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LA Times
http://www.latimes.com/news/front/20010117/t000004603.html

Wednesday, January 17, 2001
Surgeon Gen. Links TV, Real Violence
Entertainment: Report finds repeated early childhood exposure to intense
shows, video games causes aggressive behavior.
By JEFF LEEDS, Times Staff Writer
The U.S. surgeon general is poised to declare graphically violent
television programming and video games harmful to children, marking a
potential watershed in the debate over government regulation of
entertainment.
In a report on youth violence scheduled for release in Washington today,
Surgeon
General David Satcher will find repeated exposure to violent
entertainment during early childhood causes more aggressive behavior
throughout a child's life, according to a draft of the report obtained
by The Times.
"Exposure to violent media plays an important causal role in this
societal problem" of youth violence, the draft report states. "From a
public-health perspective, today's [media] consumption patterns are far
from optimal. And for many children they are clearly harmful."
The findings, while representing a small portion of a wide-ranging
report on youth violence, are expected to fuel the push by parents
groups, politicians and some
retailers to limit violence in entertainment. The full report addresses
several factors contributing to youth violence, including home
environment, school programs and the socioeconomic background of
individuals, according to sources involved in preparing
the document.
But the conclusions about media violence could resonate the loudest in
Hollywood, where the entertainment industry has long asserted that
artists' free-speech rights shielded them from legal limits on the
content they create.
By using the weight of his office to validate existing research on
exposure to violence, Satcher is turning what has been a legal debate
into a public-health issue, associating the effects of media violence
with those of cigarette smoking.
The report has been eagerly awaited on Capitol Hill, but Satcher
apparently was not subject to political pressure to rush its release.
His term lasts until 2002. While declining to comment directly on the
report, Satcher said he had not intended to point fingers at Hollywood.
"We didn't decide to take on anybody.What we decided to do was to look
at all the factors related to youth violence," he said. To address the
problem, the draft report said, parents should consider using
televisions equipped with  the V-chip screening device and more closely
monitor their children's media consumption. It also encouraged more
federal research on the subject.               Several entertainment
executives declined to comment, saying they had not seen the full
report. But many were quick to take aim at past scientific research
linking Hollywood creations to real-world violence. The draft report
also essentially dismissed conflicting research.
Instead, it suggests the statistical evidence linking media violence and
aggressive behavior is similar in strength to the evidence linking
smoking and lung cancer.
In the current political climate, the surgeon general's report could
carry even more weight. It was a surgeon general's report in 1964
linking cigarette smoking and llung cancer that led to warning labels on
cigarette packaging. But it's unlikely Satcher will call for similar
labels warning of the health effects of media violence. However, coming
on the heels of last year's Federal Trade Commission report on the
marketing of sexual and violent content to children, Satcher's report
may spark renewed interest in the regulation of entertainment.
"I think it's significant, particularly as a capstone on what so many
other studies have said," said Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), one of the
leading critics of     Hollywood. He added that the report should
provide an impetus within the industry to produce less violent
television programming and films.
The report was requested by the White House and key lawmakers in 1999
after two teens opened fire on their classmates at Columbine High School
in Colorado, killing 12 students and a teacher. The report was prepared
by a team of 21 researchers assembled by the National Institutes of
Health.
No sitting surgeon general has addressed the issue so directly since
Jesse Steinfeld, who in 1972 issued a report on the subject and
testified before Congress that
television violence "does have an adverse effect on certain members of
our society."
Although some research conflicts with the basic premise that media
violence fosters aggression, the team writing the draft report was
dominated by researchers who have long believed that watching violent TV
or films has an adverse effect on children.   The team didn't include
any representatives of the entertainment industry. The surgeon general's
office didn't conduct any studies of its own, citing instead a raft of
previous research on the subject. Studies used in writing the report
found, for example, that people who had frequently watched "Road Runner"
cartoons or  "Starsky and Hutch" as children in the 1970s were more
likely to exhibit aggressive behavior 15 years later. Men who as boys
had watched violence most frequently, that study found, had "pushed,
grabbed or shoved their spouse" at twice the rate of other men and had
been convicted of crimes at three times the rate of other men. Similar
effects were found for women. In another study cited by the authors,
college
students who played the violent video game "Marathon 2" generated 43%
more aggressive responses in later tests than those who played a
nonviolent game. And in
another study, researchers found that young black men who watched a
violent rap music video were more likely to endorse the use of violence
in a hypothetical
conflict situation than those who watched a nonviolent rap video.
But this body of research has long been criticized by the entertainment
industry as incomplete or unrealistic.  "The scientific evidence is
murky. The conclusions of
some of these people don't measure up," said Jack Valenti, president of
the Motion Picture Assn. of America. Valenti added that many violence
studies are flawed because they are usually done in laboratories, and
that it is impossible to predict future behavior based on exposure to
violence.
"You can be a football player and be aggressive.That doesn't mean that
when you grow up you want to blow somebody's head off," Valenti said.
That said, Valenti insisted that Hollywood is more sensitive to violence
issues and has been abiding by its pledge to curtail the marketing of
violent movies to children and teens.

Times staff writers James Bates in Los Angeles and Marlene Cimons in
Washington contributed to this story.
                                                           * * *


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