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texasdex
03-07-2003, 02:53 AM
This is an actual article from the New York Times

NBC is poised to make a stunning announcement regarding Tamara Brooks and Jackie Marris, the two Lancaster teenagers who catapulted to fame after their August 1 abduction by career criminal Roy D. Ratliff, New Times has learned.

Although sources said a press conference isn't scheduled until next week, they confirmed that the network is continuing its relationship with Brooks and Marris by signing them to host their own prime-time reality show. Tentatively titled Survive This!, the show is slated as a mid-season replacement to debut during February sweeps.

NBC came under heavy criticism for courting the rape victims, who appeared on the network's Today show just after their rescue. Yet therapists and sex-crime experts consulted by New Times said NBC may actually have done the teens a service by exposing them to worldwide publicity.

"The network, of course, realized that it could get high ratings by putting these rape victims on camera, but it also helped them in the process," said nationally recognized psychologist Cindy Pequot. "They are going through the healing process by telling their story to millions of viewers, and that's a good thing."

Added the girls' newly hired publicist, Lynne Balzac, who coincidentally holds a master's degree in psychology, "It's easy for the public to question why Tamara and Jackie want to put themselves before the public eye again and again, but I have one word for what the girls get out of this, and that's closure. In fact, I'd call having your own television show closure with a bonus, wouldn't you?"

Other mental-health professionals told New Times that trauma victims don't really need extended private healing time, as psychologists and psychiatrists once believed. All the media exposure, plus the seven-figure deal each of the girls is expected to get from NBC for the reality program, will go a long way toward helping them to feel better, the experts insisted.

"Look, I wouldn't want this to happen to my son or daughter," said UCLA Rape Prevention Services director Martin Finoogian, "but you have to think of how fast Roy D. Ratliff will fade from their minds when these two girls are faced with the pressures of not tanking in the ratings so they can keep those million-dollar paydays coming in."

Survive This! will feature the crime victims introducing a new slate of contestants each week in what promises to be a show that will push the already expansive boundaries of reality television. NBC staffers, who asked that their names not be published, described the concept as "groundbreaking," "alarming" and "actually kind of sick."

"I'd say it's Survivor meets Hannibal Lecter," said one network executive, who described a frenzy of activity at NBC's Burbank studios as everybody gears up for the program. "Frankly, we couldn't not do this show after the kind of summer we've had. I mean, the news guys have gone wall to wall lately on all of these kidnappings and murders.

"You can't believe the numbers they put up during the Runnion thing," he said, referring to the kidnapping and murder of five-year-old Samantha Runnion in Orange County. "And the mother! Jeez, you just can't find more compelling television!"

He continued, "I mean, Tamara and Jackie, their story just couldn't have unfolded more dramatically for TV. The Amber Alert [highway crime-warning] system had been put online, what, an hour before the girls were abducted? And the pursuit and shootout, the stories of the girls struggling to get away as they were being driven to their supposed deaths. I don't know who said it, but as soon as someone down here muttered, "We couldn't have scripted this thing any better,' I think we all had the same thought: Why the hell not?!"

Survive This! will be much more difficult to cast and produce than other reality shows because the winnowing down of contestants will be a twofold process.

"On the one hand, we will have to go through thousands of videotapes sent in by teenagers who desperately want one thing more than any other -- stardom," said the show's producer, Billy Slattery, the only person connected with Survive This! who would speak on the record. "Sure, you might question Tamara and Jackie's parents for letting them go on national television literally hours after they were sexually molested by a multiple felon, but when Tamara told the L.A. Times "I guess you could say I'm like a celebrity,' wasn't that right on the mark? And, you know, who could blame her? You have to understand what a little television time means to kids. I know I'm not going to stand in their way."

As he sifts through the tapes, Slattery said, he'll be looking for star potential and attractive faces, like those of the hosts. "Good looks definitely don't hurt when you're looking at putting people on TV. And to put it bluntly, jailbait sells! One thing you've got to say for Ratliff -- he may have been a psycho with a deathwish, but at least he had good taste in victims."

But selecting a pool of dozens of eager and comely contestants out of thousands of potential candidates is only half of his headache, the producer said.

"Then you've got the other pool. We're getting considerable cooperation from the State of California, which, it turns out, is desperate to parole multiple offenders like Ratliff. Overcrowding or something, I think Governor Gray Davis' office said. But some of these guys just don't look the part. And some, after rotting in prison for a decade or two, have lost that fire down below and just aren't the predators they once were, if you know what I mean."

But sources at NBC said that by the time shooting starts in a couple of months, casting difficulties will be solved.

"I tell you the part I'm looking forward to most. Each week, Tamara and Jackie will share with contestants and the public the techniques they learned when they fought off Ratliff," said the network executive. "Now, if that's not public service, I don't know what is!"

NBC is keeping Brooks and Marris under wraps until the press conference. Consequently, they couldn't be reached for comment for this article.

Survive This! contestants will be briefed by the girls before they are helicoptered to a remote, secret location. If things go according to plan, NBC will have placed several paroled repeat sex offenders in various locations miles from the drop zone. The contestants will have 48 hours to find safety at a remote building made to resemble a rural sheriff's station. NBC hasn't decided who will portray the show's "sheriff," but staffers said overtures have been made to both Orange County sheriff Mike Carona and Kern County sheriff Carl Sparks.

"Who knew these guys would turn out to be so good on television?" said the NBC executive. "I just hope we can get one of them!"

Taking a page from Survivor, the Survive This! team plans to make ample use of Steadicams, infrared lenses and "confessional" video techniques. But in a Blair Witch twist, contestants will be given their own cameras to document their terrifying ordeals. "We actually got that idea after hearing the stories told by Jackie and Tamara," Slattery said. "We realized that viewers missed out big-time because the girls had no video of Ratliff inside the van. That would've been juicy! We're not gonna let that happen again."

Asked if he's worried about the implications of unleashing career criminals on young victims for the sake of entertainment, the network exec threw up his hands. "You have to give the people what they want! And what they want, frankly, is graphic TV. We're in the television business, and this show will benefit NBC on a lot of different levels. Think of the tie-ins we'll be able to do with the local news programs, not to mention the kind of things we'll be able to do with ET and Access Hollywood. I can see a screaming Pat O'Brien running from a violent perp as he takes part in a little first-person journalism."

Choosing winners, said Slattery, will be the trickiest part. "We're still debating that. Is it the most harrowing escape? Is it the contestant who escapes the most unscathed, or the one who escapes the most, well, scathed? Clothes getting ripped off would boost ratings.

"We're toying with a celebrity panel to decide the winner," he said. "Katie Couric [who interviewed the girls on Today] would be a natural for this. We might want to include a rape expert to provide useful commentary for the public."

The aforementioned Pequot (self-dubbed "rape counselor to the stars") told New Times she has been approached, but admitted she's wary about the show.

"I'm just not sure what the message of this program will be," she said. "On the one hand, I suppose it's about Tamara and Jackie showing how empowered they are by fame, and to that I say, "You go, girls!' But, on the other, do we really need to make more rape victims famous? That would tend to dilute the celebrity of being a victim of sexual assault, wouldn't it? I mean, everybody remembers Richard Hatch, who won on the first Survivor series. But can you name the woman who won the next one? Or any of the other winners? After a while, the public loses interest. Tamara and Jackie are just lucky they got there first."

Is this wrong or what?!?!

carrot red
03-07-2003, 05:38 PM
Really disgusting.:disgust: :shocking:
I betcha people would watch it, another twisted tv reality in the making. :angry:

texasdex
03-07-2003, 05:58 PM
Yeah tell me about it. This proposed show sensationalizes the victimization of women and violent crime. The "Married by America" show is going to be horribly degrading to the institution of marriage. And the Hottest Person in America is just so unbelieveably shallow I can't stand it.

On the other hand American Idol I do like, and occasionally watch. Many of the contestants are good singers, and the ones who aren't (you know who I'm talking about; the one who sang "like a virgin") are extremely funny.
The "I'm a Celebrity" show was good because it featured famous people who were willing to give up their time, risk their reputation, and go "camping" for a few weeks to earn money for their favorite charity.

carrot red
03-07-2003, 06:13 PM
I forgot to wish you a happy second anniversary, tex.:)
moocow posted a thread about reality tv a few days ago, go check it out. It talks about the extend some poeple go to just to be on tv.

texasdex
03-07-2003, 07:05 PM
Thanks! I guess I'm officially an old timer now, eh? cuz the board's only been around for about three or so years.

carrot red
03-07-2003, 08:12 PM
You've gotta be kidding. Compared to me, you're more than an old timer...

Maverik X
03-07-2003, 08:48 PM
That was possibly one of the most disgusting things I've ever seen. I have a friend who was raped. I wonder what she would think of that.

KINGOFALLME2
03-07-2003, 09:48 PM
That..is...just...sick

Myth
03-07-2003, 10:12 PM
yea maverick its just fucked up =/

the extent someone would go to make money and produce a television programme is somewhat unbelievable.

Pathwalker
03-07-2003, 10:13 PM
This has to be one of the sickest ideas I have ever seen for a tv show or what have you. I'm horrified(sp) that anyone could think that this is a sane idea or that they would want to watch something like it. I have been raped and all I want is to learn to live beyond it...not to imortalize it for other people to watch and for more pediphiles to learn from....This just scares me silly...gone

Rijuhn
03-08-2003, 12:39 AM
I, I just don't know how to put this seriously enough. This is the future of Hollywood. Why can't...no I can't even say what I feel about these sick liberals, or it could be used against me. All I can say is God help this world!

Fatty Lumpkin
03-08-2003, 02:09 PM
That's disguisting. It doesn't matter who's offended, as long as they get their precious ratings.

Jigglysaint
03-08-2003, 02:23 PM
And to think that I was actually wondering when they would start selling rape on TV.

As soon as children are involved in this kind of sickness is the day I will stop watching TV forever.

Ian
03-08-2003, 05:19 PM
That is sick. Other than the fact that most reality shows suck anyways, but this is so greedy. They couldn't care less for the people, they just want ratings=money=they're rich.

Rijuhn
03-09-2003, 12:25 AM
I wonder how far these fucking sick Hollywood-types will go until there's another civil war.