Suicide prevention groups protest `The Office'
By DAVID BAUDER,
AP
Posted: 2009-11-05 17:32:08
NEW YORK (AP) - Some suicide prevention groups aren't laughing
over a scene in "The Office" where Steve Carell's character tries
to scare young children by struggling in a hangman's noose.
The American Foundation for Suicide Prevention and other mental
health organizations say NBC and other entertainers should stop
using suicide as a punchline. They worry that depiction of a method
of suicide might encourage mentally ill people to take their own
lives.
"We try not to be zealots about this," said Robert Gebbia, the
foundation's executive director. "But this one ... kind of crossed
the line."
A spokeswoman for NBC's entertainment division did not have an
immediate comment.
There's been a run of television shows that have inflamed
sensibilities lately. The Parents Television Council has urged
affiliates of the CW network not to air a Nov. 9 episode of
"Gossip Girl" following on-air promos for a sexual threesome.
Some religious groups were angered by an episode of HBO's "Curb
Your Enthusiasm" where a drop of Larry David's urine is splattered
on a portrait of Jesus Christ.
"The Office" Halloween episode last Thursday opened with the
paper company hosting a haunted house for young children. Carell's
socially clueless office manager Michael Scott promises a scare,
and pops out with his depiction of a hanging.
Afterward, Scott speaks like an exaggerated public service
announcement: "Kids, just remember, suicide is not the answer. It
is the easy way out."
Gebbia said it's impossible to imagine a death due to breast
cancer, for example, being used as a joke. He said he wants
entertainers to be aware of the impact of their work.
Mental Health America, the National Alliance on Mental Illness
and Suicide Awareness Voices in Education are other organizations
that joined Gebbia's group in calling for sensitivity. They said
research has shown that explicit depictions of suicide may prompt
vulnerable people to copy the act.
Two years ago, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention
protested a General Motors commercial that showed a robot leaping
off a bridge, and a Volkswagen ad with a man standing on a ledge
threatening to jump.
"We're not trying to be censors or fall into the trap of
wanting everything to be PC, politically correct," Gebbia said.
"But on the other hand, it's offensive to some people who have
lost relatives to suicide by hanging."
11/05/09 17:30 EST