mijopaalmc
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2007
- Messages
- 7,172
You know, if the Discovery channel were to air the Blair Witch Project or Loose Change as factual documentaries, I think most JERFers would take issue with that, too.
OK, now you're verging on almost self-satirical (if not comepletely deliberate) density.
The Blair Witch Project, films in that subgenre, and more generally mockumentries are marketed in a way so as make to distinguishing them from reality extremely difficult, if not downright impossible. Where there is "obvious" parody or satire, the film is presented in such a way that it is clearly meant to appeal to those viewers who style themselves as sophisticated--that is to say, in a way that is immediately obvious to every viewer. Where there is no "obvious" parody or satire, the film is presented as portraying "real" events.
The whole issue is that, if people are meant to be taken as autonomous agents, they, at some point, have to be assumed to be responsible for their own belief formation, and if they can't be bothered to pay attention to the the-following-is-satire-f***face or the-preceding-was-fiction-dip***** disclaimers, "skeptics" and "critical thinkers" can't compel them form their beliefs in a fashion that "skeptics" and "critical thinkers" want them to. Moreover, the righteous indignation at DiscoChan's airing of the "documentary" seems a bit counter-productive as it can be easily spun as look-at-what-the-Establishment-doesn't-want-you-to-know.
Overall, the goals of "skeptics" and "critical thinkers" would be better served teaching people to look for disclaimers and explaining why a network might have to put a disclaimer in the front- or back-matter of a show.