You'll often hear them referred to as "the walking dead". In fact, in 2010 a wildly popular show called The Walking Dead appeared on television, and this past October it premiered for its third season. According to Entertainment Weekly,
"[The 2012] premiere will probably be remembered as the hour that set a record for zombie killing. How many was that? Seventy? Eighty? After last season’s fan complaint of too much farm chatting and not enough zombie killing, the third season premiere’s orgy of kill-shots surely satisfied fan blood lust."Can I be honest, that last sentence really really really concerns me. Not necessarily because our culture has this kind of thought toward what is considered entertainment, but because there are a LOT in the Church who are ingesting this show as a regular part of their viewing diet. Recently I wrote a post called "Time to Diet?" that challenges us as Christ followers to have different standards than the world when it comes to what we are "feeding on" via our eyes and our ears.
Even the creators of the show are looking for ways to push the boundaries of what is acceptable on television. I came across an interview on a site aptly called bloody-disgusting.com where The Walking Dead creator Frank Darabont and executive producer Gale Ann Hurd were asked a number of questions about their show. This statement left me chilled to the bone:
"When we were cutting the show together I remember turning to Gale going ‘wow look, we killed a seven-year-old in the first scene. It is kind of our mission statement, isn’t it? It kind of like really sets the tone. It clues the audience in, ‘if you don’t dig this kind of stuff, you really should just tune out now. But if you do think this is intriguing, then stick around’, you know?"Their "mission statement" revolves around pride in killing a seven-year-old? I don't "dig this kind of stuff", so you can be assured that I won't be tuning in anytime soon.
Psalm 101:3--"I will refuse to look at anything vile and vulgar."
Philippians 4:8--"Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever ispure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things."
Great post--especially the quotes which help us to understand that what we view truly is the intention of the creators. Only "problem" with the post is that it causes me to start to evaluate my own viewing habits. You're going to hit some nerves with this one...including my own. -Travis
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