Monday, October 15, 2007

Iranian Television

You gotta be kidding me, right?

They simply can't have these programs, not after everything I've been told about the mindless savages.

Right?

"Slightly Off Religious Path, Iranian TV Finds Viewers" by NAZILA FATHI

TEHRAN, Oct. 15 — Iran is bending its religious restrictions on television series in an effort to attract more of the country’s audience to state-run television.

State TV, which had a monopoly on viewership until satellite channels began to draw more viewers beginning in the early 1990s, has been trying to win back its audience for several years. One result: a spate of mini-series that depict love stories between characters who are not necessarily pious, and that allow women to show more of their hair — both of which have been considered un-Islamic.

[I really get sick of the lies we are told about our 'enemies."

Don't you, too, reader?]


Analysts say the new programs are part of the government’s bid to use television as a more effective instrument to shape public opinion. Most series still have clear political messages, though they are conveyed with much more subtlety than in the past.

[Awwww, that never works!

Take it from a mind-numbed American consumer of tv.

I mean, we all know the Iraqis had weapons and was trying to make a nuke.

We all know that Saddam harbored al-Qaeda, and was in on 9/11.

We all know that Iran wants a bomb, and that Ahmadinejad wants to wipe Israel of the face of the map.

So, as you can see, reader, tv has absolutely no effect on opinion.

Otherwise, I would believe the MSM and think we are losing in Iraq and that the surge is a failure.

I mean, heck, they just told us today that the U.S. has defeated "Al-CIA-Duh" in Iraq, so we can start coming home, right?

No? WTF?


They say the government appears to have realized that political programs, such as those showing confessions extracted from democracy advocates in prison, have not achieved its goal of building domestic unity at a time when the country is under intense international pressure for its nuclear program.

[That's why you got to run stories about American Idols and Britany Spears, Iranians.

Americans LOVE THAT SHIT, and look how unified and smart we are!]


“They have learned that if they want their programs to be effective, they should send the message indirectly,” said Abol-Hassan Mokhtabad, a journalist and news media expert. He added that “it is very natural” that the government would “pursue its political goals through them, too.”

One popular mini-series, called “Zero Degree Turn,” depicts the Iranian Embassy in Paris during World War II, when employees forged Iranian passports for European Jews to flee to Iran. The series is built around a love story between an Iranian-Palestinian man and a Jewish Frenchwoman he helps escape to Iran.

[You are KIDDING ME, right? Your shittin' me, right?

Iran has a SOAP OPERA based on the Holocaust?

Oh, man, am I sick of being lied to!]


Scenes of terrified Jewish men, women and children being loaded into trucks by Nazis are arousing feelings of sympathy for Jews
at a time when President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has denied the Holocaust.

[Yeah, except he DOES NOT DENY IT, he just questions the numbers.

But that's what I expect from the Times.

Can't be decent for one second to a Zionist enemy, can ya?]


But the series has a more subtle message: that there is a difference between Jews and Zionists. One Jewish character, the uncle of the Frenchwoman who escapes to Iran, is depicted as brutal and manipulative. He has ties to Israel.

[Once again, the Iranians are correct. There IS a difference!]

State-run television hired a prominent director, Hassan Fatthi, who shot the scenes, many in Paris and Budapest, in lavish settings. Women appear without Iran’s obligatory head scarf and the ankle-length Islamic coat, in a nod to life in Europe in the 1940s.

Another series, “The Forbidden Fruit,” is about the platonic love between a religious married man in his 70s and a beautiful woman in her 20s. Although the series has angered many women in Iran for the way the man treats his wife, the love story has attracted a large audience.

Movies, too, have been permitted to cross political red lines. Several recent films produced by people with links to the government have mocked revolutionary and religious values.

A popular war comedy that came out this year called “Those Expelled” shows how people from different segments of society defended Iran during the 1980-1988 war with Iraq.

In the past, almost all war movies showed those who fought as chaste and religious.

The main character, Majid Suzuki, is a criminal who volunteers to fight in the war to prove to the woman he loves that he is a changed man.

Majid is rejected as an unworthy soldier by ardent revolutionaries who accuse him and his friends of being corrupt. In the end, Majid and his best friend are killed in a bloody scene where they fight Iraqi soldiers. A religious character, Hajji Saleh, survives by hiding behind him.

“I loved it because it made fun of the people who are in power and showed their true face, like Hajji Saleh,” said Reza Mohammad-panah, 25, a driver in Tehran. Hajji is a title for those who make the annual pilgrimage to Mecca.

At one point, Majid’s friend yells at the commander: “What are you proud of? Your bushy beard?” referring to the beard that has been a symbol of being an Islamic revolutionary. “It is not the beard, it is your roots that counts,” he adds.

[This is the censored, single-minded, restrictive television the Iranians get?

It is better than the shit schedule on Amerika's channels every night!]


Some Iranians say they believe that the movie received government backing because it could stir sentiment for war at a time when tensions over a possible conflict with the United States are rising. It was one of the rare films that was endorsed by the minister of culture and Islamic guidance, Hossein Saffar Harandi.

Despite criticism by hard-liners who said the movie made fun of revolutionary values, state-run television has promised to broadcast it.

It is difficult to gauge how effective the government’s new strategy is, though the television mini-series have large audiences, and “Those Expelled” took in more than $270 million.

“People usually have their own understanding of movies,” said Ali Moalem, a director and film critic. “‘Those Expelled’ wanted to show that war is cool and everyone can fight. But people watched it as a comedy and ignored that message.”

[Iranians think independently, too?!?! WTF?!

Next thing you know, they'll be telling me the Iranians only want nuclear power]