I’m sure you’re familiar with this disgusting phenomenon – TV dating shows. Adult human beings on national television, GROVELLING for dates! Have some self-respect. If you want to pick someone up, go to a bar, to the park – even to the library – or (if you're that desperate) just buy a Playboy. Of course it's sleazy, but you won't be sharing it with the rest of the nation.
The 'contestants' (I hesitate to call them victims) are usually chosen for their potential to amuse the TV audience as opposed to any concern for their happiness or compatibility. Just think of shows like Beauty and the Geek or Please Marry My Boy (both on channel 7) or The Farmer Wants a Wife (on channel 9). Shows like these is one reason why I've stopped watching TV.
These abominations have taken something that should be private and romantic and – who knows – maybe even intimate, and turned it into something cheesy and repulsive. You can say what you like about the dating scene and singles' bars, but at least I’m not on The Bachelorette. You'd think that anyone with an IQ over about 50 will be appalled by the very idea, yet they're still on air - and herein lies the mystery - but I guess that in today's idiot-o-cracy, I shouldn't be surprised.
The irony is that television used to mean something. It was a medium for intelligent discourse, for exposing national scandal. Remember Ed Murrow's See It Now and his exposé on Joseph McCarthy? Fat chance of that happening now. Now, everything has to be bright and colourful - perhaps to distract the population and stop them asking awkward questions, like 'what did my taxes get spent on?' - and that's the bigger mystery. Shouldn't we be asking awkward questions? Hey, if Woodward and Bernstein never asked questions, do you think they would have cracked Watergate? If Rosa Parks never questioned the status quo, where do you think the civil rights movement would be? Examples go on and on, and yet some people don't question what they read and see. Why is that?
What do you think, hmmm?
