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MTRCB’s goal: a culture that promotes human dignity

  By ELLEN TORDESILLAS ON July 17, the Movie and Television Review Classification Board will conduct a Child and Family Summit at Balay Kalinaw at the University of the Philippines, Diliman. Participants will be parents and other family members including kasambahays.  A workshop will be held and the output will be presented to networks and

By verafiles

Jun 8, 2013

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MTRCB Board Member Mario Hernando2commentary logo

 

By ELLEN TORDESILLAS

ON July 17, the Movie and Television Review Classification Board will conduct a Child and Family Summit at Balay Kalinaw at the University of the Philippines, Diliman.

Participants will be parents and other family members including kasambahays.  A workshop will be held and the output will be presented to networks and movie and TV producers.

This activity is in line with the pro-active  role that the current MTRCB leadership is undertaking. It actually started under the term of now Senator-elect Grace Poe which Chairman Eugenio “Toto” Villareal is continuing.

Villareal, a lawyer, sees the role of MTRCB as not just as  regulatory but developmental as well.

“We want to create a culture where contemporary values are upheld and maintained, “ he said.

He said in the discussion among members of the 30-man MTRCB board, they asked themselves, “Why don’t we teach these values and build a culture with these values in media and entertainment so that  we lessen if not totally eradicate cases of  violations .”

He added that our society should develop a culture  “which is promotive of  human dignity.”

MTRCB at TV5That summit aims to empower members of the family and kasambahays to understand very well the MTRCB  rating system. Like, what’s the difference between R-16 and R-18 classifications for movies? (R-16 – Only viewers 16 years old and above can be admitted while R-18 are only for viewers 18 years old and above.) The restrictions is MTRCB’s way of  advising  parents and supervising adults that the film may contain themes, language, violence, nudity, sex, horror, and drugs that may not be suitable for children below the specified ages.

Villareal said they have color coded  the TV and movie  ratings (Green for General Audience, Blue for  Parental Guidance, Yellow for R-13, Orange for R-16 and Red for R-18) so that it would be understandable even for  those who are not so literate.

In the wake of the controversy caused by the comedy bar jokes of ABS-CBN talent Vice Vulgar with GMA7 broadcast journalist Jessica Soho as subject, MTRCB has started meeting with TV network executives on the migration of comedy bar materials, which are strictly for adults, to television. He stressed the importance of self- regulation by networks.

“MTRCB  is always interested for the good of the industry. We wrote ABS-CBN and relayed to them the complaints that we have been receiving. In MTRCB, we teach a child “galangin ang matatanda, huwag apihin ang may kapansanan, don’t embarrass anyone.’ If they are watching this type of (comedy)  humor in TV, then there would already be a contradiction, at the very least confusion in the minds of children,” Villareal said.

Related to this, Villareal revealed that  up for review in the next few weeks is  ABS-CBN’s  comedy show “Going Bulilit” as they have received some complaints about “For Adults only” jokes being portrayed by children.

He said, “We have the Best Practices conference last year.They have come up with some solutions. We will now evaluate.”

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A blogger ,Alsan, commented on my column last Wednesday , “Does MTRCB have a say on pay-per-view?”

His view: “I think pay-per-view may be considered private and therefore may be beyond the jurisdiction of MTRCB. If a person wants to spend money to view a ‘vulgar show’, that is his or her business.

“However, I believe that  money is not the only consideration here, although that is the main goal of ABS-CBN and Vice Vulgar, to make  much money from the concert. The vulgar concert went beyond the boundaries of good taste and standards of propriety. Weighed against these standards (and possibly against the Magna Carta of Women), I think this show should be banned for showing for all types of media. ABS-CBN should be faulted for allowing itself to be a party to such vulgarity.

“The network should be ashamed to use the word ‘kapamilya’. Without ABS-CBN and the sponsors (again the source of revenue for the network and the vulgar vice), Vice Vulgar would be relegated to comedy bars, where he rightfully belongs.”

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