To Catch a Predator

12/08/07

Permalink 05:47:40 am, by Roulette Email , 537 words, 61 views   English (US)
Categories: Teh Tubes

To Catch a Predator

To catch a predator is a set of 'investigative reports' run by NBC Dateline. Basically, they film an incident where a sting operation is run on someone online in the hopes of catching pedophiles trying to find kids to have sex with. In a sad statement on our society, they seem to be pretty successful.

All and all, a noble idea. Fewer people out there trying to molest children is a good thing. Bravo, bonus points, and kudos.

But you know what, the show is just wrong, in my opinion.

Something in my brain has a hard time wrapping my head around turning this sort of police activity (the people involved are not police for the most part) into a spectator sport. In many ways, this is worse than shows like Cops because of it's focus on the sexuality of the 'minors'. Once they come and get the guy, they go through a Q&A section on camera where they review what they guy said online. They make sure to point out the fairly graphic (for broadcast TV) descriptions of sexual activities and positions.

It's supposed to come off as forcing the predator to admit to his crime, but it seems overly focused on the naughty bits to me. While I'm sure this is good for ratings, I find it kind of skeevy even if the 'children' involved are adults posing as jail bait.

To be honest, I think the entire show is a bit dodgy. First, they set it up to bring the guy in. Some people have gone so far as to say their methodology is borderline entrapment, but without the full transcripts, it's impossible to tell. They guy shows up, they bring him into the house, and they interview this guy. His lawyer isn't there. Face isn't blurred (at least not in the few segments I've seen parts of). I don't even know if he's been officially arrested or read his rights at this point. But there he is right there on camera. Anything he says will damn sure be used against him. It's damn sure not softball questions.

The problem is that all of this occurs outside of the justice system. The predator is thrown in front of public opinion long before the court system has finished with them. They present all of the evidence in a very one-sided manner. It may be true, but it's certainly not part of a fair justice system.

Is the overall goal good? Sure. I just don't think catching pedophiles should be used to boost commercial sales. I think the show is tasteless, crass, and asinine. It peddles it's wares to the lowest portion of the viewers psyche and then tries to pretend as if it's doing it for lofty noble reasons. It's not. It's all about ratings. The presentation of the segment and it's focus on the lewd and vulgar commentary drives that point home for me. Police work just shouldn't be a spectacle presented to viewers.

To be fair, most of these points are true of Cops and similar crime documentaries as well. I don't enjoy / watch them either. The nature and presentation of this just seems far more blatant and distasteful to me.

Comments, Pingbacks:

Comment from: sTmykal [Member] Email
I would suspect that there is a level of "would you allow us to use this footage in return for whatever reduction of jail time" going on.

I agree with the borderline entrapment but I also do not know the full extent of those transcripts. If the adult predator leads the conversation and the undercover cop as the "minor" simply follows, I'd say for damn sure that the adult predator is in the wrong and knows exactly what's going on.

Like anything presented in the media, it's edited for content. It's edited to draw attention. It's edited to get ratings. So yes, it's going to focus on the shocking, the terrifying and then confrontational.

So unless you're seeing the "before" of the contact (chat room transcripts), all of the "present" (the confrontation at the home), and the "after" (the arrest, the trial, the plea bargain and the time served), you just don't have the entire story of one of the predators.
PermalinkPermalink 12/12/07 @ 10:41

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