Glenn Beck from CNN is in the middle a laughingly amateur 4-part series called “Porn: America’s Addiction.” (Those who visit the series’ website are subject to Glenn Beck’s knowing gaze and prominent finger pointed accusingly at the visitor. Note the wedding ring and air of condescension—who does this guy think he is?)
Three installments have aired so far, and the next airs tonight. The first three installments cover tired territory: porn is a big industry and some people get addicted to porn. Yawn. Why is it that every news story or feature about porn is identical? The CNN reports fall right in step with just about every other mainstream media coverage of porn for the last 5 years:
First Glenn Beck bemoans the success of the industry: “Unfortunately, business is good.” Yeah, it sure is a shame that an industry catering to the high demands of American consumers is able to sustain itself and turn a profit.
The same old statistics are tossed in: “Porn is a $57 billion industry worldwide; in the US, it grosses $12 billion.” To give a sense of scope the writer/reporter notes that in the US, porn profits dwarf those of pro football, baseball, and basketball—combined! (This statistic always irked me; in it, I sense an implied judgment that somehow pro sports are a wholesome, more preferable pastime for Americans when in fact only a limited—and male—demographic tends to be interested in sports, and furthermore sports figures have been known to commit violent and sexual crimes worse than anything found in your average, consensual porn movie.)
Then the technological dimension is noted—porn drives technological innovation. Would the Internet exist without porn? Who knows?
There is always a cautionary tale about children finding porn online. The Glenn Beck story posts that the “average” (how could anyone know?) age kids these days first see porn online is 11 years old. The horror! This seems awfully old to me. Furthermore, it’s not like the kids were immune to porn before the Internet came along—most of my friends (pretty much the last generations to remember a time before the internet) came across a porn magazine or image at a young age, even without the Internet. True, the Internet makes it easy to find porn, but so many parents and school personnel are frenzied in their vigilant monitoring of kids’ use of the Internet that I think the risk is largely mitigated. (What’s more, I’m not even convinced it’s a bad thing for a kid to stumble across a little online porn, but that’s a whole other debate.)
Something I found interesting was that Beck interviewed the current male operator of Danni’s Hard Drive, without mentioning the site’s illustrious roots.
As some of you may know, Danni’s Hard Drive was one of the pioneering porn sites of the newly-created Internet in the eraly-mid '90s. Most interestingly, its founder is a woman, Danni Ashe, who taught herself HTML and launched a site out of the early-Internet newsgroups she’d been frequenting. Needless to say, her site was a huge success and it has become legendary as the archetypal example of women-driven porn in the Digital Age.
But Glenn Beck didn’t seem to find any of this worth mentioning. He apparently prefers to offer viewers the same tired porn run-around.