Tuesday, July 30, 2019

1955 TV Show: Confidential File: Horror Comic Books

Here is "Confidential File," a 1955 news program. This episode talks about lurid comic books that were believed to be the root of juvenile delinquency.

A report by Paul Coates. Produced by Jim Peck. Directed by Irvin Kershner (the guy who would go on to direct "the Empire Strikes Back"). Aired October 9, 1955. A KTTV Production, Los Angeles, for Times-Mirror.

In 1954 the Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency conducted an investigation into how the comic book industry was supposedly contributing to the moral decay of a nation's youth. The investigations were spurred on by a number of articles that blamed comics for the rise in juvenile delinquency in post-war America. Chief among the critics was Doctor Frederic Wertham, whose book, "Seduction of The Innocent" has been blamed for nearly single-handedly crippling the entire comics industry.

In 1955, the comic book publishers formed the self-regulating organization, The Comics Code Authority, which great impacted on how comic books were perceived by the public and what kind of stories were told in the comics for decades. The effects of the virtual witch-hunt from this period in American history still has effect on the comic book industry to this day.

"Confidential File" was aired in 1955, after the senate hearings and the formation of the Comics Code, but it serves as a good example of how the media reacted to the comic book industry, and sought a scapegoat by blaming the comic book publications for society's own lack of responsibility in raising its children. This was a "whipping boy" blame game that would continue on, blaming TV cartoons, rock and roll music, Dungeons & Dragons, videogames, and so on.



2 comments:

top_cat_james said...

Ah, thought this looked familiar--Clips from this program used in the 1988 documentary, Comic Book Confidential.

top_cat_james said...
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