Sex Watch? Uncensored Breast Exams Provide Public Service — And Ratings


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bare.breasts.dcA DC local news station, WJLA, has gotten into hot water in some quarters for airing a bare-breasted, unpixelated guide to breast self-exams. Critics say it’s a salacious ratings ploy, but defenders say it’s a valuable public service. Could it be a little bit of both?

The segment has found a formidable defender in Elizabeth Edwards, who has stage IV breast cancer and who criticizes her lack of breast health education for the unchecked progression of the disease early on (at the 2:00 mark in the Dr. Nancy clip below):

“We need to desensitize people about some things. This is the cancer most likely to strike women… For us to be squeamish about showing how it is we stop the attack on our individual bodies, I think, is foolhardy. We need to be prepared.”

But is a beneficial public health announcement tarnished if the local news station that runs it plays up its salacious elements (cf. the alarming red band warning on the video below; the Skinemax-ish synth soundtrack and electric pink background with which the series opens up) and tellingly holds off on running it until the beginning of Nielsen’s November sweeps, which run from October 29th to November 25th this year?

WJLA’s general manager Bill Lord frankly told The Washington Post that ratings were a factor in the station’s programming decisions: “‘People will say we’re doing it just for ratings,’ he said. ‘But we’re a commercial television station — we’re trying to get people to watch us. Yes, this is an attention-getting story, but it’s also an important story.’”

Speaking on Dr. Nancy, Dr. Robert Schenk made the point that even though the series and the buildup to it “clearly” seemed engineered to bolster WJLA’s ratings, that might not be such a bad thing: it would only ensure that a valuable piece of public health education would reach a bigger audience.

WJLA’s publicity and broadcast strategy is a free-market solution to a public health problem, but it’s got its issues. As compared with, say, Katie Couric’s on-air colonoscopy in 2002, which also drew big audiences, the station’s self-interest shines through a little too brightly. What’s worse, by playing off the ’salaciousness’ of their subject matter, they inflame the social taboos that made it possible for a local TV network to get national attention for airing an uncensored breast exam.

Here’s a clip from the WJLA series in question (NSFW?):



And here’s the Dr. Nancy segment (via TownHall)



(h/t Doug Ross via Technorati)

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3 comments

  • sarainitaly sarainitaly says:

    it is an important health message, and I can’t believe people got all weirded out over it. Boobs schmoobs. They are on tv in yogurt commercials in Italy all the time. Yogurt, bath wash, shampoo….

    This woman has smaller breasts than half the men in America, who proudly walk around sans shirt.

  • Keeva Keeva says:

    This is an essential health message and needs to be treated as such. For some inexplicable reason, the mere sight of a bare female breast seems to send all of these tough talking people into a tizzy. Just look at how it is presented here – as a “sex watch” item. Nonsense.

    Nothing, and I mean nothing, is less than a self-exam except a mammogram.

    Get over it folks. Women are dying every day because of the lack of realistic and usable public education.

  • Nachi Nachi says:

    God forbid such evil acts take place. We must filter all of our hatreds and personal hangups thru what we imagine to be…Jesus!! Yup. A human female breast!??! Ughhhh. With our naughty parts all engorged and tingling, how can we ever hope to conquer the Forces of Evil throughout the Middle East. The latter be our…destiny.

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