Family TV? Not in 2008
August 15, 2008
By John W. Kennedy
I don’t watch much television,
but recently I subjected myself to watching all sorts of current fare for the
sake of research. In a TPE feature
story running Aug. 17, I write about how television in the past 50 years has
changed in its depiction of the American family. Lately, it’s not a flattering
portrait.
There are few family-themed shows
on the broadcast networks anymore, and those that exist are hardly testaments
to the traditional family. Dysfunction seems to be a prerequisite for a TV
household these days.
“Two and a Half Men” again
finished as the highest-rated sitcom last season. A large portion of the show
follows hedonistic womanizing by one of the brothers. The highest-rated
scripted series, “Desperate Housewives,” focuses on the sexual frustrations and
desires of four women in one tony neighborhood. And of course there’s “Brothers
and Sisters,” which in May gave us TV’s first primetime same-sex commitment
ceremony. The “Family Guy” episode I screened featured repeated gratuitous use
of crude humor at random intervals.
The tour of today’s TV comedies
made me long for the days when series actually relied on good writing. Andy
Griffith, Dick Van Dyke and Bob Newhart didn’t resort to crudeness in an effort
to be funny. The hour-long family dramas of today also are a far cry from “The
Waltons” or “Little House on the Prairie.” “Desperate Housewives” became a
cultural phenomenon in 2004 and has been a top 10 show each of its first four
seasons. For the most part, the four female lead characters are smarmy, catty,
narcissistic, sex-obsessed gossips.
Instead of being filled with
cultural pollution via subtle indoctrination, it would be wiser to spend that
time reading what the Bible says about sex and morality. Psalm 101:3 says, “I
will set before my eyes no vile thing” (NIV). Proverbs 4:23 says, “Above all
else, guard your heart, for it is the wellspring of life.”
The current depictions of family
on TV should also remind us that God’s Word, in contrast, wonderfully supports
marriage and family. From Genesis’ story of creation to Revelation’s depiction
of the Church as the bride of Christ, we see the incredible value God places on
family.
Yes, it can be pretty gloomy on
the family front as depicted on the networks. But if you’re facing challenges
in your home, catch a higher vision of what family is meant to be. God wants
your home to bypass Wysteria Lane and find renewed
hope and fulfillment on the narrow road that leads to life (Matthew 7:13,14).
— John W. Kennedy is news
editor of Today’s Pentecostal Evangel and blogs at Midlife Musings (jkennedy.agblogger.org).