NEW YORK, April 15 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Morality in Media
President Robert Peters had the following comments regarding tomorrow's
first anniversary of the April 16, 2007 Virginia Tech massacre:
"Two of our nation's leading newspapers, USA TODAY ("For families and
survivors, grief becomes call to action," 4/11/08) and the N.Y. Times ("At
State Level, More Attempts To Limit Guns," 4/11/08) have already chosen to
remember the first anniversary of the April 16, 2007 Virginia Tech massacre
with front page articles highlighting gun control efforts.
"Undoubtedly, there are loopholes in our nation's gun control laws that
need plugging, but in remembering that the Virginia Tech killer used guns
to slaughter fellow students, we should also remember that the killer grew
up in a culture that glamorizes and even celebrates gun mayhem.
"Along with reporting on loopholes in our nation's gun laws, therefore,
the media should also be reporting on the irresponsible TV shows, films,
rap lyrics and video games released in the past year that wallow in deadly
gun violence and that are popular among children and young adults.
"The media should also reconsider its blind adherence to modernistic
Supreme Court decisions that have made it almost impossible to hold
entertainment media companies responsible for harm caused by their reckless
disregard for human life. Surely, this was not the intent of our nation's
founding fathers, which never meant for the Constitution to become a
'suicide pact.'
"Set forth below are quotations that appeared in news publications
following the horrible mass murder that took place one year ago at Virginia
Tech. They merit the public's consideration."
"Equally important was an observation made by one of the CNN talking
heads who pointed out that the killer who made a bloody wreck of Virginia
Tech used the 'weapon of choice' seen in rap videos and action films. That
was another indictment of the strutting, malicious violence that pollutes
our popular culture and may have influenced the Virginia Tech killer who
brandished two pistols..." [Stanley Crouch, "Society hits a dead end," N.Y.
Daily News, 4/23/07)
"The notion that 'movies don't kill people, lunatics kill people' is
liberating to us screenwriters because it permits us to give life to our
most demented fantasies and put them up on the big screen without any
anxious hand-wringing. We all know there's a lot of money to be made in
trafficking in blood and guts...[But can] we really in good conscience
conclude that the violence saturating our popular culture has no impact?
...As responsible Americans put their heads down on their desks and
reflect, should the scribes of popular entertainment be excused to the
playground? ...Before cashing those big checks, shouldn't we at least pause
to consider what we are saying with our movies about the value of life and
the pleasures of mayhem?" [Mike White, "Making a Killing," N.Y. Times,
5/2/07]
"'My first thought when I saw the newspaper picture of Cho holding two
guns was this guy has seen too many Asian gun films...,' Tom Weisser,
Editor of Asian Cult Cinema magazine, told the Post yesterday. 'Perhaps
there has never been a better example of a pop-culture killer.'" [V.A.
Musetto, "Erie link to blood soaked Korean film," N.Y. Post, 4/20/07]
"Much has been made of the frightening similarity between 'Oldboy,'
Park Chan Wook's dark 2003 movie thriller, and the deeds of Cho Seung Hui,
who shot to death 32 people...But there are problems as well. For one,
'Oldboy' wasn't a gun picture...Many of Cho's pictures - 11 out of 43 -
featured guns. And when I look at them, another name struck me as far more
relevant than Park Chan Wook. That's John Woo. Woo almost redefined the
action genre with a series of Hong Kong gangster movies...In at least three
regards, Cho activities so closely reflect the Woo oeuvre that it seems
somewhat fair to conclude that in his last moments, before he blew his
brains out, he was shooting a John Woo movie in his head. First is the
peculiar nature of the gun violence...Second is the nature of the guns
themselves...The third...is thematic..." [Stephen Hunter, "Cinematic Clues
To Understand The Slaughter," Washington Post, 4/20/07]
"Virginia Tech killer Cho Seung-Hui plagiarized other school shooting
psychos in a twisted show of one-upmanship. He used the Internet to
research and learn from infamous school killers, including Columbine's Eric
Harris and Dylan Klebold...'Cho was an empty vessel and he poured himself
full from images off the Internet...,' said Loren Coleman, an expert on
school shootings and the author of 'The Copycat Effect.' 'There's a
psychological process that these shooters appear to be competing for - the
high body count.'" [Jill Culora, "Sick homages from a student of psychos,"
N.Y. Post, 04/22/07]
SOURCE Morality in Media
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