Likewise, the 2003 National
Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) found violence by 12-20-year-olds fell an
astounding 65 percent during the 1990s (much faster than among older men) to
the lowest point since the first survey 30 years ago. Recent Monitoring the Future surveys confirm
youths report less violence than at any time since the survey began in 1976.
Women, in particular, report
being safer than ever. Over the past decade, the FBI and NCVS found violence
against women fell by 53 percent, including murder (down 66 percent), rape
(down 70 percent) and assault (down 45 percent). Especially large declines were
reported by females ages 12 to 20.
MEF videos constantly demean
young women as shallow, self-destructive, and “having so much trouble today”
because they passively buy into “toxic culture.” “It’s totally simple what’s in
girls’ heads,” patronizes psychologist Mary Bray Pipher in MEF’s Reviving Ophelia: Saving the Selves of
Adolescent Girls.
Refuting MEF’s crude sexist
stereotyping, today’s wonderfully diverse teenage girls are safer, behave in
much healthier ways and report higher self-esteem than Pipher’s generation did.
MEF’s self-anointment as a
media critic is belied by its recycling of the mainstream media’s worst
deceptions. Game Over features a
newscaster deploring “all the violence being perpetrated by young people
lately.” Wrestling with Manhood,
flashing news headlines and Parents’ Television Council claptrap, blames World
Wrestling Entertainment for inciting children to kill. (That backfired when the
notoriously dishonest PTC was forced by lawsuit to admit, “It was wrong to have
stated or implied that WWE or any of its programs caused these tragic deaths.”)
In another fabrication
common in teen-fixing videos, Deadly
Persuasion proclaims unheard-of upsurges in young people’s smoking and
drinking, supposedly driven by popular music, ads and “movies targeting teens.”
Among MEF’s breathless claims: Girls’ smoking “has risen to exceed boys’ ”;
more boys are using “spit tobacco”; “African-American and Hispanic teens’
[smoking] rates . . . are increasing”; “80 percent of black young people smoke
Newports”; and “young women are drinking more heavily.”
What appalling lies. The
Monitoring and National Household surveys, which MEF thoroughly twists, report
smoking and drinking by teens of both sexes have fallen sharply. In 1976, 38
percent of high school seniors smoked regularly and 68 percent drank alcohol
every month. The 2004 figures were 25 percent and 48 percent, respectively.
Are girls smoking more? No. Girls’ smoking declined by 38 percent
in the past 25 years. Do girls smoke more today than boys? No. In the 1970s,
girls smoked more than boys; today, boys smoke more than girls. Do more boys
chew “spit tobacco”? No. Chewing tobacco use is at an all-time low. Is smoking
among black and Hispanic teens rising? No. Their smoking declined dramatically
over the past 25 years. Do 80 percent of young black people smoke Newports? No.
Just 10 percent smoke at all. Are young people drinking more dangerously today?
No. Teens’ and young adults’ drunken driving and alcohol overdose fatality
rates have plunged 40 percent since 1970.
While lambasting easy
targets like fictional ads and images, MEF shows no stomach for challenging the
mainstream media’s real fear crusades that demonize teenagers. Aping the
corporate media, MEF ignores the widespread poverty, adult violence and addiction,
and generational disinvestments that damage young people the most.
Like other teen-fixing
hucksters, MEF producers seem to regard young people as exploitable objects of
whatever inflammatory propaganda they can get away with. Reviewers and
reporters should stop fawning and start shaming.
Mike Males teaches sociology at the University of California at Santa
Cruz. Contact: http://home.earthlink.net/~mmales.