CensoredAlso
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2002
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Yeah I remember Todd, he was really popular. I think they did a good job making his character's journey a complex one, and not too contrived or objectionable. Maybe it wasn't realistic, but again, I don't think it's always a story's job to be realistic, but just to get an important message about morality across through the characters.Then there's one of the show's all-time most controversial villains, Todd Manning. His main storyline when he was brought on was as the leader of a vicious college gang-rape of Marty Saybrooke. Ordinarily, this would be a character beyond redemption, but they took full advantage of the kind of complexity the serial drama format has and we saw his redemption take place very slowly over a matter of years. He did remain a villain capable of many things, but he also carried the guilt over his rape and that was the type of thing he would never do again. (Unfortunately, in the last couple of years, the show's undone lots of his careful redemption and had him go BSC and tried to make him a romantic lead being fought over by people who should know better than to see him as a prize when he's never fully paid for his more recent deplorable acts...but at least for a good decade and a half, it was a well-done complex storyline)
Yeah see that's the thing. There are always some people who are either disturbed or ignorant and take what they read in a book or see on TV too seriously. But it's likely that they would have these problems regardless of what entertainment they watched. And obviously the great majority of human beings are able to distinguish between real life and fiction. Instead of attacking the media, we should be addressing the psychological issues of the humans who watch it.A person would have to be pretty disconnected from reality to make life decisions like that based on fairy tales.