My reality TV heroes

By Catherine Jones
My reality TV heroes

From Channel 5’s ‘groundbreaking’ Touch the Truck to last year’s Dancing on Wheels – think Strictly but in wheelchairs – on BBC3, I didn’t think reality TV could get much more bizarre. But last night in France, it just did.

Game Of Death invited 80 people to take part in what they thought was a game show pilot. When other ‘contestants’ (played by actors) who sat in a torture chair got the answers wrong, the glamorous host instructed the players to administer electric shocks while a studio audience chanted ‘punishment’ over a rousing musical soundtrack. After much screaming in apparent agony, the person in the chair appears to pass out, or die.

Of the 80 people administering the shocks, just 16 chose to stop before administering a fatal voltage.

Far from Game of Death being the product of a TV exec’s particularly twisted mind, it’s nothing more than the latest televised version of a legendary/notorious psychology experiment. In the early 60s, Stanley Milgram, a Yale Psychologist, found that 65 per cent of his subjects, ordinary people from the town of New Haven, Conneticut, administered the fatal shock. (15 per cent fewer than the Game of Death).

Milgram was investigating obedience and authority and his experiment proved that when an authority figure tells you to do something, most of us do it. His thesis helps explain how once-perfectly decent people can do terrible things in Nazi camps, Iraqi prisons (remember Lynndie England?) and now on French telly.

Naturally, many of the Game of Death’s contestants were shaken up by the experience. One, whose grandparents were Holocaust victims, was filled with regret at her actions. No one wants to realise that, in another place at another time, they could very easily have been the Nazi prison camp guard or done their bit in the Killing Fields of Cambodia or Rwanda. But now we know all about Milgram’s experiment, and what we humans are capable of, it’s important to remember the minority of people who had the courage to say no.

The philosopher Edmund Burke put it best when he said: ‘All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing’. That’s why I think the 16 conscientious objectors were the real stars of last night’s show. Let’s hope, in all the predictable fuss that’s being made in the international press today, we take time to celebrate their actions and aspire to do the same if and when we ever find ourselves in a French television studio, or worse.

Comments

  • Celebritycruises   (April 4, 2010 at 3:06 pm) Reply  |  spam

    My reality tv heroes are Colin and Justin from ‘I’m a Celebrity, Get Me Out Of Here!’ so its an added bonus for me that they will be heading the entertainment line-up at Southampton’s Mayflower Park on 24th April. I will be taking to the streets of city with thousands of other women to take part in a 5k powerwalk called the ‘Celebrity SunWalk’ in aid of breast cancer charities, if you fancy joining me head to the walkthewalk website and register.

    Rebecca
    Celebrity Cruises
    http://www.celebritycruises-blog.co.uk
    Sponsors of the Celebrity SunWalk 2010

More News

Most Popular Tags

More Self

How to switch off in a switched-on world

How to switch off in a switched-on world

A new wave of scientists and writers claim we should be worried about the effect...

Click here to read more
TWITTER CHAT: Your dilemmas

TWITTER CHAT: Your dilemmas

Our advice columnist Lucy Beresford answered your problems

Click here to read more
Sally Brampton – No regrets

Sally Brampton – No regrets

Sally Brampton has no time for regrets

Click here to read more

Top 5 tests / Most popular

Related Articles

The colour of money

The colour of money

Francesca Teoh investigates the current bias for over-inflated salaries

Click here to read more
Will the real Camerons please stand up?

Will the real Camerons please stand up?

Apparently, Sam Cam is Dave's 'secret weapon'. She must have an extremely good c...

Click here to read more

Psychologies Partners

Psychologies Club

Receive exclusive new benefits every month in 2011.

subscribe
Archie Panjabi in this month's issue of Psychologies

Special offer

Free Green People Organic Body Spa set, worth £40. Plus! Just £6 for 6 issues

subscribe