Posted on 07/15/2011 6:50:42 AM PDT by markomalley
Some reality shows are designed to advertise wanton misbehavior and stupidity for its own sake. Theres no life lesson, just an exercise in how you can grade your own moral worth on a Jersey Shore curve.
That is not the case with TLCs Sister Wives. For TLC (The Learning Channel, a misnomer demanding initials-only), it was the usual slam-dunk oddball premise: Wont people be curious to see how four wives married to the same man get along in the same house?
The shows stars, Kody Brown and his wives, want much more than fame and fortune. They want to make polygamy respectable, even legalized. The show was a surprise hit for TLC, drawing an average of 2.2 million viewers over Season 1" last fall. The polygamists have recognized the power of pop culture particularly television and are pouncing to normalize this abhorrent behavior.
If this was in any doubt, it was removed when Brown & Co. recently hired hotshot Washington lawyer Jonathan Turley and sued in federal court in Salt Lake City to get Utahs polygamy law voided. Brown and his four wives knew they were taking a risk of being prosecuted when they signed the deal with TLC, but it was all calculated, with an activist motive.
Kody Brown proclaimed, While we understand that this may be a long struggle in court, it has already been a long struggle for my family and other plural families to end the stereotypes and unfair treatment given consensual polygamy.
Robyn Brown (wife number four) also said they wanted to make a political point. It's okay for us to live this way, honestly. I'm sorry, but this is a nation of freedom of choice, Brown declared on National Public Radio. We should have this choice, and I want my kids to know that.
Turley denounced Utahs law as an injustice: There is no allegation of child abuse, no allegation of child brides, no allegations of so-called collateral crimes, but prosecutors have stated publicly that they believe the family is committing a felony every night on television.
Actually, Sister Wives isnt on TV every night thankfully, its only a Sunday night show. But is TLC concerned? Hardly. It has felt that the Brown familys legal peril and courtroom activism only add a layer of edginess to the show. It doesnt matter one bit to TLC that it is the showroom for a campaign nuking the nuclear family. It felt no need to comment on the Brown lawsuit. All is fair in love and television.
Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff, whose office would defend the statute, is skeptical. He called the lawsuit "somewhat of a PR ratings stunt for their show." Thats an understatement when you consider that he polygamy law hasnt been used to prosecute anyone in eight years.
Local police in Lehi, Utah launched an investigation last September after "Sister Wives" made its debut on TLC. How could they not? They were dared to do so on national TV. Then they turned their findings over to the Utah County attorney to determine whether charges are warranted based on the state's bigamy law. Charges were never filed.
Whats sad about this whole exercise is that media chroniclers of the Browns, from network TV to Oprah to blogs and wire services, routinely treat them as sympathetic figures. Every exotic alternative lifestyle is assumed to be progressive and therefore admirable and is not only to be tolerated, but welcomed. Its rare that anyone appears for five seconds on TV to protest the Browns and TLC. NBCs Today show has lent them two sympathetic interviews without opposition, and even allowed their news anchor Natalie Morales to moonlight and interview the Browns for their own TLC special last fall.
Its even sadder that the political world would take this TLC show as an opportunity to propose further shredding the institution of marriage. On the liberal website Slate, blogger Jessica Grose blithely proposed that Perhaps the best way to keep polygamous practice consensual and the power equal [between husband and wives] is not to just decriminalize it, but to legislate it...polygamous couples could enter into contracts that are less like marriage contracts and more like commercial partnership contracts. Or, if we could borrow the TLC metaphor, like television contracts.
It is somehow not enough that the entertainment media would try to undermine traditional marriage and the traditional nuclear family in their bed-hopping soap-operatic scripted dramas. Now its also the role of reality television to suggest that a man with four spiritual wives is exactly the same as you and me, and that perhaps our legal boundaries against polygamy are now unwarranted and archaic...as long as it scores 2 million in the Nielsens.
What about the 298 million Americans who are not watching?
i won’t argue, only pray that I don’t end up needign to know this;-)
A better term might be ‘actual family’...its past time to take command of the language and tell the truth.
"natural family" then, to distinguish from "legal family," or family formed by act of law (e.g., adoption of a child into a same sex partnership).
So is Bozell suggesting that the TLC series “Sarah Palin’s Alaska” was a plot too ?
And if so, what kind. I’m dying to hear his analysis.
Oh boy, another channel to block on my cable. I’m running out of stations.
NAMBLA is weighing in as well so men can marry boys. They want the legal age lowered because the current legal age is causing the arrest and legal problems for its members.
What are the odds of all four wives having a “headache” on the same night?
LOL. Well, I was blessed with a wonderful mother-in-law, so I’ll respectfully disagree :)
Natural is an accurate term, but not belligerent enough, I think.
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