National Post (National Edition)

How niche TV is dividing America.

- Kara alaimo

ABC made the right decision when it cancelled the sitcom Roseanne last week after the show’s eponymous star posted racist and other offensive tweets. Her hateful language has no place in our society. Yet the show’s removal is part of a larger trend of audience Balkanizat­ion that could have negative consequenc­es.

Television shows like I Love Lucy in the 1950s, All in the Family in the 1970s and Seinfeld in the 1990s unified the country by forging a common culture with shared references. Wildly popular shows like The Mary Tyler Moore Show — which depicted a working woman in the 1970s — and The Cosby Show — about a beloved African-american family in the 1980s — also had a huge impact by challengin­g attitudes toward sexism and racism. Democrats and Republican­s with very different political beliefs and lifestyles could still connect through television.

But in recent years, Americans have increasing­ly chosen their entertainm­ent along partisan lines. This developmen­t threatens to deepen the polarizati­on between liberals and conservati­ves that has accelerate­d in the age of Trump. In December, a Pew study found that the gulf between Democrats and Republican­s is the country’s biggest rift — larger than the difference­s between blacks and whites, rich and poor, young and old, and urban and rural Americans. The share of people who think there are strong or very strong conflicts between members of the two parties rose to 86 per cent. If liberals and conservati­ves watch entirely different television shows, the political divide will only get worse.

Last month, Fox removed from the air two series with themes and characters that probably had more appeal for liberals than for conservati­ves, the network’s target audience. One of these shows, Brooklyn NineNine, featured a black, gay New York City police captain fighting discrimina­tion alongside a Hispanic, bisexual character. It was cancelled outright. The announceme­nt generated widespread lamentatio­n on social media and in Hollywood and NBC later announced that it had picked up the program. Then Fox aired the final episode of New Girl, which also takes place in an urban setting with a young, diverse cast, including a black roommate and a Jewish roommate who marries an Indian-american woman. The network simultaneo­usly announced that it hadrevived­lastmansta­nding, a show that ABC had cancelled about a conservati­ve Colorado dad featuring the outspoken conservati­ve actor Tim Allen.

The growth of Netflix is exacerbati­ng this trend. The endless array of shows and movies on the streaming serviced has splintered viewers into ever smaller niches.

Another problem with this new type of audience segmentati­on is that viewers who select their entertainm­ent along purely political lines are reinforcin­g preexistin­g worldviews, rather than being challenged to understand other perspectiv­es. One of the most important functions of welltold stories is to expose us to new issues and ideas. The subtle messages such shows send and reinforce may be especially powerful because people may absorb them passively. Research shows that people are more likely to be critical of messages when they’re aware that the source is trying to persuade them. But few people view sitcoms as vehicles of indoctrina­tion and therefore think critically about their underlying messages.

If conservati­ves start tuning into Fox exclusivel­y for their entertainm­ent in the same way they do for their news, Americans of different political persuasion­s will increasing­ly inhabit different countries. In the age of “fake news” and “alternativ­e facts,” that’s a developmen­t our deeply divided nation can’t afford.

SITCOMS AS VEHICLES OF INDOCTRINA­TION. — KARA ALAIMO

 ?? ADAM ROSE / ABC VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Roseanne Barr and John Goodman in Roseanne.
ADAM ROSE / ABC VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Roseanne Barr and John Goodman in Roseanne.

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