The Briefing Room

General Category => National/Breaking News => Topic started by: mystery-ak on June 06, 2020, 12:59:09 am

Title: Washington Post: Let’s cancel all the cop shows on TV
Post by: mystery-ak on June 06, 2020, 12:59:09 am
Washington Post: Let’s cancel all the cop shows on TV

John SextonPosted at 1:01 pm on June 5, 2020

Writing at the Washington Post, author Alyssa Rosenberg has a unique solution for the problems with our policing: Cancel all the cop shows on television. She argues we need to do that because there’s a “reactionary streak” behind the “surface liberalism” in these shows.

    For a century, Hollywood has been collaborating with police departments, telling stories that whitewash police shootings and valorizing an action-hero style of policing over the harder, less dramatic work of building relationships with the communities cops are meant to serve and protect. There’s a reason for that beyond a reactionary streak hiding below the industry’s surface liberalism. Purely from a dramatic perspective, crime makes a story seem consequential, investigating crime generates action, and solving crime provides for a morally and emotionally satisfying conclusion.

    The result is an addiction to stories that portray police departments as more effective than they actually are; crime as more prevalent than it actually is; and police use of force as consistently justified. There are always gaps between reality and fiction, but given what policing in America has too often become, Hollywood’s version of it looks less like fantasy and more like complicity…

    Say writers made a commitment not to exaggerate the performance of police. Audiences would have to be retrained to watch, for example, a version of “Special Victims Unit” where the characters cleared only 33.4 percent of rape cases, or to accept that in almost 40 percent of murders and manslaughters, no suspect is arrested. If storytelling focused on less-dramatic but more-common crimes such as burglary and motor-vehicle theft, the stakes would shrink — along with the case-clearance rate.

I think there’s some truth to what she’s saying. Crime shows aren’t really representative of reality. There are a lot more serial killers in 15 seasons of Criminal Minds than there probably are in the entire country. And there’s no doubt that the dictates of drama mean these shows rarely end with the criminals not even being identified. So I think it’s fair enough to say there’s a clear element of fantasy in these shows.

more
https://hotair.com/archives/john-s-2/2020/06/05/washington-post-lets-cancel-cop-shows-tv/
Title: Re: Washington Post: Let’s cancel all the cop shows on TV
Post by: Idiot on June 06, 2020, 01:46:16 am
Washington Post: Let’s cancel all the cop shows on TV

John SextonPosted at 1:01 pm on June 5, 2020

Writing at the Washington Post, author Alyssa Rosenberg has a unique solution for the problems with our policing: Cancel all the cop shows on television. She argues we need to do that because there’s a “reactionary streak” behind the “surface liberalism” in these shows.

    For a century, Hollywood has been collaborating with police departments, telling stories that whitewash police shootings and valorizing an action-hero style of policing over the harder, less dramatic work of building relationships with the communities cops are meant to serve and protect. There’s a reason for that beyond a reactionary streak hiding below the industry’s surface liberalism. Purely from a dramatic perspective, crime makes a story seem consequential, investigating crime generates action, and solving crime provides for a morally and emotionally satisfying conclusion.

    The result is an addiction to stories that portray police departments as more effective than they actually are; crime as more prevalent than it actually is; and police use of force as consistently justified. There are always gaps between reality and fiction, but given what policing in America has too often become, Hollywood’s version of it looks less like fantasy and more like complicity…

    Say writers made a commitment not to exaggerate the performance of police. Audiences would have to be retrained to watch, for example, a version of “Special Victims Unit” where the characters cleared only 33.4 percent of rape cases, or to accept that in almost 40 percent of murders and manslaughters, no suspect is arrested. If storytelling focused on less-dramatic but more-common crimes such as burglary and motor-vehicle theft, the stakes would shrink — along with the case-clearance rate.

I think there’s some truth to what she’s saying. Crime shows aren’t really representative of reality. There are a lot more serial killers in 15 seasons of Criminal Minds than there probably are in the entire country. And there’s no doubt that the dictates of drama mean these shows rarely end with the criminals not even being identified. So I think it’s fair enough to say there’s a clear element of fantasy in these shows.

more
https://hotair.com/archives/john-s-2/2020/06/05/washington-post-lets-cancel-cop-shows-tv/
Great idea....lolololol.  Idiots......
Title: Re: Washington Post: Let’s cancel all the cop shows on TV
Post by: Slide Rule on June 06, 2020, 12:09:20 pm
Better to just ban Hollywood and its writers from Cop and Law shows.

There is so much PC crap said between the action scenes.



Title: Re: Washington Post: Let’s cancel all the cop shows on TV
Post by: EdinVA on June 06, 2020, 12:29:31 pm
Quote
...solution for the problems with our policing:...
We don't have a problem with policing, we have a stupid criminal problem....
Can't do the time, don't do the crime....
Title: Re: Washington Post: Let’s cancel all the cop shows on TV
Post by: GtHawk on June 06, 2020, 06:00:04 pm
Geez, if you ban all the cop shows you put all those liberal SJW writers out of work and eliminate a huge segment of social engineering opportunities.