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Family Guy
Creator Seth MacFarlane Can't See His Own Hate
By Wesley J. Smith
Editor's note. This appears
today on Wesley's excellent blog,
http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/secondhandsmoke/
A few weeks ago, I castigated the
creators of the mega crude Family Guy for using the V-word to
make fun of Terri Schiavo. Using the word "vegetable" to
describe anything but carrots or squash–in other words, to
describe any human being–is hateful and intended to dehumanize
them, strip them of their intrinsic dignity, and in some hands,
open them up for instrumental use as a mere natural
resource–just as we did to American slaves.
Last night, Family Guy's creator,
Seth MacFarlane was on Larry King and the program allowed
Terri's brother, Bobby Schindler, to send in a question. From
the transcript:
KING: Seth MacFarlane's our
guest. His show provoked an outcry with a musical about the late
Terri Schiavo. We reached out to them today and Terri's brother
Bobby had this question for you. "How do you justify using the
term vegetable to describe any human being when its only
intention is to denigrate and dehumanize just like the "N"
word?"
MACFARLANE: My first response
would be it's not a human being, it is a cartoon. But you know,
I think -- this is -- this was a touchy area because the idea
was, keep in mind, this is a play within a play. And this is an
instance where you see the Griffin family in the audience
reacting and in a way that is -- they themselves are a little
put off and we have done this a few times on the show in which
there's something that's done in extreme -- you know, one could
argue questionable taste but you got to have somebody there
who's reacting to that in a negative way and that's something
that we sort of tried to include with Brian and Chris sitting in
the audience reacting wide eyed at this show. It is kids putting
on a play. You know, whether the -- whether that term is
denigrating is for the viewer to judge.
MacFarlane's elliptical answer
indicates to me that he has never considered the question. He
wasn't asked about the show, he was asked about the epithet.
Moreover, the scene did not have people appalled: The audience
of the supposed play laughed uproariously when, "Terri" having
been called a V, responded, "We hate vegetables!" Moreover, if
the show had the kids put on an old fashioned minstrel show that
used the N-word–which he almost certainly would never do, and if
he did, it is unlikely it would ever be aired–would he ever just
reply that the denigrating nature of the word is "for the viewer
to judge?" Not on a bet.
Some concerted consciousness
raising is clearly required. We have to help people understand
that using the V-word to describe people with serious cognitive
disabilities is as hateful and dehumanizing to them as using the
N-word is to people of color, the F-word to gays, or the C-to
women. The time has come to retire it from common and acceptable
usage, just as we have (or are doing) with the others. |