___ ~ w w V-qw lw w w w v I FILM INTERVIEW Y E A R B OOK Continued from Page 10 ti-I C Punk lovers Sid (Gary Oldman, right) and Nancy (Chloe Webb). NL I, Hi, Ramona here. You may be asking yourself... "What does the Corner Market Coffee Lady have to say to me today?" You'd better sit down. I just got back from a trip de Columbia. Have they got beans! Lima beans, baked beans, green beans, and, yes, it's true, COFFEE BEANS. Just imagine, Colombian coffee beans made into espresso and cappucino - right here at the Corner Market! To think, you and I travel the world for such delicacies. You now may be asking yourself - "Self, what kind of fool am I, for travelling the world, when all I want is at the Corner Market?" You'd better sit down. If you can stomach Sid & Nancy, you'll love their film By Kurt Serbus SID AND NANCY, Alex Cox's cinematic account of the love storyw between late Sex Pistol's bassist Sid Vicious and his equally late girlfriend, Nancy Spungen, is a movie that succeeds on a totally -k unexpected level while falling short on the points that most film biographies aspire to. That is, it'sY damnably good entertainment (at least the first 80 minutes or so) without delving very deeply intox character or motivation. Cox's strategy seemed to be to merely shoot Sid and Nancy's romance in a flashy, commercially palatable style, and let other, less savvy types worry the questions of historical significance, like why two empty, contemptible human beings like these have been enshrined as martyrs by an entire x straggling counter-culture. But then, this is Punk, the last place you want to look for "meaning" and "historical significance," so maybe Cox's modus operandi is only fitting. So what if you walk out of the theater with absolutely no clue as to what really went on un- derneath Sid's spiky hairdo? Nobody (at least nobody who Sid and Nancy director Alex Cox. you face? What's different now? K: I never had any constraints. There isn't any children's television now. Thank to government deregulation, broadcasters have no obligation and broadcasters in the commercial sector aren't doing anything for children unless they can make money. That's why The Captain with a bigger audience than the morning news isn't there -because adults bring more money to the bottom line. That wouldn't have happened ten years ago because broadcasters would have lost their licenses if they hadn't served special audiences. Today, with degregulation, they don't serve any audience. D: Can you explain deregulation? K: Every broadcaster is licensed by the government. Up until five years ago if you were a broadcaster, you went to Washington every four years and they said, 'What have you done for children? What have you done for blacks? What have you done for Hispanics? What have you done for special audiences?' They said, 'We're doing Captain Kangaroo five hours a week,' and a stamp came down and they said here's your license, you can go make money for the next four years. So they were very happy to do that. Now, you don't have to do anything. Only the marketplace decides what programming we do, so as a result, we don't have any programming in the commericial sector-only public television does quality programming for families. D: How does the concern in money-making television affect your show? K: The program went off in 1984 as a direct result of deregulation. Now it's on public television which is not really affected by that at all. D: What do you think network programming? For instance, Pee Wee Herman does a children's show called Pee Wee's Playhouse. K: That's on CBS on Saturday morning. I haven't seen Pee Wee, but you know Pee Wee, don't you? Do you think that's a wonderful, constructive program serving the special needs of children? I don't think it can be. It's a money- maker... it's going to make very big money. It's going to sell toys on the toy shelf, and we're going to make money from children. We're the only country in the Western world that does that. D: How is your show different? K:Well, did the Captain exploit you? Did the Captain get you to buy toys? Did Captain try to merchandise the products? Or did Captain care about how you felt and the relationships you had, that sort of thing? D: How do you think your show affects children? K: I have absolutley no idea. Children are different-how does television affect adults? When I ask you that, you say, 'That's ridiculous!' There are people in college, there are adults, there are grandmothers, there are males, there are females, there are people who live in Georgia, people who live in Alaska. People are different and that's the way it is with children. Sixty million children, every one of them different from everyone else... they're not monolithic. Various programs affect children differently depending on their background, experience, and stage of de- velopment. Only the parent knows; let the parent make the decision. D: Do you think that children today are different from when you started on television? K: Absolutley not-they may have greater vicarious experience through television, greater general knowledge of the world perhaps, greater vocabulary, but those are surface things, those aren't basic things. "Who am I?" "Am I loved?" "Am I valued?" Those are the basic questions that children ask themselves. They asked those in Roman times. The child really hasn't changed at all. D: What about forces in society that might make children in the '80s different from those growing up twenty years ago, like the threat of nuclear war? Or isn't that significant? K: There aren't any studies one way or the other. My guess would certainly be that children today are at least more concerned about nuclear holocaust than children a quater of a century ago. It's got to be a part of concern in every child's life. D: You spoke at a Senate hearing on violence in television-can you comment on it? K: I testified for a hearing of the judicial committee which was considering legislation to exempt broadcasters from anti-trust regulations so they could come together and consider the effects of televison programming, including violent programming, on their audience and set standards industry- wide. D : What's your opinion of violence in television? Is it more prevalent now than twenty or thirty years ago? K: It really doesn't matter whether there's more or less; what matters is, is it there and is it having an adverse effect on viewers? Evidentally, it does. I'm not an expert, I'm not a child psychologist. But most of the studies that have been made over the last thirty years do show a causal link between the viewing of television violence and aggressive behavior in young people, for example, and there is very little question that most of us adults and children are immunized to the effects of violence from constant television viewing. The effect of that viewing even though it may be vicarious is an experience, so we no longer are shocked by violence of any king-real life or whatever. D: If that is the situation, what advice do you give to parents? K: Why are parents allowing their children to watch violent programming? I mean, that's the easiest thing in the world-not to use the television as a babysitter. The most violent programming on television is the news; we're not going to suggest that television news not be broadcast, obviously. It's not a question of broadcaster responsibility so much as it is a parental responsibility not to use television as a babysitter. Not to allow children to view programming that's inappropriate for that particular child. Every child is different. Only the parent can decide whether a program is appropriate viewing or not. D: Do you think the show made an impact on adults today who watched as children? K: It may have, it may not have. Depending on the individual child and the things that the child watched, certainly. Every experience the child has, every experience you have today is shaping you in some way. We as human beings always are changed and altered and affected by our experiences, and television is certainly one of those experiences. A child is probably affected to a greater extent because he is more open and more learning than an adult. Obviously, it did have an effect. D: When you talk to adults who watched your show, what do they remember? K: I guess they remember the same things anybody else does. It was a warm experience, that Captain was their friend, that we made them feel valued, built a high self-esteem, that sort of thing. A child who has a high feeling of self value can accomplish almost anything. Without that, even with all kinds of other advantages, a child cannot accomplish anything, so that's critical. Usually if a child by the time she is eight or ten or twelve feels valued, that usually lasts a life time. It's very difficult to break that down. But it can happen, of course. D: What other areas of interest are you involved in besides children's programming? K: I have everything to do with children, everything in the world. Anything that is of interest to the young people, concerns the young people, is in my reange of interest. When I was 19 years old, I didn't pick children, obviously not. I was on my way to law school. When I became involved in children's television, I became involved in children's issues. D: Such as? K: Daycare, nutrition, medical care, -things involving children. Think of all the problems children have: education, nutrition, medical care. Children are the principle underclass in this nation. Four out of ten of the poor in this nation are children. Single-parent families, homes where both parents work outside the home. Daycare, "latchkey children": what do we do with children between school and the end of the I & Lo b* o'% BauSc t Lenes a" 90 O at jSfl. ..-- Co nt jgatior ---' Exam,,ine lensstrUctior ComPeX.Contact Len C... Tec. Cnenient .e Kit.. start-'-ip workday? All of these things are l children's issues. SOTTINI'S c Giant Ital Submarine!' 769-SUBS 205 S. 4th Ave. * Eat In or Carry Out HOURS: , Mon-Sat 11-6 ~'i I F compl~ete F,co ac Lens~ profesn EQ1:d I If you haven't been to the Corner Market lately... Honey, you haven't been to market. Bring in this ad for 1/2 OFF an espresso or cappuccino Weekdays 7:30am-12 midnight Weekends 12 noon-7pm Michigan Union, ground floor EXP. 11/21/86 Call Today For Yoi ARBOR CONSUME 973M7 Offer good at participating offices only, single only. Prior orders, group plans and otherd This is a limited time offer andm PAGE 6 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 14, 1986 WEEKEND/ NOVEMBER 14, 1986