The Schism Between Faith and Punditry by L. Brent Bozell III August
20, 1997
About three years ago I was visiting with some executives
from NBC Entertainment. Asked why their network wasn't airing any family drama
series, one vice president gave me this extraordinary explanation: "Ever
since Michael Landon died, we just can't make that format work." Several
months later, CBS launched "Touched By an Angel." Like Landon's
"Highway to Heaven," it featured an angel in the lead role, yet the
new series was far more spiritual in nature, and ultimately far more
successful in the ratings.
Some folks just don't get it. They just don't understand
what the public wants - and doesn't want.
Take Howard Rosenberg, TV columnist for the Los Angeles
Times, whose August 6 piece dealt with ABC's fall entry "Nothing
Sacred," which has drawn considerable fire from Catholics and
non-Catholics. Rosenberg explains that in the pilot episode the protagonist, a
young priest named Father Ray, "seriously question[s] the existence of
God, [is] tempted by an old flame... [and] counsel[s] an unmarried woman who
is contemplating ending her pregnancy to follow her own conscience instead of
the church's stricture against abortion. In addition, a nun associated with
[Ray's] inner-city parish is adamant about God['s] being female."
Rosenberg writes that "one can see where some
Catholics... would be troubled by 'Nothing Sacred,' if not outraged." He
also notes "television's near half-century of puking on the pious by
either ignoring or denigrating organized religion in entertainment
programs." All of this is true, and gives the reader a fairly good
understanding why "Nothing Sacred" is yet another example of
Disney/ABC's ongoing anti-religious bigotry. Except for one thing. Rosenberg
doesn't agree. He's too busy asserting that Father Ray "may turn
out to be prime time's most interesting, thoughtful and complex new character,
and 'Nothing Sacred' its most challenging new series." In the eyes of the
church, Father Ray's pro-choice message is heretical, but, thinks Rosenberg,
Ray's "attitudes and behavior, although risky for a priest hoping to keep
his parish, seem pretty reasonable to me." Forget that pious tripe about
the sanctity of the priesthood, and that a man called to service by Our Lord
undertakes a responsibility far more profound than anything Rosenberg (or I)
could ever imagine. Rosenberg sees it another way: "The crises [Ray]
faces are a dramatic turn-on." Rosenberg's apologia is absurd. He thinks
Catholics should take solace in the fact that "'Nothing Sacred' is
neither as combative or as polemical in its pilot as 'Stop the Church'" -
the 1991 PBS documentary about an ACT UP protest during Mass at St. Patrick's
Cathedral. Even more inanely, he argues that given the presence of
"Touched By an Angel" (which he belittles as "driven by
schmaltzy reverence") and other traditional faith-based series,
"prime time's house of worship [is] large... enough to accommodate a
priest" like Father Ray, even if the Father Rays of Hollywood are created
to offend worshipers.
Then there's Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly magazine,
who gives the WB network's "7th Heaven," centering this time on a
Protestant minister and his family, a B grade. Some of Tucker's reasons for
enjoying this wholesome series, however, betray the same naivete regarding
religion. "On '7th,'" he writes, "moral lessons are taught
regularly but without self-righteousness or cant; this is one of the rare
shows in which religious beliefs are shown to be a part of a family's everyday
approach to life rather than a set of functions. Wasn't that the beauty of
"The Wizard of Oz," or "Miracle on 34th Street"? There may
be much truth to what Weinraub writes. But rather than accept it, Hollywood
and the public should dedicate themselves to changing it.
Voice Your Opinion!
Write to Brent Bozell
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