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Crazyshit and cultural desensitisation: Have we gone too far?

From Crazyshit, to Euphoria, to Instagram, contemporary western media is a minefield of taboos. Are we navigating with care?

First things first, this is an opinion piece. These observations are my own, limited-in-scope by my own upbringing, gender, age, privilege, life experience, and so on. I’m not here to tell you what to consume.

What I’m interested in, is exploring our current media landscape, and its impact on the highly impressionable, which tends to be younger audiences. I sincerely hope this piece stimulates productive conversation and meaningful reflection.

crazyshit

Prelude

I must be getting older. The signs are emerging. Hangovers are fiercer. I have a compulsion to switch off lights before leaving the house. I’m thinking about adding garlic to my dinner and buying a Dyson. Scary shit.

Anyway, the latest ‘adult’ thought that popped into my head really spun me out – ‘What are impressionable audiences being exposed to today?’

As a child, I remember my parents prohibiting The Simpsons, fearing I would embody Bart’s rebellious persona. I remember wanting to watch the Harry Potter films, then being told to read the books first, so I would understand the themes on a broader level. I remember my first experience with porn, and how it bestowed a severely misguided perception of women and sex. Not to mention the head-fuck that was 2 girls 1 cup. Do teens today face similar challenges? I reckon they’ve got it worse.

Thesis

Our post-post-modern media is more diverse than ever, exploring a myriad of complex cultural topics, from sexuality to mental health, to drug use, and more. This is productive, but, to quote Father John Misty, leaves a few issues to address”. Firstly, portraying sensitive topics in a responsible manner requires educated experience and forethought. Secondly, filtering media to appropriate age groups is increasingly ineffective.

Kids are curious beings – and now they have phones. What do you think is gonna happen?

To holistically analyse today’s media, I’m going to spotlight three trending mediums – porn, TV shows, and social media. For each, I’ll provide an example, ponder impacts  – both positive and negative, and ultimately conclude if it’s cause for concern. We might butt heads along the way, but I appreciate you hearing me out.

Porn – Crazyshit

In the research phase, I was originally going to spotlight Pornhub as the primary culprit for desensitising sexual exploits, due to its controversial history. However, in the end, I opted for Crazyshit. This is because Pornhub – while still guilty of hosting morally myopic content, also hosts a diverse range of pornography, with some categories portraying sex as consensual and beneficial for all parties. Though it’s unlikely, one could find a video on Pornhub void of disturbing narrative, where the sex workers were compensated fairly and ethically.

Crazyshit, on the other hand, dedicates its website to hosting only THE most fucked-up scenarios of perverse male fantasy.

Crazyshit is emblematic of a major problem in the porn industry: the stubborn portrayal that women crave unsolicited, unprotected, rough sex. It’s simply not true, but to a virgin teenager who’s ‘learning’ about sex, and viewing porn as reality, the results could be – and HAVE been, horrific. This issue is fleshed out further in Euphoria, but we’ll get to that later.

Has porn, and the excess of harmful kinks found on the internet gone too far? Has fantasy devolved into brutality? Is porn found on Crazyshit cultural desensitisation gone AWAL?

I believe so.

This is why I think OnlyFans is such a fantastic alternative. Workers are responsible for their own content, and best believe they set their own prices. If you’d like to learn more about the dark underbelly of porn, check out this fantastic piece from Fight The New Drug, which shares sex workers’ harmful experiences in the industry.

TV – Euphoria

Euphoria is an unfiltered, surrealist TV show that explores the mental and physical warfare known as American high school, known for its unsanitised depictions of sex and drugs. Euphoria has become a cultural phenomenon, and it’s easy to see why. The characters are memorable, the storytelling is intricate, the camera/lighting work is immersive, and scenes move at a bullet-like pace, accommodating our increasingly limited attention spans. As an artistic project, it’s mostly faultless, but hell, I hope minors aren’t watching it. Oh wait, it’s a high school show. Doesn’t that make teens the default target audience?

A 17+ show like this never would have reached the mainstream a few decades ago, but I know multiple young-uns binging the thing. It’s cultural desensitisation at work. I found an IndieWire piece that expresses the contradiction of Euphoria perfectly. The show is “striving” for an “intense, authentic experience” to “help teens” understand the perils of drug and sexual abuse. However, to quote director Levinson, “I don’t think this is a show for people under 17”.

After hours of back-and-forth, I ultimately believe Euphoria is a positive example of cultural desensitisation. Although I think the content is far too heavy for high-schoolers eyes, at least underage viewers are observing the potentially harrowing pitfalls of sex and drugs, which Western society typically glamorises. While Crazyshit normalises the morally grey, Euphoria portrays it for it is. Morally grey.

Social Media – Instagram

I empathise with the current generation of youth. They’re the base audience of social media, living out double lives all around the globe. Double-lives? you say. Let’s examine Instagram, a dominating platform in the social media landscape. It’s addictive, narcissistic and anxiety-inducing, assigning popularity to its users with a numerical figure, incentivising fake personas, echo chambers, and lowest-common-denominator opinions, in order to receive maximum engagement. From what I’ve seen, the chokehold platforms like Instagram have on young people, is only tightening. And what’s worse, social media’s toxicity is too much to comprehend for an impressionable audience, let alone step away from.

As you can probably tell, I’m not just against social media for the impressionable. I’m against it, period. Here’s a nugget of wisdom from Bo Burnham’s COVID-lockdown experience:

“Maybe, maybe the flattening of the entire subjective human experience into a…lifeless exchange of value that benefits nobody, except for, um, you know, a handful of bug-eyed salamanders in Silicon Valley… maybe that as a, as a way of life forever? Maybe that’s, um, not good”. 

But how does social media tie into cultural desensitisation? Unlike Crazyshit and Euphoria, the actual content isn’t my primary concern. It’s the excessive drip-feed of content, the heinous trap of endless scrolling. I believe it strangles any trace of humanity from an individual’s posts. We’ve just become spoiled for content. We’ve become consumers. Judgemental onlookers. So much so, that when my friend posted a blurry photo of their holiday, I thought, ‘that’s a pretty average post’ instead of, ‘oh wow, looks like they’re having a wonderful time’. Check yourself, Manning.

Obviously, Instagram (and social media as a whole) has brought about some wonderful changes to culture, such as widespread access to critical information, connecting families across the world, and boosting social movements. Still, at its best, Instagram is a double-edged sword.

Conclusion

Let’s return to The Simpsons for a second, and a quote from the spiky-haired 10-year-old my parents feared: “If you don’t watch the violence, you’ll never get desensitised to it”, Bart quips to Lisa. It’s witty and telling, signature trademarks of the show’s fabled writers. So much so, it raises an idea we haven’t even traversed yet:

Is desensitisation even a bad thing?

Here’s my two cents. In our saturated media landscape, from porn to TV shows, to social media, it’s all about responsibility. On one hand, there are the media creators. They (myself included), should ask themselves, who am I targeting? How will this be perceived? Does my work perpetuate falsehoods?

On the other hand, audiences have a responsibility. They should think critically about what content they choose to consume. Does it explore taboos, encourage taboos, or warn us about them?

So, what are you waiting for, critically-thinking consumer? Hit me.