Same news, different year: Muslims unhappy with their portrayal on '24'

Fred

Middle of the road
http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/print?id=2805120

Muslims Unhappy Over `24' Portrayal
Muslims Protest Reprised Role As Terrorists in Fox Hit Series `24'

CLIFTON, N.J. - Two years ago, Muslim groups protested when the plot of the hit Fox drama `24' cast Islamic terrorists as the villains who launched a stolen nuclear missile in an attack on America.

Now, after a one-year respite during which Russian separatists played the bad guys on the critically acclaimed series, Muslims are back in the evil spotlight. Unlike last time, when agent Jack Bauer saved the day, the terrorists this time have already succeeded in detonating a nuclear bomb in a Los Angeles suburb.

Being portrayed again as the heartless wrongdoers has drawn renewed protests from Muslim groups, including one that had a meeting with Fox executives two years ago over the issue.

"The overwhelming impression you get is fear and hatred for Muslims," said Rabiah Ahmed, a spokeswoman for the Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations. She said Thursday she was distressed by this season's premiere. "After watching that show, I was afraid to go to the grocery store because I wasn't sure the person next to me would be able to differentiate between fiction and reality."

She said the group had a conference call Wednesday with Fox executives to protest the current plot line and request more positive portrayals of Muslims on the show, but was not promised anything.

After a January 2005 meeting with CAIR, Fox aired a commercial in which the show's star, Kiefer Sutherland, urged viewers to keep in mind that the show's villains are not representative of all Muslims.

In a written statement issued late Wednesday night, the network said it has not singled out any ethnic or religious group for blame in creating its characters.

"24 is a heightened drama about anti-terrorism," the statement read. "After five seasons, the audience clearly understands this, and realizes that any individual, family, or group (ethnic or otherwise) that engages in violence is not meant to be typical.

"Over the past several seasons, the villains have included shadowy Anglo businessmen, Baltic Europeans, Germans, Russians, Islamic fundamentalists, and even the (Anglo-American) president of the United States," the network said. "The show has made a concerted effort to show ethnic, religious and political groups as multidimensional, and political issues are debated from multiple viewpoints."

The current season began with Muslim terrorists waging an 11-week campaign of suicide bombings across America, culminating in the detonation of a suitcase-sized nuclear bomb in Valencia, Calif., about 26 miles north of Los Angeles. Estimated death toll: 12,000.

Watching the show's characters talk about detonating a nuclear weapon a few blocks from where she works unnerved Sireen Sawaf, an official with the Los Angeles-based Muslim Public Affairs Council, and a self-described "huge `24' fan."

"It's a great show, and I do realize it's a multidimensional show that portrays extreme situations," she said. "They have gone out of their way to have non-Muslim terror cells.

"But I'm concerned about the image it ingrains in the minds of the American public and the American government, particularly when you have anti-Muslim statements spewing from the mouths of government officials."

Sohail Mohammed, a New Jersey immigration lawyer who represented scores of detainees caught up in the post Sept. 11, 2001 dragnet, watched the episode depicting the nuclear attack with an Associated Press reporter.

"I was shocked," he said. "Somewhere, some lunatic out there watching this will do something to an innocent American Muslim because he believes what he saw on TV."

Engy Abdelkader, a member of the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee from Howell, N.J., launched a campaign Wednesday to encourage Muslims offended by the program to complain to Fox.

"I found the portrayal of American Muslims to be pretty horrendous," she said. "It was denigrating from beginning to end. This is one of the most popular programs on television today. It's pretty distressing."

Concerns about Muslims' civil rights, detention of terror suspects in Guantanamo-like holding centers, and stereotyping are given vastly expanded treatment on `24' this year. In one exchange, the show depicts the president's national security adviser challenging the White House chief of staff over the detention of Muslims without criminal charges.

"Right now the American Muslim community is our greatest asset," the security adviser says. "They have provided law enforcement with hundreds of tips, and not a single member of that community has been implicated in these attacks."

"So far," the chief of staff responds.
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
Muslims Unhappy Over `24' Portrayal

Boo freakin' hoo

Lay down with dogs, get up with fleas....
 

Midnight_Wolf

Membership Revoked
Oh Darn.............. If the shoe fits...............Then again, you could always go home. Wherever the hell it is you call home. Why is it we always have to listen to the whining and crying of immigrants. If you do not like our culture and way of life. Go Home. It really isn't hard to grasp. I am So Sick of these Whiners, and Complainers. Hello, this Isn't Your Country. STFU. There, I feel better now.
 

Ta-wo-di

Veteran Member
I see a class action lawsuit coming on behalf of the muzzies by the ACLU for hate crimes - a speech - a thoughts or whatever. Get over it.
 

momof23goats

Deceased
-.all that comes to mind is this. STFU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I am soooooooooooo tired of these illegals coming in our country, and making demands, marching in our streets, this really sucks.
oh, by the way, guess i will start watching this program now.
 

Z28Camaro6D9

Veteran Member
Screw them.
Look how Italian-Americans like myself have been portrayed by Hollywood during the last 40 years: Italians are either dumb boxers or we work for the Mob.
Now a Muslim group has the nerve to complain about one show ?
To hell with them.
 

Metolius

Inactive
Sound like someone needs to learn where the "off" switch is on their TV. Barring that, they ought to take a look in the mirror, and decide who it is that is truly sullying their reputation.

These portrayals are, as they say, "ripped from the headlines." If they don't like them, they ought to start a group to counter the bad image - get some good PR. The fact that I have not seen much of this since 9/11 speaks volumes to moi.
 
If the muzzy bunch can demonstrate that ANYthing on the show is not what has already been DONE (often repeatedly) by muzzys - THEN we'll listen, not before. The horrific events shown are not done by 80 year old grandmothers or housewives from Peoria.

Too damned bad if they don't like having realistic portrayals of what supposedly sincere devout adherents of islam have already done - typically to what the majority of humans would call 'innocents'.

'24' has yet to show beheadings of blindfolded captives, murders of priests, nuns, death threats to the Pope, riots over cartoons, portrayals of members of other religions as pigs, gross destruction of other religion's artifacts and places of worship...all things that the muzzy bunch has already done.
 

The Cub

Behold, I am coming soon.
Why are they bitchin' about the muzzies caught in the act on the news?.....how is it any different? :screw:

I suggest that they redirect their whining to their brothers that make the daily news and tell them to clean up their act and convert to Christianity. ;)
 

bigrogb

Inactive
Screw them.
Look how Italian-Americans like myself have been portrayed by Hollywood during the last 40 years: Italians are either dumb boxers or we work for the Mob.
Now a Muslim group has the nerve to complain about one show ?
To hell with them.


Hey dont forget you guys make a great spaghetti also!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Sorry had to take it. No harm intended.
 

Z28Camaro6D9

Veteran Member
Hey dont forget you guys make a great spaghetti also!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

We do make a pretty good dish of spaghetti come to think of it,
although no one can touch my Grandma's recipe !!

Like Michael Savage once said:
"...The real problem with this country is that you just can't find a good meatball anymore..."
 
Top