Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Commentary on Fox News' Sensationalistic Deceptions and Hypocritical Outrage Over "Sex" Scene in Mass Effect.

It should be no surprise and no mystery that Fox News is neither fair nor balanced. Their deceptive tactics and rampant sensationalism are well-known among their former viewers like myself. Fox News has sensationalized hostage situations and school shootings. They added inappropriate and gratuitous sexual imagery when they covered a serial killer prowling around the beaches of Florida near Spring Break. In fact, Fox News adds gratuitous sexual images in almost any story they cover, especially sexual-themed stories. When Bill O'Reilly devoted a segment of his show to a Carl's Jr. television advert staring Paris Hilton, he displayed the ad for 19 seconds running. Instead of responsibly showing the ad to his viewers for only five seconds, he shown the ad for nearly a third of a minuet. If you are showing an ad you are outraged at for only five seconds, I would not mind. When you do that for almost twenty seconds, you are using that ad gratuitously and it makes you a hypocrite. This is what Fox News does best. Spin the story to make whatever they do not like look bad. They take what democrats say and twist it into something negative. It is wrong and is not reflective of what I thought Fox News was...fair and balanced.

The tactics of Fox News was on display again yesterday on their midday show "The Live Desk". The segment was on the supposed sex scene in the Xbox 360 game "Mass Effect". Hosted by Martha MacCallum, the segment featured a debate between author Cooper Lawrence and Spike TV's game reporter Geoff Keighley (transcript and YouTube video here). The segment was titled "Se"Xbox? New Video Game Shows Full Digital Nudity and Sex". Keighley defended the game well, but it was obvious the game along with Keighley himself was not going to get the "fair and balanced" treatment. Geoff was not given much time to give his replies while Cooper Lawrence was misrepresenting the game, a game she admitted that she never played, and was just being rude to Keighley, even telling Martha to "Let me at him".

Geoff should be praised not only for defending the game, but for even going on Fox News, which is never kind to video games or the industry itself. He had tremendous poise and kept his cool while he was being rudely interrupted by Lawrence along with being bombarded with sensationalized exaggerations of the scene and the game itself. Full nudity? Explicitly graphical sex? This could not be further from the truth. The scene (which is in the YouTube clip here) only features a bare backside and one breast. No full nudity. No graphic sex. Cooper Lawrence, along with Martha and the "A-List" panel, made the false claims of graphic sex without even playing the game. Does this sound fair and balanced? Were the words of Lawrence about the game as a whole and the way Martha moderated the debate reflective of that slogan? Look at the title of that segment. "Se"Xbox? New Video Game Shows Full Digital Nudity and Sex". That alone should be a red flag not only for sensationalizing a story, but also for slander. Microsoft and BioWare should call an attorney.

When Martha interviewed the panel about the scene, one of the panelists criticized the ESRB for not giving the game the Adults Only rating, which would get the game pulled from store shelves. If Mass Effect should get such a rating for the "graphic scene", then Fox News should be declared obscene and be available only through the adult pay-per-view channels. The sexual images they shamelessly exhibit while covering news stories are more graphic and more gratuitous than the supposed sex scene in Mass Effect and are on the screen longer on all of their shows than the scene in the game. Fox News is being hypocritical in their outrage. Not only do they display sexual images without any qualms, but their salaries are paid by the same man who owns the Fox Television Network, which has shows like The Simpsons, Family Guy, House, and 24 among other shows that are not suitable for children. These shows feature more sexual content than Mass Effect. Fox News is owned by the same company that owns MySpace. I do not need to tell you about the stuff one can view on the social networking site. Fox News and their employees are in no place to criticise those who develop games with any sexual content. If they want to go after adult content, they should start with their own channel. How about if they not show sexual content gratuitously and inappropriately?

Fox News' coverage of the "sex scene" in Mass Effect is nothing short of sensationalism and a complete distortion of facts. The so-called graphic nudity is nothing more than a brief shot of a woman's rear and a bare left breast. This is not pornographic. This is not AO content. Fox News is doing what they do best. They sensationalize. They spin the facts. They are not fair to who they do not agree with. Fox News is lying to their viewers. Their viewers are not getting all sides of any story they "report". This is fear-mongering. The act of deliberately twisting facts and research to scare viewers and to defame anyone or anything is a violation of journalistic ethics. We have seen this from Fox News so many times. This is the same network that gave anti-game crusader and lawyer Jack Thompson air time during their coverage of the Virginia Tech massacre. Fox did nothing but listen to this massacre-chasing monster blaming video games for the shooting before any investigation took place, before the identity of the shooter was known, before the final body count was known, while students were worried sick about the well-being of fellow students and professors, while family members were waiting for the conditions of their loved-ones. Just sad and disgraceful. No one at Fox News objected. No one at Fox News had any qualms about Jack Thompson capitalizing on a tragedy that was still going on. DO THEY NOT HAVE ANY SHAME?

My anger with Fox News is not a right-wing issue or a left-wing issue. This is about holding journalists who sensationalize and spin the facts responsible. The journalists at Fox need to take a long look in the mirror. They need to look at themselves and take stock. When they do that, they should ask themselves this question: Who is worse, the game developers who make the games or those in the media who sensationalize and distort the facts about the game to scare the viewers and to fit an agenda? If you think the former is worse, I got these six words to say:

YOU HAVE NO BUSINESS BEING JOURNALISTS!

Good night and good luck.

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