The new icon is ideal
for the networks – easy and portable, unimportant
enough to watch on a cellphone video screen. Inoffensive enough so that few
pressure groups will complain.
But that image still packs a big punch around the globe because we export so
much American culture. According to the Pew Global Attitudes Project, foreign
opinion of Americans has been declining – especially in Europe. In the
three years from 2002 to 2005, how much they like Americans dropped 13 percent
in Great Britain, 7 percent in France and 5 percent in Germany.
When viewers turn on their TV sets in London, Paris or Berlin, they see an endless
stream of anti-free enterprise and anti-American propaganda packaged in some
of our most popular TV dramas. Maybe that has something to do with it.
This problem isn’t new. Go back to April 1978, when Hollywood scriptwriters
introduced us to the oil baron Ewing family of “Dallas.” Out of that
deep well of insanity came one of TV’s most famous villains – J.R.
Ewing.
Ewing’s ten-gallon hat and evil ways were the perfect image transition
from good cowboy to bad. In a few short years of J.R.’s “contracts
were made to be broken” attitude, “Dallas” was a global sensation.
But J.R. Ewing was a teddy bear compared to what we see in today’s primetime
dramas. Hollywood has expanded on the stereotype and embraced his contemporary
corporate counterparts. Then Hollywood exports them to a worldwide audience.
Take a look at the shows. The top American dramas portray businessmen as liars,
cheats, thieves and murderers. In a study of the top-rated dramas, the Media
Research Center’s Business & Media Institute (BMI) found the networks
took a largely negative view of both the American businessman and the very
idea of business.
The study focused on the top drama names in television – the “Law
and Order” shows, all three “CSI” programs, “Desperate
Housewives” and more. The “Law and Order” franchise was especially
hostile to companies. In one episode of NBC’s “Law and Order: Special
Victims Unit,” greedy pharmaceutical executives were selling a bad vaccine
to the military. CBS’s “Without a Trace” accused drug companies
of “doing experimental drug trials on kids.”
How can drug company executives market their products overseas to men and women
who have watched these shows? The cowboys of yesteryear were tough but fair,
so they could be trusted. The new American businessmen are automatically treated
as evil.
And foreign viewers are bombarded with American television. “Law and Order” shows
appear in six different European Union nations – France, Germany, Spain,
Italy, the Netherlands and the U.K. The shows are translated in three other
languages.
London’s Sunday Times referred to these kind of crime-fighting programs
as offering viewers “the comforting illusion that order can be imposed
on a dangerous world,” in a Jan. 26, 2003, article. I don’t find
it “comforting” that much of the world is being told American businessmen
are crooks – by our own industry.
“CSI” has even more reach into the European market. The main program
hits at least 14 of the EU’s 25 member nations. “CSI: Miami” manages
13 and “CSI: New York” appears in 11. That means most of the EU member
nations get to see businessmen murdered because they needed “a competitive
edge” for their products, as in one “CSI: Miami” episode.
Another episode of the same show blamed the video game industry for a violent
crime spree in Miami. The episode, “Urban Hellraisers,” showed the
fictional president of TransInternational refusing to cooperate with police after
being told his video games were spurring a cult of teenagers to violence. “I
have a board to answer to … stockholders. My hands are tied,” he
said.
That’s the slightly sanitized version of “I was only following orders.” And
that is pretty much how the networks treat businessmen – as slightly
sanitized, slicker versions of ultimate evil. That approach has turned real
life on its
head and pretended some of the most useful members of our society are some
of the most dangerous.
That is the new image of America around the world.
Thanks, Hollywood. CRO