Oct 30, 2014

Why Responsible Dish Network Programming Is A Must

By Roseann Hudson


After more than seventy five years of watching the boob tube, we put aside its dangers the same way we disregard our fast food eating habits. We know that it causes obesity because we burn more calories when we are using our brain. We also know that it dims the mind because it feeds us information in its most reduced form.

It has been more than seventy five years since black and white televisions, blamed by scientists for making people more likely to dream in monochrome. Now we have not just technicolor but HD color sets with unlimited channels from Dish Network Las Vegas. We have embraced the Netflix effect as a reinforcement for TV addicts and show collectors alike.

The social aspects of television has long been ignored, and we are the clueless victims. It has long widened the gap between our real selves and ideal selves with all the social archetypes and erroneous role modeling. And the major platform for propaganda has always been television.

Unlike filling in the search bar when we use the Internet, television has none of those active searches. Whether we like it or not, once we turn it on, whatever is on regardless of channels, we passively devour. And because information on television is in its most reduced form, there is no challenge whatsoever when our brain decides to accept what we see as vital information, never mind if it is fiction rather than fact, smokescreening rather than real issues.

Most of the items on our grocery list right now are not really basic needs, but created needs by advertising campaigns we constantly are being fed when we watch television. That deodorant you are buying never became a thing if not for that marketing campaign that told people that there is shame in sweating and having natural body odor. Before that, people do not really care.

Depending on the show or program, television also feeds us with social archetypes that are more or less wrong. But there is a positive and a negative side with this story. Shows, following the patriarchal, dominant male format, used to portray women as second class characters. The good news is that times change and television did as well. In fact, it also gave rise to feminism, and now we have stronger female roles and gender equal programs.

Speaking of news, studies have also shown that watching news on TV has negative psychological effects. This is why we worry, especially if we have seen some tragic news on screen. The even worse thing is that negative news is being sensationalized.

We have also made the error of making TVs as substitute for nannies. While we are more resilient to its effects as adults, children are more prone to get its harmful disadvantages. TV hinders the cognitive and initiative development of children and messes up their attention span.

In moderation, however, the boob tube also has benefits, such as its painkilling properties when babies watch cartoons and its ability to solve loneliness according to the Social Surrogacy theory. The evil is not in the box per se. Just like we must not believe everything we read in books, the same principle applies when we consume the brain chewing gum.




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