Mediawatch-uk
Mediawatch-uk | |
---|---|
Mediawatch-uk logo as of 2012 | |
Motto | Campaigning for family values in the media |
Formation | 1965 |
Legal status | Non-profit organisation |
Purpose/focus | Pressure group |
Region served | United Kingdom |
Director | Vivienne Pattison |
Website | www.mediawatchuk.org.uk |
Mediawatch-uk, formerly known as the National Viewers' and Listeners' Association (NVALA or NVLA), is a pressure group in the United Kingdom, which campaigns against the publication and broadcast of media content that it views as harmful and offensive, such as violence, profanity, sex, homosexuality and blasphemy.
The NVALA was founded in 1965 by Mary Whitehouse to succeed the earlier 'Clean-UP TV' campaign, which Whitehouse co-founded early in the previous year. Mrs Whitehouse remained as the group's leader until 1994, when she was succeeded by John Beyer. NVALA changed its name to the current mediawatch-uk in 2001. Beyer resigned his post in July 2009; the current director is Vivienne Pattison.[1]
Mediawatch-uk monitors broadcast output, publishes reports about programme content and responds to Government and other consultations on broadcasting policy, as well as arguing for parliamentary accountability for broadcasters and greater public involvement in broadcasting policy issues. The organisation is mainly concerned with taste and decency issues [2] and ensuring that the broadcasting codes and guidelines are complied with.
Campaigns
Pornography
Along with around 400 others Mediawatch-UK responded to a Home Office consultation concerning extreme pornography in December 2005. In the Mediawatch-UK response[3] it was suggested that the possession of allegedly "hard-core" pornography, as currently classified R18 by the British Board of Film Classification and, therefore, legally sold in high street sex shops (R18 classification), should be included in the range of extreme pornography that is the subject of the Home Office consultation. It is proposed that possession of extreme material would become a criminal offence punishable by up to three years in prison. Mediawatch-UK are campaigning for the law on possession "to include a much wider range of pornographic imagery, such as R18 material".
Mediawatch-UK also responded to a Home Office consultation on the regulation of R18 videos, on a Department of Culture Media and Sport consultation on the future of the BBC, on the Office of Communications' Broadcasting Code and its Draft Annual Plan for 2006/7, on a House of Lords consultation on Religious Offences and much more.
In January 2012, Mediawatch-uk issued a condemnation of the outcome of the R v Peacock court case. The Metropolitan Police had accused the defendant, Michael Peacock, of selling gay BDSM pornographic DVDs which had the ability to "deprave and corrupt" the viewer, contravening the Obscene Publications Act 1959, but he was acquitted by a jury. Vivienne Pattison claimed that the case "illustrates the problem" with the law as it stood, noting that "There is not a list which says what is obscene and what is not. It makes it incredibly difficult to get a conviction on that". In response to the events of the trial she argued that while "As a society we are moving to a place where porn is considered as kind of fun between consenting adults," she felt that this was problematic because in her opinion "porn is damaging."[4]
Violence
Mediawatch-UK criticised the Wii game MadWorld, stating that it was the "most violent video game ever to launch on the family-friendly Wii". John Beyer, director, stated that "This game sounds very unsavoury. I hope the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) will view this with concern and decide it should not be granted a classification. Without that it cannot be marketed in Britain. What the rest of world does is up to them. We need to ensure that modern and civilised values take priority rather than killing and maiming people. It seems a shame that the game's manufacturer have decided to exclusively release this game on the Wii. I believe it will spoil the family fun image of the Wii." But MadWorld's publisher Sega stated that "MadWorld pushes the envelope with its extreme content but takes a step away from the dark and serious nature of most mature games." Nintendo also responded, saying that their Wii console "appeals to a wide range of audiences from children and teenagers to adult and senior citizens, anyone from 5 - 95, as such there is a wide range of content for all ages and tastes available. MadWorld will be suitably age rated through the appropriate legal channels and thus only available to an audience above the age rating it is given." and that "the game is not made by Nintendo but by Sega."[5]
See also
- Anti-pornography movement
- Censorship
- Pornography
References
- ↑ Mediawatch-UK official website. Accessed 5 June 2013
- ↑ http://www.mediawatchuk.org.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=209&Itemid=143
- ↑ http://www.mediawatchuk.org.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=238&Itemid=100
- ↑ "Not guilty verdict in DVD obscenity trial". BBC. 6 January 2012. Retrieved 7 January 2012.
- ↑ "Parents horrified as most violent video game ever to launch on 'family friendly' Wii". Daily Mail (London).