Looney Toons: More Violent Than
DBZ?
By K. Miyazaki
Recently I was thinking about some of the cartoon shows
on TV these days that are accepted as "good for
the kids", such as Looney Toons and I thought,
"Wait a min.... why aren't these shows getting
the same amount of public outcry that shows such as
DBZ gets???" Sure, DBZ has a lot of violence in
it, but it's mostly unrealistic, but it's chopped into
pieces anyways. But what about Looney Toons? It's not
chopped into pieces and it's generally embraced by the
public as "wholesome". So the question that
I want to ask here is, "Why DBZ and not Looney
Toons??".
Sure, I admit, DBZ do have some violence and dirty
jokes that need to be censored out to fit the so called
"strict morale standards" that American television
holds. But the big question is, could kids actually
copy these things that are being done on DBZ and become
violent? I for one, don't think so. Could kids charge
up for a Makkankosappo (Special Beam Cannon for our
dubbie friends) and impale his/her friend with it? No.
Could kids increase their power levels to 20,000 by
using Kaiohken and kick their friends through a mountain?
No. Could kids shoot a Kamehameha and blow up a city?
No. And could kids fly 20,000 feet into the sky where
they shoot a Gallic-hoh (Gallic Gun) down at the Earth,
blowing it to bits? I don't think so.
However, look at these other "accepted" cartoons
like Looney Toons. Could kids run around chasing each
other with a shotgun like Elmer Fudd and Bugs Bunny
does all the time? Yes. Could kids throw sticks of dynamite
at each other like Wile E. Coyote does to Road Runner?
Yes. And these things are probably just as fatal, if
not even more so, than the stuff that happens in DBZ.
Plus these are senseless violence! It's being done for
pure humor and entertainment. At least DBZ has a pretty
positive underlying theme, like "Beating up the
bad guy, responsible for the murder of millions, to
save the world." So why aren't these other cartoons
being scrutinized, criticized, and being censored to
pieces like DBZ? Heck, Looney Toons even promotes smoking
cigars! So why, why, why aren't these shows getting
the same treatment as DBZ?
The answer to that may lay with the adults in America
today. These people grew up watching these shows, thus
they don't consider it to be bad. I grew up watching
DBZ, and I don't find it to be bad, and I will never
consider it to be bad even when I'm an adult. I guess
it's just something that people naturally come to accept
as they grow up. In fact, when I was a kid in Japan,
I remember watching Looney Toons for the first time
and my parents were disgusted by the senseless violence
in the show... yet they weren't as disgusted by shows
like DBZ. That was probably because my parents didn't
grow up Looney Toons. (Whether they grew up watching
anime is iffy, however.) So the fact is, it could just
be that people tends to accept anything that they see
as a kid, and when they're older, they just criticize
anything that seems to be bad while ignoring some of
the other problems since they've decided when they were
kids that it's good. The same example can be seen with
other things like music. Parents hate music like rap
because it's new and different, while many kids see
nothing wrong with it.
So now ask yourself. Which is better: Heroic violence
or pointless violence for the pure pleasure/humor of
it? Which do you want little kids to be doing: Fighting
a mock DBZ fight or getting dynamites to blow up in
their face, thinking that they'll just turn into a pile
of ashes, and that they'll return the next day in a
new episode? At least DBZ teaches some lessons in life,
not to mention most of the negative aspects of the show
being uncopiable for kids. If shows like Looney Toons
can be embraced by the public and be accepted without
any censoring, then so should DBZ. And if people still
feel censoring is necessary, then how about censoring
the entire entertainment industry, instead of leaving
loopsholes here and there where kids are easily exposed
to violence and sex? No censoring is going to work unless
it's complete and total. And obviously such a thing
is impossible. So I say, give everyone what they want,
and one of those things is uncensored DBZ! That's just
my stance on things. I'd like to close this editorial
by saying, what do you think?
Thanks for reading this editorial everyone,
K. Miyazaki
SSJ4Vegetto33@aol.com
Disclaimer: I have nothing against Looney Toons. It
just was a good example to use. I also don't think censoring
is the only problem American DBZ has... but not much
we can do about that! ^_^
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