News
The Telegraph hits out at Byron Review…again
Tim Ingham Apr 2 2008, 10:40am
Comments (15)
Broadsheet's opinion pages attack report’s proposals for the second time this year
The Daily Telegraph has published a new opinion piece that criticises recommendations contained in the Byron Review – entitled: ‘There is a majority against video games, and it is moral’.
The article, written by Jenny McCartney, suggests there is a problem with the sort of games that are being allowed to reach retail’s shelves – and the lack of action taken in the Byron Review to increase censorship.
The piece is the second Telegraph opinion article to attack the Byron Review this year. Last month, Sky Sports football pundit Jim White questioned whether the report was an empty Governmental stunt.
Jenny McCartney’s full opinion reads:
‘The report issued last week by Dr Tanya Byron on the effects of violent computer games upon young people was a typical well-meaning New Labour project: it made decent recommendations of dubious effectiveness. Dr Byron, a former television psychologist with experience of troubled children, said games should be rated by the user's age, and urged fines, even jail, for those selling them to underage children.
‘Dr Byron seems a sensible woman, and no doubt she has done her best to contain the spread of some of the more obnoxious material on offer without incurring the ire of the games lobby. But one of her remarks in an interview last week struck me as particularly, and depressingly, modern. "My review is not about making any kind of moral pronouncements," she said, "although I do think that it is important to look at the desensitisation to violence.”
‘The f-word might be everywhere now, from playgrounds to the titles of BBC documentaries, but it's the m-word that can render people really twitchy. Opinion-formers will squirm to avoid an argument that is seen to be based on moral considerations: they will grope instead for the comfort-blanket of scientific data, and "pragmatic approaches", and "natural concerns".
‘The word "moral" still has deeply unfashionable associations with Mary Whitehouse, and the "moral majority" protesting against the "tide of filth" in books and television in the US. How tame and inoffensive that tide looks now.
‘Yet the truth, surely, is that the majority of us would indeed recoil from the idea that our teenage son or daughter was upstairs playing Manhunt 2, a recently licensed game in which the protagonist, an escaper from an experimental asylum, tortures and murders other players in the most graphic ways.
‘It might well be true, as we are so often told, that most children who immerse themselves daily in violent video games will not go on to commit real murder.
For that, I suppose, we must all be grateful.
‘But the instinctive objection remains, and it is indeed rooted in morality: the sense that it is wrong for anyone, child or adult, to spend long hours electronically rehearsing the prolonged agony and detailed humiliation of other human beings for their own amusement. It is insidiously corrupting to their view of themselves and other people.
‘No one is saying that all video games are damaging, even if they depict fighting. I am not under the illusion that we can, or should, attempt to confine older children to a play world made up entirely of group hugs and communal co-operation. A significant vogue in video-games, however, is to put the player not in the role of a character who combats wrongdoing, but of the wrongdoers themselves: the mass murderer, the torturer, the street thug, drug dealer or pimp.
‘The selection of protagonist is no doubt ironic, with these strutting miscreants representing the fantasies of nerdy little middle-class boys, but when one considers the prevalence of gangs, drug dealers and teenage violence on the streets the irony doesn't seem quite so amusing.
‘The authorities have found themselves powerless to oppose the nastiest examples of such "entertainment". Consider Manhunt 2, a game so repellent that the British Board of Film Classifications sought to ban it. The BBFC is certainly no bastion of old-fashioned censorship -the Guardian recently said it was more like a "progressive young uncle" than a "strict matron".
‘But even the progressive young uncle was shocked by Manhunt 2. David Cooke, the BBFC's director, banned the game for its "unrelenting focus on stalking and brutal slaying", adding that it was distinguished by its encouragement of "sustained and cumulative casual sadism". The fact that, in America, the makers cut a castration-with-pliers scene for its Wii version gives you some idea of its content.
‘The BBFC's ruling was repeatedly overturned by the Video Appeals Committee, and the game was licensed for sale in Britain this month. It has an "18" certificate, but it would only require an 18-year-old player with younger siblings to leave it lying around at home, for it to be freely available to underage players.
‘This is a curious country, in which it is socially acceptable to be outraged by bottled water and plastic bags, but embarrassingly de trop to get worked up about sickening depictions of violence as entertainment.
‘Perhaps if more people, including teenagers, were prepared to voice moral objections to this toxic stuff, it would no longer be possible to lampoon them for caring.’











Comments
“Here we go again...”
Posted by: Thatbloke - Apr 2, 11:15am
Video games, like rock n roll isn't going to go away. Ever. So stop wasting your f**king time with this pathetic campaign to try and convince the people of Great Britain that poorly eductated children and viloent crime is in any way linked to this multi-billion industry.
Jenny, go and f**king fall under a bus. Failing that here's hoping someone caves your skull in 'Manhunt style' on your way home from the office one night. One less scare mongering a'hole would be far more benificial to this country than trying to ban GTA.
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted by: Reythor - Apr 2, 11:20am
Well said that man!
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted by: John - Apr 2, 11:26am
"Jenny, go and f**king fall under a bus. Failing that here's hoping someone caves your skull in"
Without a doubt the funniest thing i have ever read on MCV!
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted by: Brett Stocks - Apr 2, 11:43am
Those sorts of comments aren't going to help now are they?
My problem with the opinion piece is that Jenny McCartney seems to ignore the far bigger moral majority that sees through this 'pompous self serving false-majority' that bends facts and figures to fit their discourse and hegemony and sees them for what they are; fear mongers who do far more harm than good.
That's why this country is like it is these days, and in fact kids sit in and play video games more than they perhaps should, because it the likes of Ms McCartney that would have us believe that your neighbour is an axe-wielding psychopathic who will smash your skull in for asking for sugar and that kids can't go down to the park because they be swamped by paedophiles who will rape them with their eyes.
They are the instigators of the blame culture. They are the instigators of the fear culture. They are the people who have made millions of kids turn to video games to experience escapism they probably would have experienced up a tree in the local park in the past.
It's time for them to accept the damage they have done and for the good of the country, shut up.
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted: Apr 2, 11:51am
We could gas all the ****rags?
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted: Apr 2, 11:52am
The bigger problem is people not taking ratings seriously enough; you won't find people leaving films like Saw lyring around so why should people do it will Manhunt.
Too often people look to blame the creators of things rather than how it ends up in the wrong hands and parents need to take responsibility as do siblings who provide games to underage kids as they also should do with providing alcohol but on both accounts siblings don't understand that the age restrictions are there for a reason.
I've never seen anything in a game thats worse than a film yet when a film get an 18 rating people understand it means 18. how many 12 year olds will be playing gta4 when it's released? Most will probably be bought by their parents
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted: Apr 2, 11:58am
The generation of youth today is not shocked by that much anymore, just look at the web memes likes Goatse and 2 girls 1 cup as examples, and video games do not seem that bad to us. All forms of media have disgusting sides to them, and it shouldn't be a problem with correct parenting and education.
Why not give lessons on parenting to people who are expecting, rather than just letting them enforce their views on issues such as this?
Back to my first train of thought, this generation are able to deal with shocking images and concepts as we have to, since the news are always trying to shock us anyway. Not a week goes by in the news that doesn't contain articles on terrorism, war, disease, sex scandals, crazy celebrities, increasing financial trouble, murder, death. Why are these newspapers so nasty towards a medium that can help people to release their frustrations and inhibitions, rather than just absorb the scary (and stretched out) truths of the current world from a newspaper.
If they really cared about the "mental state" of the population, the newspapers would not show news stories with gory images and full descriptions of the brutality of some of the horrors that occur.
The best (perfect-world) solution would be to change every form of media to not allow "sick imagery", including news, tv, games and film.
But, there is still the internet..........
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted by: Hnbeanz - Apr 2, 1:27pm
I usually thought games reflect life itself... So maybe the rags like Daily Telegraph and The Mail should be on the governments case about releasing pedophiles, drug dealers and violent criminals early from prison...
Then maybe we could be playing games like Grand Theft Auto: Sunshine Edition.
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted by: Xavier - Apr 2, 3:19pm
If this Jenny has kids and they turn 18+, I hope they play manhunt infront of her.
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted by: Desolationstorm - Apr 2, 4:15pm
There are a lot of problems in the world and one that has always followed humanity is our need to place the blame on something distincitve. Throughout history we have always used a scapegoat to explain our societal issues without excepting that we are all to blame. The decline of desentivity to violence isn't due to any rise of new media but lies with inherrent instincts within every person. We are a very violent species and always have been. Its only been recently that we ignore that violence is inevitable in a society filled with emotions and comfort.
Fear Mongers are the worst filth they feed off fear and plant a reason for that fear within people. They come out with their skewed facts and coorelations and preach to a lot of people that do not understand what it is that they are placing their fear in.
I consistantly get into debates and arguments with older family members who only knowledge about gaming is what the news tells them or if they happen to walk by a tv at a family gathering. I try and show them that the only problem is misinformation and not the games themselves. I ask my dad whats the difference between a Cowboy running around shooting native americans or tom hanks running up a beach on Dday? We like to see violence portrayed and with each genertaion we seek it in alternative ways. Whether its been Gladiators, theater, books, radio, film, tv, comics, music, games or the internet. The only thing that changes is in the medium this in acheived. We are a speices like any other species and have bloodlust built within our genetic code.
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted by: Xavier - Apr 2, 5:24pm
Things will change but its gonna take time for people to accept video games as an art form of entertainment. We basically need a young Prime Minister who has played GTA!
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted by: Xavier - Apr 2, 5:27pm
10 - 12 years from now when I vote I am gonna make sure whoever or whichever party I vote for have played and enjoyed violent video games
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted by: Isolater - Apr 2, 7:40pm
We have a dangerous government.
When it is time to speak out we need to make our voices heard.
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted: Apr 3, 8:15am
Do newspaper journalists play games at all? I never hear of a newspaper liek the times actually praising games, only slagging them off. Surely at least one member of their staff would play a game or two?
“Re: Here we go again...”
Posted by: ADE_1977 - Apr 7, 9:49am
Correct me if i'm wrong but 18 is the legal voting age in this country, the reason being that by this time we are considered capable of making an informed decision weighing pros against cons and deciding if any given candidate is worthy of our cross on the ballot paper.
All the games mentioned in this and similar articles carry that same 18 rating so why can't we be given the facts and allowed to make our own minds up. 18 means 18 and if younger gamers are playing these titles then surely it is the fault of those adults responsible for them, not of the industry itself.