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Talking Hairdos and the Ten Commandments
Breakpoint ^ | 10/28/2203 | Charles Colson

Posted on 10/28/2003 1:27:42 PM PST by Warhammer

Talking Hairdos and the Ten Commandments The Warnings of Neil Postman

BreakPoint with Charles Colson

October 28, 2003

A few weeks ago, one of the most astute media critics of our age, Neil Postman, died at the age of 72. In remembering the long-time New York University professor, the press described Postman’s warnings about the dangers of mass communication.

In his devastating critique of television, titled Amusing Ourselves to Death, Postman declared that television turns even the most tragic news into mere entertainment, delivered by “talking hairdos.”

Postman’s book was reviewed in all the right places, and it has been around for some time—but not once did we learn where Postman got his ideas. It turns out he got them from the Bible.

Postman’s thesis is that different media encourage different ways of thinking. The printed word requires sustained attention, logical analysis, and an active ima gination. But television, with its fast-moving images, encourages a short attention span, disjointed thinking, and purely emotional responses.

Postman says he first discovered the connection between media and thinking in the Bible when, as a young man, he was struck by the Old Testament words: “You shall not make for yourself a graven image.” Postman says he realized that the idea of a universal deity cannot be expressed in images, but only in words.

As he put it, “The God of the Jews was to exist in the Word and through the Word, an unprecedented conception requiring the highest order of abstract thinking.” This is the God Christians worship today—a God known principally through His Word and incarnate.

Many religions have a scripture, of course. Yet most teach that the way to contact the divine is through mystical visions, emotional experiences, or Eastern-style meditation. Judaic Christianity insists on the primacy of language.

Gene Edward Veith, in his book Reading Between the Lines, explains why: The heart of our religion is a relationship with God—and relationships thrive on communication. We can’t know people intimately by merely being in their presence, according to Veith. It takes conversation to share thoughts and personalities.

Christians are meant to have an ongoing conversation with God. He addresses us in the language of Scripture, and we address Him through the language of prayer.

This emphasis on the Word has had a deep impact on Western culture. Reading was once confined to the elite. But it was the Reformation that first aimed at universal literacy, so that the Bible could be read by every person.

Today’s missionaries are similarly concerned with literacy. In nonliterate societies, they develop a written form of the native language and teach people to read the Bible.

They can then go on, of course, to read about anything—sanitation, health care, democracy—things that often transform their culture, much as the Reformation transformed Western culture.

Here in the West we are in danger of coming full circle: The visual media may ultimately undermine literacy. If that happens, can biblical faith still flourish?

Neil Postman’s writings remind Christians of the dangers of television. We need to learn when to turn it off lest we lose our historical reputation as the “people of the book.”

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

For further reading:

“Neil Postman, University Professor of Media Ecology, dies at 72 ,” New York University, 10 October 2003 .

Jonathan Zimmerman, “ Postman as Prophet ,” New York Post, 12 October 2003 .

Peter Kavanagh, “ An echoing silence in his wake ,” Globe and Mail (Toronto), 11 October 2003 , R9.

Gene Edward Veith, “ Flex the brain ,” World, 1 November 2003 .

Jay Rosen, “ Neil Postman: A civilized man in a century of barbarism ,” Salon, 10 October 2003 . (Subscription required, or watch an advertisement to obtain a one-day pass.)

Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death (Viking Press, 1986).

Neil Postman, The Disappearance of Childhood (Vintage, 1994).

Gene Edward Veith, Reading between the Lines (Crossway, 1990).

Neil Postman, “ Informing Ourselves to Death ,” speech given at a meeting of the German Informatics Society on October 11, 1990 .

Read more writings by Postman .

BreakPoint Commentary No. 030804, “ Our Shrinking Culture .”

C. John Sommerville, How the News Makes Us Dumb (InterVarsity, 1999).

Thomas Hibbs, Shows about Nothing (Spence, 1999).


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: amusingourselves; bible; bookreview; charlescolson; media; neilpostman; tv
"Talking Hairdos" pretty much sums up TV news today.
1 posted on 10/28/2003 1:27:42 PM PST by Warhammer
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To: Warhammer
You know, a century ago it was considered appropriate for little ones as young as five years old to read the Bible.

Early reading was essential and ingrained. Being a responsible thinker meant everything.

Today's early training is little more than day-care, and television news is little more than emotional pabulum.

2 posted on 10/28/2003 2:14:21 PM PST by b9
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To: Warhammer
Postman had it right. Liberal spouse has on CNN a fair amount of time. About two days ago, I caught a charming and regular anchor woman. I think her first name Caroline. She has the most fetching smile coupled with incredible dimples. Her eyes even laugh- good for her, she is doing well in a career.

Now down to the nitty gritty. Talking of the tragic case of Lacy Peterson she commented on the up coming case. I know that many people are devasted by this awful case. The families , friends, and a destroyed husband. Quoth she, bubbling over about the case. It should be fun.

Thank heaven my spouse accuses me of having no sense of humour( on other subjects,I should add.

3 posted on 10/28/2003 2:22:29 PM PST by Peter Libra
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To: Peter Libra
"It would mean that in order to be properly informed they would have to stop skating over the surface of issues such as these, letting the anchor people do all the heavy lifting, and start doing their own thinking. But thinking can be kind of like work. Besides, a lot of people just don't quite have the hang of it. The raw material required to do one's own thinking consists of facts gathered from a wide variety of sources, not just the one that happens to materialize when the TV set is switched on."

"The "facts" presented by the mass media are typically folded into a smarmy batter of tendentious fiction calculated to elicit a response from the viewer that will be useful in advancing the hidden agenda which the presstitutes are paid to promote. The viewer, who does not comprehend that he or she is being manipulated responds emotionally, as though watching a soap opera or a TV series. After all, most people have a lot more experience responding emotionally to TV plots than they have at thinking critically and analytically. The script writer manipulates the emotions of the audience who respond in a predictable fashion. The viewers are being conditioned to react in a certain way. The leap from the semi-conscious emotional response evoked by TV "entertainment" to the conditioned response elicited by the politically motivated propaganda inserted into "news" presentations is a short one."

THE FACE IN THE MIRROR

"The black-shirted, brown-shirted and red-banner-waving totalitarians of the twentieth century missed the point on a grand scale. All that ... rough stuff --- is really unnecessary in building a totalitarian state. In fact, if overdone, it tends to give the game away."

4 posted on 10/28/2003 2:32:51 PM PST by f.Christian (evolution vs intelligent design ... science3000 ... designeduniverse.com --- * architecture * !)
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To: f.Christian
Thanks for the post. On a gloomy onset of the end of fall in Great Lakes country, I have something to wile away the evening. This is to read carefully your "rough stuff"- one always can learn something in this world. Cheers.
5 posted on 10/28/2003 2:45:01 PM PST by Peter Libra
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To: Peter Libra
I told a man going Back to England yesterday ... " tell tony blair I luv him ' --- he replied - you're the only one !



What must it have been like for the English and the Germans to endure the daily bombings of WWII - hitler - nazis ?

Veterans day pretty soon !
6 posted on 10/28/2003 3:00:19 PM PST by f.Christian (evolution vs intelligent design ... science3000 ... designeduniverse.com --- * architecture * !)
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To: Warhammer
LOL Talk about the pot calling the kettle black.
I would remind Mr Colson of the Preaching Hairdos of
evangelical ripoff artists; Swaggart, Bakker, Tilton and many
more. There are charlatans, you might say, of biblical
proportions out there and they don't work for CBS.
7 posted on 10/28/2003 6:04:54 PM PST by gcruse (http://gcruse.typepad.com/)
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