Google



  Find out the newest ways to manage content directly to your web properties using Feature Wire and Feature Page.
 
 
Rob Asghar >>
Michael Barone >>
Bruce Bartlett >>
Austin Bay >>
Tony Blankley >>
Andy Borowitz >>
L. Brent Bozell III >>
Pat Buchanan >>
Steve Chapman >>
Mona Charen >>
Linda Chavez >>
Alexander Cockburn >>
Joe Conason >>
Larry Elder >>
Susan Estrich >>
Joseph Farah >>
Suzanne Fields >>
Froma Harrop >>
Molly Ivins >>
Terence Jeffrey >>
Lawrence Kudlow >>
David Limbaugh >>
Phil Lucas >>
Michelle Malkin >>
Roland S. Martin >>
William Murchison >>
Oliver North >>
Robert Novak >>
Bill O'Reilly >>
Marvin Olasky >>
Miguel Pérez >>
Dennis Prager >>
Deb Price >>
Alan Reynolds >>
Paul Craig Roberts >>
Crispin Sartwell >>
Debra Saunders >>
Robert Scheer >>
Ben Shapiro >>
Mark Shields >>
Roger Simon >>
Lenore Skenazy >>
Tony Snow >>
Norman Solomon >>
Thomas Sowell>>
John Stossel>>
Jacob Sullum >>
Matt Towery >>
R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr. >>
Walter E. Williams >>
 
  Agnes
  Andy Capp
  Ann Landers Classic
  Archie
  Ballard Street
  Ballard Street
  BC
  Chip Bok
  Crispin Sartwell
  Heathcliff
  Linda Chavez
  One Big Happy
  Rubes
  Speed Bump
  The Dinette Set










 
 
by L. Brent Bozell III
 

All newspaper editors want to know what their readers like. If you would like to read this feature in your local newspaper, please do not hesitate to share your enthusiasm with your local newspaper editor.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE



THE ARRESTED ADOLESCENT'S CHANNEL



Nothing is sacred at Comedy Central. The cable channel has perfected the formula of mocking positively everything, to find the final frontier of offensiveness and smash it to bits. And it's been able to reach the top of its field in spite of -- or, better put, because of -- the network's sheer lack of comedic talent.

In real comedy one can parody without mockery, rib without insults. Take the giants of this genre. Don Rickles made himself a household name "ridiculing" blacks, women, and anyone else who came across his cross-hairs on the Dean Martin roasts, and no one laughed harder than his victims, like Mohammed Ali, who then returned the volleys with equal panache, reducing the irascible Rickles to giggles. Jackie Mason continues to be one of the funniest men in America; his one-man show, "The World According To Me," in which he takes a pointer to a map of the world and for an hour assaults virtually every country, race and culture on the face of the earth, remains in my book one of the most clever comedic works I have ever watched. When he was finished with Ireland, he'd left this Irish-Catholic in tears with laughter.

That kind of comedy requires talent. What Comedy Central delivers -- the greatest possible insults for laughs -- is neither comedic nor demanding of talent. In the tradition of Howard Stern, the goal is only to shock, and at the center of this non-principle principle is a beautiful escape hatch from critics. As one Amazon.com reviewer argued, "the beauty of it is that it is offensive to so many different people you cannot possibly get angry." Mock everyone and everything, and you will somehow be immune from harm. They are most definitely immune from shame.

There is a network formula here -- shock equals publicity equals ratings -- and Comedy Central thrives on it. The all-mocking channel gained another wave of publicity when soul singer Isaac Hayes withdrew from his voice-over role as "Chef" in the vile cartoon "South Park," announcing that he could not abide its mockery of the one religion some in Hollywood (SET ITA) will defend -- Scientology. This was just too much for one of the show's co-creators, Matt Stone, who quickly attacked the singer's sudden departure: "He has no problem -- and he's cashed plenty of checks -- with our show making fun of Christians."

The publicity piled up when Comedy Central planned to rerun the anti- Scientology episode in question, and then suddenly developed a bizarre case of censorship, reportedly under pressure from Scientology A-lister Tom Cruise. That move led to a wave of cable news programs devoted to the rich irony: Comedy Central has a conscience about disturbing the sensibilities of a bizarre cult, but has no reservations whatsoever about insulting Jesus Christ, the Blessed Virgin Mary and airing programs such as last December's "Merry F--ing Christmas."

But the whole controversy doubled the ratings for the expected Scientology rerun that never aired. When a new "South Park" episode appeared, the producers did what any group of arrested adolescents would do: They went completely over the top. Chef is brainwashed by the "Super Adventure Club," an obvious Scientology reference. He comes home telling the children he wants to "make sweet love" to them. The other characters were angry at "that fruity little club for scrambling his brains." It ends when Hayes' Chef character is struck by lightning, impaled, shot, mauled by a mountain lion, and eaten by a grizzly bear.

Speaking of cartoonishly overdone death scenes, let's not ignore the season finale of "Drawn Together," another vile "adult" late-night cartoon that airs right after "South Park," in which cartoon characters from different eras and genres are thrown together in a house like a reality show. Predictably, the producers brag on the Comedy Central website that they're doing the same humor they enjoyed in "tenth grade."

The finale was a "clip show" of previous episodes, putting all of the most shocking cartoon sex and violence in one intense package. One clip mocked the "Veggie Tales" cartoon for Christian preschoolers. The cucumber character goes on a shooting rampage, killing nearly all the show's major characters, shooting most of them bloodily in the head. Behind the killings, a laugh track howls.

Another clip features the "Veggie Fables" characters singing a song called "God Is Watching." The lyrics predictably associate Christianity only with condemnation. The happy vegetables sing about how God watches you shower and touch yourself, and they then turn angry and promise, "Your flesh will burn, your bones will churn, your soul will be torn asunder. You wretched, heathen, heretic, burn in Hell! For eternity!"

Comedy Central is pathetic, a naughty channel for Lost Boys who don't want to grow up, both the arrested adolescents who make these ugly, filthy shows, and the arrested adolescents who enjoy them.

L. Brent Bozell III is the founder and president of the Parents Television Council. To find out more about Brent Bozell III, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2006 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Originally Published on Tuesday March 28, 2006
 
Back
Archive:
 




 
 
about creators  |  contact us  |  site index  |  privacy policy