Canned show stirs TV debate in the Philippines
Fast-talking comedian Willy Revillame is one of the most popular  television personalities in the Philippines with a legion of poor fans  who crave the thick wads of cash he hands out to audience members.
But  to many critics, the 50-year-old star represents all that is wrong with  an industry that they say has for years promoted low-brow entertainment  and toilet humor.
Producers at TV5 television yanked Revillame’s  “Willing Willie” show off the air this week amid an uproar over a  segment involving a crying six-year-old boy the host cajoled into  simulating a striptease for the equivalent of $230.
The incident in  March has sparked a heated debate over the standards of Philippine  television, with some calling for an end to shows they say prey on the  poor and debase moral values in the conservative Catholic nation.
“Local television feeds Filipinos a steady, dirty diet of trash,” leading film and television critic Lito Zulueta told AFP.
He said Revillame was a creation of an industry that had lost its moral compass as networks fought an intense ratings war.
“Television  people forgot the canons of ethics and good taste, thereby contributing  to the shallowness of Filipino pop culture,” said Zulueta, a senior  member of Manila’s movie critics association.
In Revillame’s show,  studio audiences get the chance to win cash, cars, houses and other  prizes by dancing and doing other acts on stage, but also by having to  recount their problems with poverty and other hardships.
With a third  of the country’s 94 million population living on a dollar or less a  day, Revillame’s prizes appear as golden tickets to a better life while  his show offers TV viewers a temporary escape from their hardships.
Highlighting  the desperation of the poor, 78 fans were killed in a stampede in 2006  as they lined up to join Revillame’s previous show on another network.
Zulueta  and other critics said Revillame was not the sole purveyor of bad  taste, pointing to other reality shows that promote greed and open  hostility among contestants.
Meanwhile, scantily clad women who  gyrate on stage and flirt with game show hosts are common fare on  prime-time TV, while senseless plots in soap operas copied mostly from  South Korean and Mexican “telenovelas” are a dime a dozen.
Daytime  comedy shows accessible to children also use language heavy in sexual  innuendo, in a country where sex education in schools remains  controversial.
A soap opera that recently completed its run on one  network was patterned after a 1980s-era soft- movie about a  14-year-old girl in a sexual adventure with two men, leading to unwanted  pregnancy.
Another talk show currently on air allows housewives and  mistresses, and warring neighbours to confront each other, often leading  to verbal abuse and punch-ups, hair-pulling and other angry encounters  on live television.
Content of this kind may be considered common in  the West, but is much more controversial in the Philippines where about  80 percent of the population are Catholic and the church remains a  powerful moral force.
Divorce and abortion remain illegal in the  Philippines, and conservative lawmakers have repeatedly rejected bills  that would promote artificial contraceptives.
In an emotionally  charged appeal this week on her blog, theatre actress Monique Wilson  called on her fellow artists to help raise television standards and  boycott exploitative, low-brow shows.
Wilson, who counts among her  achievements the lead role in the West End production of the Miss Saigon  musical in the early 1990s, said television was supposed to empower and  educate.
“When you see shows like Willing Willie — and many other similar shows — they do the opposite,” she said.
“They  dumb down audiences. They disempower them by creating a mendicant  society with game shows that promise quick money. They keep them  dependent on handouts, instead of creating opportunities for them to  build on skills.”
Veteran TV programmer Nessa Valdellon joined the  chorus of calls in the mainstream press this week for advertisers to  invest on shows that provoke critical thinking.
“It’s not just a pipe dream. I believe the Pinoy (Filipino) audience is a thinking audience,” Valdellon told AFP.
Nevertheless,  many critics believe Revillame will soon be back on the air, with his  show currently only being suspended for two weeks and the host defiant  about his style of entertainment.
“The program aims to provide a  venue for everyone to show their talents, tell their stories and make  their dreams come true,” he said in a joint statement with his  employers.
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