What would Hollywood be like if Radical Centrists were in charge ?
The following article discusses movie shortcomings as understood
from a Christian perspective ( written by someone named Mohammed  ).
 
But it isn't just Christianity that is misrepresented by Hollywood  
producers.
ALL religions  are misrepresented, and some, ironically Judaism  included,
are not represented at all, or are only rarely represented. Plus some  
subjects
are represented poorly, again and again, such as history and the  sciences.
 
Anyone have a good answer ?  My feeling is that many or most of the  script
writers must be "kids," young people in their 20s, say, or some  equivalent,
writers who were recruited in their 20s and who have retained that  mindset
despite now being in their 50s or 60s, because they are expected to  create
material that has the quality of naive 20-somethings.  I mean,  much ( most 
)
Hollywood fare is juvenilia. Immaturity oozes out of every scene.
Half of everything is not thought through, and the other half
is ill-informed. Plus the morality one gets is largely nihilistic
as if the writers are mostly horny young men who don't really
have other values except any excuse that comes to mind
to seduce women. Plus young men's adventuresomeness
and putting winning some obvious prize ( a million dollars )
above all other considerations.
 
OK, anyone can think of exceptions. There are the best producers
and then there is everyone else. But something is horribly wrong with
the film industry and it would be nice to have a few ideas handy
as a remedy.
 
Billy
 
---------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
 
Christian Post
 
_Hollywood Out of Touch, or Are Christians Expecting Too  Much?_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/hollywood-out-of-touch-or-are-christians-expecting-t
oo-much-66766/) 
 
By Ravelle Mohammed

Tue, Jan. 10, 2012 Posted: 11:24 AM EDT   
____________________________________
  
 
Has Hollywood lost touch with Middle America? According to _The  Christian 
Film & Television Commission_ (http://www.movieguide.org/) , the city of 
lights and  big dreams does not know how to appeal to the average American. 
Yet, other  observers insist Christians may be expecting too much from a sector 
controlled  by "nonbelievers." 
"They don't know how to market to the average American who is a churchgoing 
 Christian who believes in God, country, and family," said Dr. Ted Baehr, 
the  ministry’s founder and chairman, in a released statement 
"Year in and year out, our statistics show that moviegoers prefer  
family-friendly movies with positive Christian, wholesome, patriotic,  
conservative, 
and traditional moral values," he stated. 
Filmmaker and media consultant _Phil Cooke_ (http://philcooke.com/)  
pointed out that  Hollywood does not reflect a significant segment of what most 
would call "Middle  America." He told The Christian Post that many of the 
studio executives he has  met were "politically liberal" – adding that this 
could also be said about  doctors, attorneys, and most university professors. 
"Perhaps the biggest issue is 'Why do we expect nonbelievers to act like  
believers?'" Cooke questioned. "Why do we get so stressed out when Hollywood  
doesn't reflect our values, or create movies we like?" 
Cooke, co-founder of Cooke Pictures, explained that Christians get  
"distracted" from the real call because so much time is spent "freaking out 
over  
not being able to say a prayer at the start of a high school football game, 
or  upset at Hollywood, the gay community, or others, that we forget that our 
job is  to reach the world, not complain." 
Pastor David Wright, CEO of _DOersTV_ (http://www.doerstv.com/) , agreed 
that believers  should not expect nonbelievers to act like them. According to 
Wright,  nonbelievers are sinners and sinners sin. "Because Hollywood is 
controlled by  nonbelievers who love to sin, we cannot expect a sinner to act 
like a saint," he  told CP. 
"No Christian is exempt from poisoning their mind with the filth of 
Hollywood  – you can’t play with fire and not get burned," Wright added. 
The Numbers, a box office website, found that G-rated features grossed 
$34.6  million in 2011, whereas R-rated movies averaged about $10.8 million. 
The 
 typically family-oriented G-rated films also outranked more 
explicit-natured  films in 2009 and 2010. 
Dr. Baehr noted that the results reveal that these movies made three or, as 
 in previous years, five times as much money as R-rated films. He noted 
that PG  movies also ranked far better on average. 
"Middle America wants to see, rent, and buy entertaining movies with  
Christian, biblical values that they can show to their whole family," he 
stated.  
"They want to see Good triumph over Evil, Justice to prevail, Truth to 
defeat  Falsehood, and Purity to conquer Lust. They reject movies with 
explicit, 
graphic  sex and violence." 
Pastor Wright added, "True 'Christians' crave and desire to watch Christian 
 themed movies not because of what’s in the movies, but mainly because of 
what’s  not in the movie – sin and immorality." 
On the other hand, Cooke suggested that the conception that G or PG movies  
rake in more money than R-rated films is inaccurate. He told CP that when 
you  take out high budget animated blockbusters like "Cars" or "Toy Story" 
the  situation changes significantly. 
"We'd all like to believe that people are looking for G-rated 
entertainment,  but the truth is, that's not necessarily the case," Cooke said. 
"While  
protecting children is critical, I'm not sure Christians are really called to 
 produce only G-rated movies and TV programming." 
He pointed out that much of the Bible, if turned into a movie, would be  
R-rated, if not worse. According to Cooke, God shared "real authentic stories  
and the Bible doesn’t gloss over real life." 
"The culture would respect our message much more if we stopped producing 
just  cheesy, G-rated films and started telling gritty stories about real 
life," he  said. 
Research from The Barna Group found that Christians watched almost the 
exact  type of movies and TV programs as non-Christians, Cooke revealed. The 
original  Barna study could not be found, but researchers at the _National 
Study of Youth and Religion_ 
(http://www.youthandreligion.org/news/2004-0204.html)  discovered  that 43 
percent of U.S. teens, between ages 13 and 17, who 
said their faith was  either extremely or very important in shaping their 
daily lives reported  watching mostly R-rated movies and videos. 
Regardless, Cooke shared that while there is a place for Christian-themed  
films that is not why he goes to the movies. 
"I go to see powerful, compelling stories about all kinds of subjects," he  
told CP. "If it has Christian implications like 'Blindside,' or 'The 
Chronicles  of Narnia,' great. But I'm just as thrilled to see a great war 
movie, 
historical  epic, or sci-fi thriller." 
Cooke countered that the question is not what can Hollywood do to become 
more  "in touch" with Middle America, but rather what does "Middle America" 
need to do  to get Hollywood’s attention. 
"We sometimes forget that Hollywood is a business. As a result, they pay 
very  little attention to boycotts and critics, but pay a lot of attention to 
box  office receipts," he stated. "Christians could change Hollywood  
tomorrow if they would simply start showing up at films they care  about." 
"There are millions of evangelical Christians in America, and if we could  
mobilize that power to show up at great movies that reflect our values, 
trust me  – Hollywood would notice and respond

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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