Illinois saved its season, ending up in the winning column by  defeating
UCLA in its second tier bowl game. Be thankful for small favors.
 
A & M in the SEC. When do you figure will be the first year they crack  
.500 ?
 
Utah and Colorado found out what its like to play in the Pac-12.
>From triple AAA football to the Big Leagues is not an easy  transition.
Going into the SEC is a move into the NFL class # 1 farm system.
Call it the NFL Conference. It just about is that..
 
Billy
 
========================================
 
 
 
3/16/2012 7:19:47 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  
writes:

With the arrival of GCB (Good Christian Bitches was  the original title-I 
shit you not-they changed it to Good Christian Belles  when WFAA (Dallas) and 
other ABC stations threatened not to run it), I would  say that the 
contribution of TV is not zero, but negative. It's supposedly  about a church 
in 
Dallas, but it is SOOOOOO overdone that it's pathetic. It is  now OK to bash 
Texas and Christianity at the same time. The President and ABC  do it all of 
the time. 

And they can all go pound sand. At least by moving to the SEC, the  Aggies 
are now on CBS. 

David

  _     
 
"I am so  Libertarian that I don't think  lawyers and doctors should be 
licensed by the government. I am so  Libertarian  that I make some Libertarians 
 cringe."--Neal Boortz  


On  3/15/2012 5:41 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])   wrote:  

One thing the following article is all-too-right about is the near  total 
absence of religion
as a theme on prime time TV.  Mostly it isn't there, and when it  is, it is 
mostly
secondary, and largely irrelevant. Or even trivial.
 
The article makes a point about "All-American Muslim," as if the show  was 
something
else than what it is, a whitewash of Islam, a falsification of   Islamic 
teachings, 
a gross distortion of the truth.  Then the article also comments  on 
"Touched By an Angel,"
as if that show, gone for a number of years already, wasn't mostly a  
politically correct
version of a religious soap opera even if it had its moments.
 
But what can anyone expect ?  TV producers are clueless about the  
substance of faith
and religion generally. They seem to make no effort at all to hire  
competent religious
scholars, they don't seem to know that there even is such a thing as  
religious
scholarship, and inevitably show religion as a superficial and  stereotyped 
phenomenon.
 
Things don't have to be this way.
 
Dammit, there is so much good material awaiting discovery by TV.  Just a 
few examples :
Think of TV shows about Papal politics, about  the sometimes  fierce d
ebates between
Christians and Hindus  vs Muslims, about how Jews sometimes debate  each 
other,
about Atheists in their war against religion, about new religions as  they 
try to remake
the culture based on new outlooks. There is a wealth of material, not  even 
counting
any number of historical themes that could be explored.to terrific  effect  
--the Reformation,
Deism in early America, the challenge to faith under the Nazis,   religious 
persecution
under Soviet Communism,  the rise of Zionism, the Evangelical  revival of 
the 1980s,
and much else.
 
Billy
 
===================================
 
 
 
 
RNS  /  Religion  News Service
 
Why is it so hard to  do religion in prime time?
Piet Levy |  Mar 14, 2012
 
(RNS) Many TV network executives, advertisers and producers would sell  
their souls to get the kind of audience God has. But giving religion a  
starring role in prime time? Not so much. 
Religion, God and spirituality have made cameos across the dial from "The  
Sopranos" to "The Simpsons" -- though usually as a prop or walk-on role. But 
 shows where religion is a central part of the premise are rare, and the  
ratings are generally far from heavenly.
 
Short of touchy-feely shows like "Touched By an Angel" or "Highway to  
Heaven," why is religion so radioactive in Hollywood? 
This month, cable network TLC canceled "All-American Muslim" after only  
about 700,000 viewers watched the season finale of the reality show  featuring 
Muslims in Dearborn, Mich. 
Meanwhile, ABC's saucy new drama "GCB" -- think "Desperate Housewives" in  
choir robes -- that's based on Kim Gatlin's novel "Good Christian Bitches"  
has been panned by critics and called "anti-Christian" by Newt Gingrich. The 
 "GCB" premiere on March 4 lost the coveted 18-49 demographic, but climbed  
back during its sophomore episode. 
>From a storytelling perspective, stories concerning religion have a sort  
of universal appeal, said Cathleen Falsani, the new media director for  
Sojourners and a prolific author on the intersection of religion and pop  
culture. 
"Art imitates life, and in this country and most of the world, religion,  
and certainly spirituality and faith, is a massive part of a lot of people's  
lives, whether we're embracing it or reacting against it," she said. 
TLC thought "All-American Muslim" would be a fitting companion to its hit  
show "Sister Wives," about a polygamous fundamentalist Mormon family, said  
the show's co-creator and executive producer, Mike Mosallam. 
"TLC prides itself on exposing groups of people that normally you don't  
get to really see on mainstream TV," Mosallam said. "They saw the  opportunity 
to shed light on a community that had been misunderstood for so  many 
years." 
Mosallam said TLC expected some scrutiny for the show, but ultimately the  
conservative backlash that the show was apologetic propaganda for Islam  
received more attention than the show itself. 
Jack Kenny ran into similar problems with his short-lived NBC drama, "The  
Book of Daniel," about a dysfunctional but loving family headed by a  
pill-popping Episcopal priest, which was pulled in 2006 after just four  
episodes. 
"TV shows generally need to be relatable to large groups of people,"  Kenny 
said. "Everybody has their own specific view of religion ... and  people 
feel like their religions are challenged all the time. People aren't  
comfortable living with it, much less laughing about it or following a story  
about 
it." 
As a result, said Bob Thompson, a pop culture expert at Syracuse  
University, "many religious subject matters have been underutilized (on TV)  
simply 
because there's a sense that they'll be controversial." 
It's also sensitive terrain for advertisers. Lowe's famously pulled its  
ads from "All-American Muslim" last December after receiving complaints from  
the conservative Florida Family Association. "The Book of Daniel" was marred 
 by email protests before his show even aired, "and every single sponsor  
bailed out, except the Burlington Coat Factory. There's no TV show if no one  
buys ads," Kenny said. 
Christopher Jones, vice president for the New York-based media buying  
agency Initiative North America, said some clients specifically request that  
their ads avoid shows related to religion or politics. Those decisions are  
made "on a case-by-case basis," he said, but "we don't particularly have a  
client that I'm aware of who views programs with a religious spin as  critical 
to their brand positioning." 
ABC’s saucy new drama, “GCB” has been panned by critics and called  “
anti-Christian” by Newt Gingrich. RNS photo court ABC/KAREN NEAL.  
Religion isn't necessarily a deal breaker; sometimes the show just isn't  
interesting, said Stewart Hoover, director of the Center for Media, Religion  
and Culture at the University of Colorado at Boulder, citing "All-American  
Muslim" as an example. 
In retrospect, Mosallam, the show's co-creator, sees the point. 
"People were somewhat jarred by the fact that we were asking them to  
subscribe to a reality show that was not about table flipping and cat  
fighting," 
Mosallam said. "It was about the normal, everyday lives of  American 
citizens, which is not something you see on TV." 
To be sure, religion-oriented shows can and do succeed. "Touched by an  
Angel" and "7th Heaven" had long runs because they took a "feel-good"  approach 
to faith and were "generically religious," Hoover said. 
"Sister Wives" and HBO's polygamy drama "Big Love" excelled because they  
looked at a marginalized religious group whose fringe practices wouldn't  
challenge the majority's beliefs. 
Going forward, especially if "GCB" is canceled, Hoover suspects there  
could be a downturn in shows with religious themes "if the industry sees  these 
as examples of what happens when you do religion." 
Mosallam is undeterred, saying "All-American Muslim," though a ratings  
failure, still raised awareness and paved the way for more shows about  Muslims 
in the future. 
But for his part, Kenny said he will never create a show exploring  
religion again. 
"You have to be a hit out of the box, within three episodes, or you're  
canceled," he said. "There are all these hurdles that are so enormous, why  
would you want to put in front of it this hurdle of overcoming religious  
controversy?"


Radical Centrism website and  blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
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