How Reality TV Is Teaching
Us to Accept the American Police State
By John W. Whitehead
“Plays, farces,
spectacles, gladiators, strange beasts,
medals, pictures, and other such
opiates, these were for ancient peoples
the bait toward slavery, the price of
their liberty, the instruments of
tyranny. By these practices and
enticements the ancient dictators so
successfully lulled their subjects under
the yoke, that the stupefied peoples,
fascinated by the pastimes and vain
pleasures flashed before their eyes,
learned subservience as naively, but not
so creditably, as little children learn
to read by looking at bright picture
books.”—Etienne de La Boétie, “The
Discourse on Voluntary Servitude: How Do
Tyrants Secure Cooperation?”
(1548)
February 04, 2015 "ICH"
- Americans love their reality TV shows—the
drama, the insults, the bullying, the
callousness, the damaged relationships
delivered through the lens of a surveillance
camera—and there’s no shortage of such
dehumanizing spectacles to be found on
or off screen, whether it’s Cops,
Real Housewives or the heavy-handed
tactics of police officers who break down
doors first and ask questions later.
Where things get tricky is
when we start to lose our grasp on what is
real vs. unreal and what is an entertainment
spectacle that distracts us vs. a real-life
drama that impacts us.
For example, do we tune
into
Bruce Jenner’s gender transformation
as it unfolds on reality TV, follow the
sniping over Navy sharpshooter
Chris Kyle’s approach to war and killing,
or chart the progress of the
Keystone oil pipeline as it makes it
work through Congress? Do we debate the
merits of Katy Perry’s Superbowl XLIX
halftime performance, or speculate
on which politicians will face off in the
2016 presidential election?
Here’s a hint: it’s all
spectacle.
Studies suggest that the
more reality TV people watch—and I would
posit that it’s all reality TV—the
more difficult it becomes to distinguish
between what is real and what is carefully
crafted farce. Unfortunately, Americans have
a voracious appetite for TV entertainment.
On average,
Americans spend five hours a day
watching television. By the time we reach
age 65, we’re watching
more than 50 hours of television a week,
and that number increases as we get older.
And reality TV programming consistently
captures the
largest percentage of TV watchers
every season by an almost 2-1 ratio.
As journalist Scott
Collins
notes, “reality is a cheap way to
fill prime time.”
Yet it’s more than just
economics at play. As I make clear in my
book
A Government of Wolves: The Emerging
American Police State,
we’re being subjected to a masterful
sociological experiment in how to dumb down
and desensitize a population.
This doesn’t bode well for
a citizenry able to sift through
masterfully-produced propaganda in order to
think critically about the issues of the
day. Then again, it can be hard to
distinguish between the two.
As cognitive scientist Steven Pinker
points out, the hallmark of well-told
fiction is that the audience can’t tell the
difference.
Concerning reality TV,
journalist Chris Weller
explains:
Producers have become
so good at their job of constructing a
cohesive narrative, one that imitates
life - albeit, dramatically so - that
the narrative ends up compelling life to
imitate it. This is an important
distinction…. drama doesn't emerge
accidentally. It's intentional. But not
everyone knows that.
“Reality
TV is fiction sold as nonfiction, to an
audience that likes to believe both are
possible simultaneously in life,”
continues Weller. “It's entertainment, in
the same way Cirque du Soleil enchants and
The Hunger Games enthralls. But
what are we to make of unreal realness? And
what does it make of its viewers? Do
they…mimic the medium? Do they become
shallow, volatile, mean?”
The answer is
yes, they do mimic the medium.
Studies
suggest that those who watch reality
shows tend to view what they see as the
“norm.” Thus, those who watch shows
characterized by lying, aggression and
meanness not only come to
see such behavior as acceptable but
find it entertaining.
It’s a phenomenon called “humilitainment,”
a term coined by media scholars Brad Waite
and Sara Booker to refer to the tendency for
viewers to take pleasure in someone else’s
humiliation, suffering and pain. It largely
explains not only
why American TV watchers are so fixated
on reality TV programming but how American
citizens, largely insulated from what is
really happening in the world around them by
layers of technology, entertainment, and
other distractions, are being
programmed to accept the brutality,
surveillance and dehumanizing treatment of
the American police state as things
happening to other people.
This is what happens when
an entire nation, unable to distinguish
between what is real and unreal and
increasingly inclined to accept as normal
the tactics being played out before them in
hi-def, not only ceases to be outraged by
the treatment being meted out to their
fellow citizens but
takes joy in it.
Unfortunately, for the
majority of Americans who spend their
waking, leisure hours transfixed in front of
the television or watching programming on
their digital devices, the American police
state itself has become reality TV
programming—a form of programming that keeps
us distracted, entertained, occasionally a
little bit outraged but overall largely
uninvolved, content to remain in the
viewer’s seat.
In fact, we don’t even
have to change the channel when the subject
matter becomes too monotonous. That’s taken
care of for us by the programmers (the
corporate media and the police state).
Before we got too worked up over government
surveillance, they changed the channels on
us and switched us over to militarized
police. Before our outrage could be
transformed into action, they changed the
channel once again. Next up: ISIS
beheadings, plane crashes, terrorist
shootings and politicians lip-synching to a
teleprompter.
In this way, televised
events of recent years—the Ferguson shooting
and riots, the choke-hold of Eric Garner,
the Boston Marathon manhunt and city-wide
lockdown, etc.—became reality TV programming
choices on a different channel.
The more that is beamed at
us, the more inclined we are to settle back
in our comfy recliners and become passive
viewers rather than active participants as
unsettling, frightening events unfold.
Reality and fiction merge as everything
around us becomes entertainment fodder. This
holds true whether we’re watching
American Idol, American Sniper or
America’s Newsroom.
With every SWAT team raid,
police shooting and terrorist attack—real or
staged, we’re being systematically
desensitized and acclimated to the trappings
of the police state. This is borne out by
numerous studies indicating that the more
violence we watch on television—whether real
or fictional—the
less outraged we will be by similar
acts of real-life aggression.
For instance, tasers were
sold to the American public as a way to
decrease the use of deadly force by police,
reduce the overall number of use-of-force
incidents, and limit the number of people
seriously injured. Instead, we’ve
witnessed an increase in the use of force by
police and a desensitizing of the
public to police violence. As Professor
Victor E. Kappeler
points out, “no one riots because
the police stunned-gunned a drunk for
non-compliance or because a cop
pepper-sprayed a group of protesters.”
Indeed,
notes Kappeler:
Police officers
possessing less-than-lethal weapons are
often more inclined to use these weapons
in situations where they would not have
been legally justified in using
traditional weapons, or for that matter
any level of force at whatsoever. This
phenomenon is known as net widening. As
use of force technologies improve,
police become more likely to apply force
in a greater number of situations, in
less serious situations, to more
vulnerable people and resort to force in
cases where people simply do not
immediately comply with their
directives.
What we’re witnessing is
net widening of the police state and,
incredibly, it’s taking place while the
citizenry watches.
Viewed through the lens of
“reality” TV programming, the NSA and other
government surveillance has become a done
deal. Militarized police are growing more
militant by the day. And you can rest
assured that police-worn body cameras, being
hailed by police and activists alike as a
sure-fire fix for police abuses, will only
add to this net widening.
Ironically, whether we
like it or not, these cameras—directed at
us—will turn “we the people” into the stars
of our own reality shows. As Kelefa Sanneh,
writing for the New Yorker,
points out, “Cops,” the longest-running
reality show of all which has “viewers
ride with police officers as they drive
around, in search of perpetrators… makes it
easy to think of a video camera as a weapon,
there to keep the peace and to discipline
violators.”
Ultimately, that’s what
this is all about: the reality shows, the
drama, the entertainment spectacles, the
surveillance are all intended to keep us in
line, using all the weapons available to the
powers-that-be. It’s the modern-day
equivalent of bread and circuses.
As for the sleepwalking
masses convinced that all of the bad things
happening in the police state—the police
shootings, the police beatings, the raids,
the roadside strip searches—are happening to
other people, eventually, the
things happening to other people
will start happening to us and our loved
ones.
When that painful reality
sinks in, it will hit with the force of a
SWAT team crashing through your door, a
taser being aimed at your stomach, and a gun
pointed at your head. And there will be no
channel to change, no reality to alter, no
manufactured farce to hide behind.
By that time, however, it
will be too late to do anything more than
submit.
Professor Neil Postman saw
this eventuality coming. “There are two ways
by which the spirit of a culture may be
shriveled,” he
predicted. “In the first—the
Orwellian—culture becomes a prison. In the
second—the Huxleyan—culture becomes a
burlesque.” Postman
concludes:
No one needs to be
reminded that our world is now marred by
many prison-cultures…. it makes little
difference if our wardens are inspired
by right- or left-wing ideologies. The
gates of the prison are equally
impenetrable, surveillance equally
rigorous, icon-worship pervasive…. Big
Brother does not watch us, by his
choice. We watch him, by ours…. When a
population becomes distracted by trivia,
when cultural life is redefined as a
perpetual round of entertainments, when
serious public conversation becomes a
form of baby-talk, when, in short, a
people become an audience, and their
public business a vaudeville act, then a
nation finds itself at risk;
culture-death is a clear possibility.
John W. Whitehead is an
attorney and author who has written, debated
and practiced widely in the area of
constitutional law and human rights.
Whitehead's concern for the persecuted and
oppressed led him, in 1982, to establish The
Rutherford Institute, a nonprofit civil
liberties and human rights organization
whose international headquarters are located
in Charlottesville, Virginia. Whitehead
serves as the Institute’s president and
spokesperson, in addition to writing a
weekly commentary that is posted on The
Rutherford Institute’s website (
www.rutherford.org )
Copyright 2015 © The
Rutherford Institute