Into Philly tomorrow, requisite stress levels check. So busy with “real life” in between jaunts, I’ll have to catch everyone up at the end of it all.
In the meantime, read this - I would like to echo the point here, that while I’m am anti-censorship as a rule, I find something seriously repulsive about the billboards that were pulled. If we lived in a society where the abduction, torture, rape and murder of women (or children, or men, or puppies) was a fictional construct like the boogieman, then maybe this would just be “suitably chilling.” Unfortunately, that’s not the world we live in - and sometimes we have to draw a line somwhere between art and advertising.
I’ll let Joss Whedon say it, much better than I can:
From: Joss Whedon
Sent: Thursday, March 22, 2007 10:17 PM
To: Advertising
Subject: CAPTIVITY BILLBOARDS/REMOVE THE RATINGTo the MPAA,
There’s a message I’m supposed to cut and paste but I imagine you’ve read it. So just let me say that the ad campaign for “Captivity” is not only a literal sign of the collapse of humanity, it’s an assault. I’ve watched plenty of horror - in fact I’ve made my share. But the advent of torture-porn and the total dehumanizing not just of women (though they always come first) but of all human beings has made horror a largely unpalatable genre. This ad campaign is part of something dangerous and repulsive, and that act of aggression has to be answered.As a believer not only in the First Amendment but of the necessity of horror stories, I’ve always been against acts of censorship. I distrust anyone who wants to ban something ‘for the good of the public’. But this ad is part of a cycle of violence and misogyny that takes something away from the people who have to see it. It’s like being mugged (and I have been). These people flouted the basic rules of human decency. God knows the culture led them there, but we have to find our way back and we have to make them know that people will not stand for this. And the only language they speak is money. (A devastating piece in the New Yorker - not gonna do it.) So talk money. Remove the rating, and let them see how far over the edge they really are.
Thanks for reading this, if anyone did.
Sincerely, Joss Whedon.
Creator, “Buffy the Vampire Slayer”



