WARNING: Graphic
Content!!!
Do NOT push play if you don't want to see the explicit video!!!
Don't
have active x controls?
Download the clip
(right click and choose "save target as"
Law and Order: SVU on NBC
The ominous voice at the
beginning of each episode of NBC’s Law and Order: SVU (Tuesdays, 10:00
p.m. ET) proclaims, “In the criminal justice system, sexually-based offenses are
considered especially heinous. In New York City, the dedicated detectives who
investigate these vicious felonies are members of an elite squad known as the
Special Victims Unit. These are their stories.” After such an introduction,
one would expect the show to investigate some pretty reprehensible acts of
depravity. And the February 17th episode supplied enough of it to be
named Worst TV Show of the Week.
The episode begins in the
dressing room of a strip club. An angry stripper, Sapphire, confronts a girl
named, Misty, while scantily clad dancers surround them:
SAPPHIRE: “Cute top, Misty.”
MISTY: “Thanks.”
SAPPHIRE: “That's why I bought it! Skank!”
MISTY: “Get off me, you crazy bitch!”
Sapphire rips the top off Misty, who covers her naked breasts
with her hands. Sapphire storms out to the parking lot when an injured man
emerges from the darkness with blood smeared all over his crotch. Once he’s
admitted into the hospital the doctor explains his injuries: “He was beaten in
the crotch so badly his scrotum ruptured. He also has deep lacerations to his
shoulders and lower back, and I found scratch marks on his penis.” He also had
traces of saliva on his penis and a broken nail was found on his person. Chief
Cragen performs some SVU math and proclaims, “I’m no expert, but for me,
fellatio plus fake fingernail equals exotic dancer.” Detectives go to the strip
club to interview the strippers. Half-naked women sashay and gyrate in front of
the camera while others slide up and down on stripper poles. When a detective
asks Misty if she had to beat off rowdy customers recently, she squeezes her
breasts and proclaims, “These are for pleasure, not pain.” Misty eventually
admits that she performed fellatio on the victim, but explains that she is
actually a doctoral candidate writing an ethnography of sex-workers for a book
she plans to publish. She actually recorded her encounter with the victim on a
digital recorder. When the detectives play it back, moans and sexually explicit
dialogue are heard.
Misty, however, does not remain the main suspect for long.
Instead, the victim’s transgendered, thirteen-year-old son (who lives as a girl
named Haley) becomes the main suspect. The ensuing investigation takes its toll
on the troubled adolescent. He slits his wrists, but survives the suicide
attempt.
As it turns out, Haley’s overly-sympathetic female guidance
counselor, Jackie, attacked Haley’s father for refusing to allow Haley to
receive hormone blockers to prevent his male characteristics from maturing. On
the witness stand, Jackie breaks down and admits that she was born a man. Her
tearful, heart-wrenching testimony reveals that she survived a brutal hate-crime
in her youth:
JACKIE: “I was leaving a bar, and three men grabbed me.
They called me a freak. They dragged me into a vacant lot, and they pulled up
my skirt. And one of them took out a knife and he said, ‘If you want to be a
woman so badly, I’ll make you one.’ And he cut me.”
This show claims to expose the heinousness of sexual
violence; in fact, however, it really exploits sexual violence, titillating the
audience with strippers and explicit discussions of sex. The graphic
descriptions of violence, though, add a perverse layer to the show. For this
disturbing combination of sex and violence, Law and Order: SVU has been
named Worst TV Show of the Week.
Parents Television Council,
www.parentstv.org, PTC,
Clean Up TV Now, Because our children are watching, The
nation's most influential advocacy organization, Protecting
children against sex, violence and profanity in
entertainment, Parents Television Council Seal of Approval,
and Family Guide to Prime Time Television
are trademarks of the Parents Television Council.