Pubdate: Wed, 12 Jul 2000 Source: Journal Gazette (IN) Copyright: 2000 Journal Gazette Contact: 600 W. Main Street, Ft. Wayne, IN. 46802 Fax: (219) 461-8648 Feedback: http://www.jg.net/jg/emailform2.htm Website: http://www.jg.net/jg/ Author: Sylvia A. Smith, Washington editor, The Journal Gazette TV DRUG MESSAGES SCRUTINIZED The White House should publish a monthly "report card" that evaluates the drug use messages on TV shows, Rep. Mark Souder, R-4th, said Tuesday. Each network would get two grades one for how well the entertainment programming promoted an anti-drug message, and one for how much the programs glamorized or made light of drug use. He said NBC, for instance, would get credit for an "E.R." program that dealt with drug overdose and the problems it created for a family but would lose points for a "Friends" episode that showed people drinking alcohol and having more fun as a result and made a pro-marijuana joke. "By holding it up for public scrutiny," he said, "it would embarrass them out of their position." But Barry McCaffrey, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, dismissed Souder's idea. "I personally don't think the media's the problem," he said. "The TV and film industry are not causing the drug problem in America." The big problem, McCaffrey said, is what children are doing after school and before their parents come home from work, on weekends and during the summer. Souder made his suggestion at a congressional hearing called to review McCaffrey's strategy of trying to insert anti-drug messages into popular TV shows. In the past two years, the drug office has paid scriptwriters and networks about $22 million for placing anti-drug messages in TV shows. Networks also received credits for airing anti-drug messages in their shows, allowing them to run commercial ads instead of government-sponsored anti-drug ads. McCaffrey said the program has been changed so he will no longer review scripts in advance or give payments for writers to insert anti-drug themes in scripts. He also said he wants to extend the program to movies. In both cases, he said, payments will reward writers and producers only after the movies or TV shows are released. McCaffrey said advance pay ments might interfere in the "creative process" of making a movie, but post-release rewards would not. He also said he is trying to figure out how to turn the "cookie" operation back on at the drug czar's Web site. A "cookie" is a surveillance code a Web site operator can plant in a site visitor's hard drive. Then, when the person searches the Internet for drug-related information, banner advertisements pop up to direct the person to the drug czar's drug-education site. President Clinton's chief of staff ordered the "cookies" be turned off last month because of criticism about invasion of privacy. McCaffrey told the lawmakers that the "cookie" doesn't allow his office to see who is visiting the Web site, only what banner ads are the most effective. But both practices using "cookies" and inserting anti-drug messages in TV programs could backfire, one congressman said. "We can't afford to have kids thinking that every anti-drug message portrayed on TV was planted by the government. Likewise, we cannot afford to have their parents fearing that they are being spied upon every time they visit a government Web site for information or help," said Rep. John Mica, R-Fla. McCaffrey said both are important to his advertising campaign to persuade young people about the dangers of drugs and to reduce drug use. Souder said entertainment producers should voluntarily put anti-drug messages their scripts."We are all uncomfortable that this is tied to money," he said. "This is something they ought to be doing on their own." Congress has approved a $1 billion, five-year anti-drug campaign. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck