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Lights, camera, military action!


Profiles from the Front Line is reality television, war movie, documentary video, and military propaganda all rolled into one Adj. 1. rolled into one - made up of several components combined into a single entity
combined - made or joined or united into one
. Set in Afghanistan with edgy musical accompaniment and no narration, the ABC ABC
 in full American Broadcasting Co.

Major U.S. television network. It began when the expanding national radio network NBC split into the separate Red and Blue networks in 1928.
 series has promised to take viewers "to actual battlefields in central Asia" and to "bring home the danger faced every day by America's bravest in the war on terrorism Terrorist acts and the threat of Terrorism have occupied the various law enforcement agencies in the U.S. government for many years. The Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, as amended by the usa patriot act ." ABC also proudly states that "the Pentagon and Department of Defense lent their full support and cooperation to this unique production by [Hollywood producer] Jerry Bruckheimer and [Cops creator] Bertram van Munster Bertram van Munster is a Dutch-American television producer. He co-created the reality television show The Amazing Race with his wife, Elise Doganieri. Previously, he was a field producer on the TV series COPS during its early years up to season nine. , which will feature compelling personal stories of America's military men and women and the elite U.S. Special Operations Forces Those Active and Reserve Component forces of the Military Services designated by the Secretary of Defense and specifically organized, trained, and equipped to conduct and support special operations. Also called SOF. ."

During the months when Profiles was filmed, "real" journalists weren't allowed anywhere near the front lines, and news organizations had to survive on a limited diet of highly coordinated military briefings. Meanwhile, Profiles camera crews were given nearly unlimited access to U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan.

"There's a lot of other ways to convey information to the American people An American people may be:
  • any nation or ethnic group of the Americas
  • see Demographics of North America
  • see Demographics of South America
 than through news organizations," Rear Admiral Craig Quigley told The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times about Profiles last year when the show was in development. The gang at Profiles was, as Quigley described, "trooping around all over the countryside--flying on planes, going on ships, going on patrol with the 101st Airborne, [and] living a rugged life."

In the premiere episode of Profiles from the Front Line, we meet some of the soldiers Quigley spoke about. There is Colonel Abraham J. Turner Major General Abraham J. Turner is in the United States Army and serving in Fort Monroe, Virginia.

In 1976, he graduated from South Carolina State University with a Bachelor of Science in Music and is a member of Omega Psi Phi.
, who emphatically tells his troops that "the American people expect you to be at the point of the spear" in the war on terrorism. Army Specialist Alvin Fields Alvin Fields (born October 16, 1950) is an American musician.

His musical career began when he first appeared on stage at age seven to sing a Christmas carol and stunned the audience with his amazing voice. Fields was in foster care from the age of five.
 is loving his wartime assignment. "I couldn't think of any place I'd rather be than right here doing my job, knowing I'm doing my part to keep America free," the smiling soldier tells us not long after we see him excitedly handling a new bazooka-like anti-tank weapon.

Soon we meet the "elite soldiers" of U.S. Special Operations Forces. Master Sergeant Mark (first names only for the "Rambo Guys," as they're called) explains that his team's primary mission is to "find and kill Al Qaeda," but says that identification is a problem. "To us, everyone pretty much looks the same." Staff Sergeant Mike agrees: "It's frustrating because you can't kill the guys that need to be killed." At one point the three-man crew begins to drive off with a suspect they've apprehended--an elderly, one-armed former Taliban leader. When the man's fifteen-year-old son starts to run after their vehicle, Staff Sergeant Drew coolly contemplates shooting the teen. "It's pretty easy to pull the trigger and shoot the boy, but that's not what we're there for," he says. For the most part, the military men and women featured in Profiles are good looking, articulate, and enthusiastic about what they're doing. They are archetypes of characters you'd expect to see in a big-budget Bruckheimer film.

Virtually everyone who watches television or goes to the movies has been struck by the lightning bolt that imprints all Jerry Bruckheimer productions. He is perhaps the most successful producer and the most powerful man in Hollywood, with more than $12.5 billion in film, video, and recording receipts. If you didn't see Flashdance or Beverly Hills Cop, you probably caught The Rock, or Con Air, or Enemy of the State. Maybe J. B. reeled you in with his two CSI CSI Crime Scene Investigator
CSI CompuServe, Inc.
CSI Commodity Systems, Inc.
CSI Commodity Systems Inc. (Boca Raton, FL)
CSI Crime Scene Investigation (CBS TV show)
CSI Christian Schools International
 (Crime Scene Investigation Crime scene investigation may refer to:
  • Forensic science, science used in determining legal proceedings
  • , a US television series
) television series, which are the main courses feeding America's seemingly insatiable appetite for graphic blood and gore.

More than likely, however, it was one of his big-budget war epics that got you. Those films have not only captured the disposable income disposable income

Portion of an individual's income over which the recipient has complete discretion. To assess disposable income, it is necessary to determine total income, including not only wages and salaries, interest and dividend payments, and business profits, but also
 of millions of filmgoers but, more to the point, the hearts and minds of the Washington establishment. In fact, three of Bruckheimer's biggest war movies--Tap Gun, Pearl Harbor, and Black Hawk Down--were also made with military cooperation.

Pretty powerful stuff for the Detroit native who was born in 1945 to working class German-Jewish immigrant parents. Bruckheimer has described his folks as "very strong Democrats," while characterizing his own views as more right than left. (He acknowledges that he voted for Bush in the last election.) While growing up, Bruckheimer went to weekly film matinees, developed an interest in photography, and got his career start in the world of advertising. One of the ads he produced for Pontiac while still in his early twenties caught the attention of Time magazine, and that led to a job at the high-profile ad agency BBD&O. It took less than five years for Bruckheimer to make his way from Madison Avenue to Hollywood, where he was soon producing films like the early Richard Gere vehicle American Gigolo gig·o·lo  
n. pl. gig·o·los
1. A man who has a continuing sexual relationship with and receives financial support from a woman.

2. A man who is hired as an escort or a dancing partner for a woman.
.

Bruckheimer's partnership with producer Don Simpson led to a string of box office winners, including Bad Boys (with Will Smith and Martin Lawrence) and Crimson Tide, the story of two naval officers squaring off while on the brink of nuclear war (with Denzel Washington and Gene Hackman).

Many of the films Bruckheimer has produced in more recent years, like Con Air (with Nicolas Cage) and Armageddon (starring Bruce Willis), are marked by the militaristic mil·i·ta·rism  
n.
1. Glorification of the ideals of a professional military class.

2. Predominance of the armed forces in the administration or policy of the state.

3.
 features that have earned Bruckheimer less than flattering monikers like "explosion-meister."

None of Bruckheimer's movies lived up to that label more than the 2001 release Pearl Harbor. The $135 million historical drama was pure Hollywood: shamelessly pro-American, filled with sappy melodrama, overcooked romance, and, worst of all, historical inaccuracies. The women in the film--primarily military nurses--are reduced to little more than husband-hunting airheads, while the male leads are just a bunch of good ol' boys who seem more concerned about fighting over a girlfriend than with the Japanese attack.

Black Hawk Down, released the same year as Pearl Harbor, is even more troubling. It presents a graphic minute-by-minute retelling re·tell·ing  
n.
A new account or an adaptation of a story: a retelling of a Roman myth. 
 of the ill-fated U.S. military mission to Somalia, specifically, the 1993 operation aimed at the forces of faction leader Mohamed Farah Aidid in Mogadishu. The action led to the crash of two Black Hawk helicopters and left hundreds of Somalis and eighteen Americans dead. The movie did little to explain the motivations of the Somalis, so audiences were left with the feeling that the dark-skinned anti-American mobs depicted in the film were the equivalent of a pack of wild animals WILD ANIMALS. Animals in a state of nature; animals ferae naturae. Vide Animals; Ferae naturae. . The New York Times review said that the film "reeks of glumly glum  
adj. glum·mer, glum·mest
1. Moody and melancholy; dejected.

2. Gloomy; dismal.

n.
1.
 staged racism."

Bruckheimer responded to the racism charge by appearing on the Fox News Networks most reactionary program, The O'Reilly Factor. When asked whether he thought the charge of racism would hurt Black Hawk Down's chances in the upcoming Academy Awards, Bruckheimer responded, "It's possible. Could be," adding that he thought "there was a lot of backstabbing back·stab  
tr.v. back·stabbed, back·stab·bing, back·stabs
To attack (someone) unfairly, especially in an underhand, deceitful manner:
 [over race] in Hollywood about this picture. They don't say it to our face, but...."

The powers-that-be in Washington were unfazed un·fazed  
adj.
Not fazed or disturbed.
 by the charges of racism. After an exclusive screening of Black Hawk Down for lawmakers and Pentagon officials, Washington expressed its glowing approval of the film. Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz told The Washington Post he thought it was "a powerful film." Other enthusiastic attendees included Vice President Dick Cheney and Lynne Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, and Iran-Contra man Oliver North.

No doubt the Washington reaction to Black Hawk Down helped Bruckheimer secure support for the Profiles series, but not without controversy. Reports said that the Pentagon would be allowed to prescreen pre·screen  
tr.v. pre·screened, pre·screen·ing, pre·screens
1. To view (a movie) before release for public showing.

2.
 and approve all of the Profiles footage before it aired. Bruckheimer has denied the charge, telling The Guardian of London that military leaders wouldn't have veto power on the content. But, he added, "Put it this way. If I were to rent your apartment, I'm not going to trash it. It wouldn't be right. So I'm not going to go and expose all their blemishes."

Government censorship wasn't the only concern expressed by media critics. "You have a bunch of journalists who should be covering this kind of material who are being denied access to it," Robert Thompson of Syracuse University's Center for the Study of Popular Television told Reuters. Thompson denounced "the new alliance between Hollywood and the government."

Even CBS news anchor Dan Rather voiced his disapproval for this kind of programming. "I'm outraged by the Hollywoodization of the military," he told the Santa Monica Mirror The Santa Monica Mirror is a weekly community paper which covers Santa Monica, Brentwood, Pacific Palisades, Venice, and Marina del Rey in the U.S. state of California. It circulates 25,000 papers weekly. . "The Pentagon would rather make troops available as props in gung-ho videos than explain how the commanders let Osama bin Laden Osama bin Laden: see bin Laden, Osama.  and Al Qaeda leaders escape or target the wrong villages."

In spite of its heavy-handed, lopsided, pro-American view, Profiles does offer compelling elements. Who wouldn't be intrigued by the story of Peter Sarvis, the Army specialist who left his new bride and Wall Street stockbroker job to sign up for military duty after the events of 9/11, or by the opportunity to see some of the tactics used by our military to supposedly win the war on terrorism. But those elements are far outweighed by the frightening prospect of a continued intimate union between the fiercest hawks of D.C. and the biggest explosion-meister of L.A.

One night, a few weeks ago, I found myself trapped in a Bruckheimer loop. On the networks, it was CSI: Miami, full of decapitated de·cap·i·tate  
tr.v. de·cap·i·tat·ed, de·cap·i·tat·ing, de·cap·i·tates
To cut off the head of; behead.



[Late Latin d
 limbs and charred body parts. On the movie channels, it was the vapid Coyote Ugly here, the maudlin maud·lin  
adj.
Effusively or tearfully sentimental: "displayed an almost maudlin concern for the welfare of animals" Aldous Huxley. See Synonyms at sentimental.
 Pearl Harbor there, the racist Black Hawk Down everywhere. I began to have repressive visions of an American society where citizens were allowed access only to Bruckheimertainment.

But then an even more nightmarish vision came over me: Jerry Bruckheimer and the Pentagon sign an exclusive contract to manufacture and shape the way U.S. wars are perceived and remembered. If Profiles from the Frontline is any indication, we'd better start waking up.

Andrea Lewis, a San Francisco-based writer, h co-host of "The Morning Show" on KPFA Radio in Berkeley.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Author:Lewis, Andrea
Publication:The Progressive
Date:Apr 1, 2003
Words:1645
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