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FOX TV Show ‘24’ Angers Arab/Muslim Fans in the United States and Abroad
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FOX TV Show ‘24’ Angers Arab/Muslim Fans in the United States and Abroad

By Rima Abdelkader

 

NEW YORK, 19 January 2007, (Arabisto.com): Arab/Muslim fans of the Fox hit television series ‘24’ are angered by the portrayal of Arabs/Muslims in its sixth season that appeared on two nights, Sunday, January 14 and on Monday, January 15, 2007.  On Sunday night, viewers watched characters representing suicide bombers in the United States, blowing up buses and subways, ordinary Americans committing hate crimes towards Arabs/Muslims, presidential advisors advocating illegally rounding up Arabs/Muslims in detention centers, as well as men appearing in “Guantanamo Bay” type orange jumpsuits.  Then, a nuclear explosion in Los Angeles is represented on its next, Monday night episode.  These fans are concerned about their image and safety.  They also fear what may become of the fictional episodes of ‘24’, since, they say, it fails to clearly distinguish between fact and fiction.  This Fox television series has made a huge impact on its Arab/Muslim fan base in the United States and abroad.  Through email, I had the opportunity to communicate with some of them and capture their reactions to these recent episodes.

 

Bilal Mian, a self-proclaimed ‘24’ fan and a Rutgers University student from NJ, says, “I consider ‘24’ as probably the best show that I have seen on TV.  However, Bilal says, “The Muslim community needs to look at Season 6 of ‘24’ seriously.  If any type of terrorist attack occurs in America, the reactions from the non-Muslim citizens are what we should suspect.”  His feelings, he says, derive from the reactions of ordinary Americans after the attacks of September 11th where Arabs/Muslims were vulnerable to bias attacks, deportation, and racial profiling.

 

He continues, “Being a Muslim, it just felt like everything that was happening during the show was hitting me hard.  The fact that they have hatred towards America also helps make the new season of ‘24’ more believable.” He adds that he sees no difference between the fictional show and today’s current climate of the “War on Terror”.

 

Each season of ‘24’ happens in one day, where each show is one hour, and it is all documented by federal agent Jack Bauer, who is played by actor Kiefer Sutherland, where Jack works with the Counter Terrorist Unit (CTU) Los Angeles office and attempts to prevent a potential terrorist attack from happening in the United States.

 

In these past two episodes, Jack is shown fighting terrorism through torture and other violent means in a world where citizens are shown afraid and suspicious of Arabs/Muslims in their neighborhoods.  Presidential Advisor Tom, played by Peter MacNicol, is shown advocating racial profiling and the rounding up of Arabs/Muslims, seen by Arab/Muslim fans as similar to that of Japanese Americans during World War II.  They also see this as a clear reminder of the attacks on September 11th  where upon, they say, these episodes seem less fictional than the 6-year reality they have experienced post-9/11, a climate in which the U.S. Department of Justice had in fact rounded up Arabs/Muslims and persons who merely look “Arab” or “Muslim”.  Furthermore, Principal Palmer’s sister Sandra, acted by Regina King, an attorney and legal counselor for the Islamic-American Alliance, is arrested for deleting her employees’ personal information that federal agents are seeking.  She accuses the administration of violating employees’ civil liberties in the name of national security.  In reality, the United States has passed many anti-terrorism bills that limit the availability of public records, expand government surveillance powers, and threaten people’s civil liberties.

 

In terms of hate crimes against Arab and Muslim Americans, Munira Syeda from the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) says, “Overall, the number of civil rights complaints reported by Arab and Muslim Americans has increased in the past five years, with a total of 1972 complaints reported during 2005.”

 

In Covering Islam: How the Media and the Experts Determine How We See the Rest of the World, author Edward W. Said speaks of an East-West divide arguing that a lack of knowledge about Islam has led people to misinterpret the religion as well as its culture and to form hostility towards them.  Dr. Jack Shaheen, who has documented and examined over 900 motion pictures since 1893 that include Arabs/Muslims, agrees.  In my talk with Dr. Shaheen, he says, “Fox TV’s ‘24’ persistently and consistently defames Arabs/Muslims more than any other group.”  He asks, “Why and who is the ultimate beneficiary of such stereotypical depictions?”

 

According to Dr. Shaheen, “The average American knows little about Arabs/Muslims or the Arab World.”  He says, we often see images of Arabs/Muslims with machine guns on the screen and this unfortunately generates stereotypes and hatred in the minds of the public.  Dr. Shaheen adds he is not surprised that Arabs/Muslims in the United States and abroad have responded negatively towards this show.

 

Ramsay Short, a British-Arab journalist, says, “I have watched every single series of ‘24’ up to now - that is seasons 1-5 - and loved them for the dramatic pieces of action they are.”  However, he says, “ ‘24’ doesn’t give a positive image of Arab-Americans.”

 

In an email campaign dispatched on Wednesday, Engy Abdelkader, an Arab-American lawyer and a member of the NJ American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, encouraged Arabs/Muslims to write to Fox News, out of her concern about these past two episodes of ‘24’.  In her email, she wrote, “the four hour premiere slandered and stereotyped Muslims and Arabs as terrorists and America’s enemies, intent on a nuclear Armageddon.”

 

Sawsan Zaky, an Arab-American law student and a member of the Network of Arab-American Professionals of NY (NAAP-NY), agreed with Engy’s sentiment and said, “I’m sad to say that up until last night, ‘24’ was pretty much the only television show I was willing to watch.”  She added, “I think it’s disgusting and simply irresponsible of the producers and the network to portray the Muslim community as if it were crawling with terrorists, particularly considering the current social and political atmosphere and the anti-Muslim/anti-Arab sentiment that is unfortunately so prevalent in our nation today.”

 

One news anchor joined the dispute and commented on these past two episodes.  MSNBC News Anchor Keith Olbermann, who is known for being critical of Fox News and its coverage, from “Countdown with Keith Olbermann,” said on his Wednesday night show, “24 is back.  It dropped the bomb literally.  Al Gore makes a movie about global warming and gets smeared as a fearmonger.  Fox portrays a fictionalized America riddled with terrorists, which helps keep part of the real America convinced we might really be riddled with terrorists.  And it wins five Emmys and two Golden Globes?  Gripping drama or thinly veiled propaganda?”  This type of sentiment is not new as the show has been viewed as controversial because of its unique fan base, which include Radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh, Vice President Dick Cheney, Former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Barbra Streisand and Senator John McCain.  Surprising to most news pundits and commentators, including Olbermann, John McCain even made a cameo appearance on one of the ‘24’ episodes even though he has spoken out against torture.

 

Arab/Muslim fans want the producers of ‘24’ to challenge viewers to look beyond the political stereotypes, that of terrorism and fundamentalism, and see each others as equals, rather than as “terrorists” and marginalized peoples.

 

Alia Tarraf, an Arab-American actress from NY, who performed in the past New York Arab-American Comedy Festival, says, “The problem with ‘24’ is that it not only grasps the twisted idea that all Arabs/Muslims are scary suicide-bombers, which Al Qaeda/Hezbollah etc. and the media have successfully created, but it furthers that extreme thought, pushing it in order to sell fear, which drives ratings, which cashes the big bucks.”

 

“It’s a bit sickening to think that an American program is driving more ignorance and hurting Arabs/Muslims lives in America just so that some multi-million dollar executives can make an extra buck,” she adds.

 

One Muslim fan says, despite these past two episodes and the criticism it has received, he will continue to watch ‘24’, but with an eye of caution.  Bilal from NJ says, “I love ‘24’ and will continue to watch my hero, Jack Bauer, save the day yet again.  Jack Bauer is a man who will do his job right and a perfect hero figure no matter where a person’s heritage lies.  The season will bring up issues that everyone should look at.  After such a dramatic ending of the 4th episode, I think Fox should at least put up a disclaimer for Muslims saying that Islam is not a violent religion, but there are radical groups out there twisting the religion and distorting the image of a peaceful religion.”

 

Fox News aired a commercial in 2005 after the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) complained of the portrayal of Arabs/Muslims on ‘24’ where Kiefer Sutherland explained how the show’s bad characters do not correspond to all Muslims.

 

With the recent episodes from 2007, Munira from CAIR says, “We have communicated the American Muslim community’s concerns about this season’s story line to Fox officials and will work with the network to help viewers distinguish between televised fiction and actual world events.”

 

Rima Abdelkader is a NY-based journalist and a graduate of Pace University in NY.

 


 

 

 

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Comments 18 comments for this article
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Added: November 02, 2007. 06:53 PM CST
a common factor
Why do we always fail to note that the writers of the episodes you mentioned are entirely jewish. Seriously, no christian writer would write such vicious crap with such gusto. I'm not anti-jewish, but persistently , the overwhelming majority of writers and directors (as in 99.9999999% ) of shows and movies that depict arabs/muslims in a bad light are jewish, without fail. I really wish someone would have the courage to bring that up in the mass media.
Arabisto
Added: February 09, 2007. 08:48 AM CST
Well, my strategy now is to just skip over No Dhimmi's comments and get to more specific responses to the show itself.
Djinny
Added: February 09, 2007. 05:36 AM CST
Craving for a magic bullet to conquer terror?
The aftermath of 9/11 brought some US TV dramatists a different windfall. The War on Terror has meant new opportunities keeping them very busy and making them very rich. Surfing high on the post-9/11 tide, is Fox's super spy opera ‘24’. But does '24' reflect the 'war on terror' as it is? Or are these series following a more sinister script? a recent feature in Independent, London poses many pertinent questions: Many FOX apologists such as Cliff Kincaid, editor of Accuracy in Media fancy “24” as the Big Bang moment in the current boom in telly-terror because of its revolutionary real-time format, its claustrophobic obsession with conspiracy and betrayal within the American political and security establishments, and, most conspicuously, for its timing. Now in its sixth season from January, 24 rescued Kiefer Sutherland from a twilight zone of bad movies and obscure TV guest appearances. Equally significantly, 24 set a tone Kincaid admires - terrorism is the deadliest enemy, and no weapon will be left unused in combatting it. Its makers have made no bones about their hawkish sympathies, with co-creator Joel Surnow happy to admit to 24's conservative leanings. Rewriting the history has provided an indecently quick opportunity as the TV networks have been running their own fantasy commentary on the War on Terror almost since the day of the al-Qa'ida attacks, says British critic Adam Sweeting. 'As the international situation has lurched from crisis to disaster since 9/11, sensationalist script writers turn current events into screen drama with its tabloid-lite storylines about stray Muslims cooking a wide variety of weird plots. Terrorism has proved big business, for the TV studios as the networks have been pumping out reams of programming seething with terror plots, covert agencies and geopolitical paranoia obliged by But should it be, and is it good for us?' This fascination will speaks volume of the mindset, taste and inhibitions. There is a desire that though the Iraqi episode is littered with disasters, but Hollywood can fix them. As if saying We'll send Jack Brauer back to do the job properly. As USA Today aptly puts it, 'the idea that our military fates might be in the hands of people this stupid is too horrifying to contemplate'. Some media outlets and their pen soldiers have a long tradition of keeping the specter of war vivid by stoking fears and harping about some real but many more imaginary threats. TV channels have a long tradition of popular series about official agencies, from the police and the military to the secret services featured as headstrong mavericks who refuse to play by the rules, they're still public employees who work for the state. Hence, the viewer can't help being manipulated into a kind of complicity with the machinery of officialdom, warns Adam Sweeting and asks: “So are TV's legions of secret operatives, surrogate outriders for official government policy, warning us of the bottomless pit of horrors lurking within the global anti-terror struggle? As surveillance and state intrusion soar to disturbing new levels, are the telly-agents helping to soften us up for further systematic repression of personal freedoms?”
viewsdissector
Added: February 02, 2007. 05:23 PM CST
I personally disagree with what 24 did but there is a show that is like it by showtime, its sleeper cell. The difference between sleeper cell and 24 is that sleeper cell shows that even normal muslims are against terrorism and it CLEARLY shows how the extremists are completely different than normal muslims. It also shows how they are hypocritical. The thing 24 failed to do is that they did not do a good job of making that difference shown. They might have just tought it was common sense but to an ignorant person they might not see it as common sense. Also when dealing with such a sensitive issue one must do all they can to make sure it is appropiate. Maybe thats why sleeper cell has two of its high staff members, writer and consultant/actor, as muslims.
ibes
Added: January 22, 2007. 02:38 PM CST
Reply to Mounira
Mounira, I would be more than happy to peruse the blogs you refer to, please provide them. If they are speaking out against corruption, then that is not the subject I am interested in though it is very worthy. If they are speaking out against radical Islamic clerics for the hatred and phobia they have for the West, Christians, and Jews, then I am interested. As I have stated, I have yet to hear such denouncements. For your information, I have been reading The Radical Middle Way, Islamica Magazine, the english version of Al-Jazeera, and Alt.Muslim. I have yet to come across an article that challenges the hate speech and degrading stereotypes that are espoused from media outlets that are monitored by MEMRI. If you are not familiar with that website, it is www.memritv.org. I am familiar with Mr. Hanania's comments. He is a Christian. I would refer you to his blog about the muted, silent condemnation of Churches being burned and destroyed in response to the Mohammed cartoons and Pope Benedict's quoting of a Byzantinian Emperor who was being beseiged by muslim armies. If there was a muslim blogger on this site that responded to his request, then thank you. If no one did not, then my question about a double standard stands. Again, I never criticized an entire region. I am questioning a specific segment. Please point out where I have made blanketed, insensitive comments about muslims or arabs? With all due respect Mounira, I have never said that 'arabs and muslims are decendents of apes and pigs?' Hmmmm.........I wonder if you could substitute 'Jews and Christians' into that statment. More importantly, where did it come from! For your information, I have lived in the Middle East. I am well aware that there are good arabs and muslims. People here don't like that I don't fall lock-step into all they write about. I will challenge because if we are going to object to falsehoods, stereotypes, and hatred, then it has to be across the board and that means the West, Christians and Jews. As for giving my name, no. Whether I give my real first name or use No Dhimmi makes no difference. If you don't like what I write, then what does my name matter.
No Dhimmi
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