Search This Blog

Friday, September 19, 2008

Big Brother Rant

I was thinking earlier today about a show I watched this summer called Big Brother. Big Brother is one of my wife’s favorite shows. I think she likes it because of the drama. Personally, I wonder if it’s rigged. I admit I did get into it this past season. Now, that I think back on it, I remember why I stopped watching it.

It gets is name from Big Brother, meaning the government (remember the phrase, “Big Brother is watching you”?), the lessons it teach are about the same. Like the government, the game teaches to get ahead you must lie, cheat, backstab, and double-cross. Isn’t that how people get ahead in politics? The winner of Big Brother 10, Dan Gheesling, won a half million dollars this way. So what is Big Brother endorsing? What benefits can one learn from a show that thrives on deception and betrayal? People form multiple alliances and stay true to the one that will get them the farthest. They give their word one minute and break it the next. They smile in a person’s face and talk about them behind their back to another. The sad thing is the winner of the game is the one who does this the best. This isn’t “outwit, outsmart, and outlast.” This is out-con, out-manipulate, and out-deceive.

Of course, the ones I was rooting for were evicted. Those were the ones who played the game with some sort of integrity. Big Brother isn’t about integrity. It’s about who’s the best at using people and maneuvering situations. Don’t get me wrong, to win you have to have good people skills. You’ve got to know how to read people and seize opportunities. You also have to be willing to do some unsavory things. Dan, who’s a Catholic school teacher, did not set a good example for his students, in my opinion, with his game tactics. How can he counsel someone on bad behavior when he was the epitome of bad behavior on national television?

Big Brother reminds me of a movie I once saw, Pleasantville. Pleasantville was a movie about modern-day siblings who were pulled into their television into a 1950’s sitcom. What I thought was going to be a movie about the wholesomeness of the 1950’s turned out entirely different. In the movie, instead of the wholesomeness rubbing off on the kids, they began to contaminate the 1950’s with their modern lifestyles. I suppose if anything it is a movie about Galatians 5:9: “A little leaven leavens the whole lump.” In other words, a little sin can corrupt everyone.

Then again, what does it say about our society where a show like Big Brother can earn so many loyal viewers. Unlike other reality TV shows, Big Brother offers other viewing option for those who can’t get enough during the three weekly one hour episodes. To feed your fix for sin, you can also see then during Big Brother: After Dark on Showtime Too and subscribe to their 24-hour feed.

No comments: