October 2010 - Vol. 43 . When Is Too Much Too Much? . by Don Schwager How much TV do you watch in a given day or week? And how much do your children watch? Researchers and psychologists have been warning us for a while that we are consuming too much TV and it is bad for us. On average most TV viewers in the US and Europe spend four hours a day in front of the television – more than anything else they do except work and sleep. By the age of six, a child has already spent a whole year watching television. Dr Aric Sigman, an American psychologist, biologist, broadcaster, and author, has written extensively about the harmful effects of too much TV in his book, Remotely Controlled: How Television is Damaging Our Lives (2005). Sigman, who has lived in Britain for many years, and is currently Associate Fellow of the British Psychological Society, states that “television has unleashed a worldwide cultural force equalled in history only by religion.” Dr. Sigman contends that television affects our physical, psychological and social health in very damaging ways. Here are a few key points he makes in his book: Television makes
us overweight
Television causes
half of all violent crime
Television harms
a child's development
Television lies
to us
Television also portrays the stereotype of the slim young career woman as preferable to the mother who cares for her children. (See page 166): “Television has discriminated against the vast majority of mothers. And by eroding the status of the full-time mother, television is underplaying the importance of children in our society. Bringing up young children well is, in the scheme of things, rather important.” (Page 167) And television contributes to ageism:
“Long-term daily exposure to television's unrepresentative, ever-present
youthful points of comparison in such an unnaturally high concentration
is damaging people.” (Page 250)
Sigman says that television is being used as an instrument of social control and engineering: “Advertising techniques are being used not only during commercial breaks and not only to sell you products – they are also employed to change the way we think and feel about issues in our society. Television provides the best means persuading you to buy into the right values.” (Page 209) “Today, we are enlightened by the most effective vehicle for social engineering ever envisaged. Our views and attitudes towards everything from domestic violence, drug abuse, divorce and single motherhood to immigration and racial groups are carefully manipulated by decisions taken behind the screen.” (Page 210) Now for some good
news
Following on from Sigman’s observations, here are a few points I think would be helpful for all of us to consider in our approach to viewing TV and other media. Who is in control – you or the TV? For many of us the TV is the first and last thing we interact with every day. We can all too easily slip into the habit of turning on the TV as soon as we get home, wake up, or feel the need for some kind of diversion or entertainment. If unchecked, the media can cause a lot of difficulty because of the time it absorbs and the way it interrupts social activities. It substitutes passive entertainment for active and therefore usually social entertainment. The media has a way of intruding on our lives, inducing us to use it or be affected by it without a conscious decision to do so. Do you control your TV or does your TV control you? Jon Wilson’s article on “Making Sense of the Media” gives some helpful tips for assessing how you use the media. Is the media taking up too much time in your life? Is it replacing time for relationships with spouse, family, and friends who need your support or encouragement. Has media replaced other helpful, important, and necessary activities, such as exercise, sleep, reading, prayer, reflection, and meditation. How is the media
influencing you?
We need to understand what kind of models and behavior are being portrayed in the media. Much of it nourishes a non-Christian way of looking at life. A key question to ask is, “What view of reality is being presented here?” Depending on one's view of reality, a person will think certain actions are right and others wrong; he will see some issues as important, others as trivial; he will tend to be confident or fearful. Some good media
habits
[Don Schwager is editor of
Living Bulwark and author of the Daily
Scripture Reading and Meditation website.]
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