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Sopranos-Style TV Sparks Concerns On Armenian Crime Rates

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  • Sopranos-Style TV Sparks Concerns On Armenian Crime Rates

    SOPRANOS-STYLE TV SPARKS CONCERNS ON ARMENIAN CRIME RATES

    Kuwait Times
    http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?new sid=MzIyNzY0MjM3
    April 27 2010

    Actor Harutyun Movsisian has no doubt why his character Hovo has
    become one of the best-loved and most popular figures on Armenian
    television. "Hovo is very kind, he respects his family and his wife,
    and he loves his country," said Movsisian, who is one of the ex-Soviet
    republic's most recognisable faces since he started playing Hovo on
    television series "The Trap" in 2008. "He is surrounded by jackals,
    dishonest, cruel characters and he fights for justice and to protect
    ordinary people." Given the desc ription, one might think Hovo was
    a police officer, a crusading lawyer or even an Armenian version of
    superspy Jack Bauer on American television series "24".

    But Hovo is in fact the head of an organized crime family and "The
    Trap" one of a slew of Sopranos-style television series that have
    taken Armenia by storm. But as the popularity of these mafia dramas
    has grown, so have Armenia's crime rates, and police are raising
    concerns that the glorification of crime bosses is to blame.

    Last year "The Trap" was the highest-rated program on Armenian
    television, according to AGB Nielsen Media Research's Yerevan office,
    with more than 27 percent of Armenian viewers tuning in every day
    to watch Hovo struggle with corrupt police and rival gangs as he ran
    his criminal empire.

    Similar programs featuring hero gangsters, including "The Orphans",
    "The Price of Life", and "Happy Unhappiness", were all in the top
    five most-watched. Many of the programs, including "The Trap", have
    now ended but thanks to their popularity many new mafia dramas are
    now in production. Overall crime rates in Armenia, meanwhile, jumped
    54.7 percent last year and police say local television's love affair
    with the criminal world is partly responsible.

    These programs are propaganda for criminality," Armenian police
    spokesman Sayat Shirinian said. "Glorifying criminals, humiliating
    the police and showing that violence is the answer of course will have
    an effect on people's morals and lead to an increase in criminality."

    Critics are especially worried about the impact of the programs
    on children.

    These series are teaching new behavior-that murder, terror or
    blackmail are the fastest and most effective way to solve problems,"
    child psychologist Khachatur Gasparian said. "Children identify
    with the heroes of these programs and become more aggressive and
    uncontrollable." Some have even raised concerns that the programs are
    damaging Armenia's international image by portraying the country as
    a hotbed of crime. Critics fear the series could scare off investment
    from Armenia's widespread diaspora commun ity, which the impoverished
    country relies on for significant economic and political support.

    These series create the impression that the country has no honest
    policemen or fair officials, that all questions are solved by
    violence," said Hovik Musayelian, a member of Armenia's Public Council,
    an advisory body to the government. "Many Armenians from the diaspora
    are afraid to invest because they think the country is in the hands
    of criminals and the mafia," he said.

    In the face of growing criticism, Armenia's National Commission
    on Television and Radio took steps this year to rein in the mafia
    programs, imposing new restrictions on showing violence and on
    positive portrayals of criminals. But critics say the rules can be
    broadly interpreted and may not have much effect. Harutyun Gukasian,
    a scriptwriter for "The Trap", said he cannot understand what all the
    fuss is about and dismissed claims that mafia dramas may be behind
    rising crime rates as absurd. "Don't make me laugh... Nobody becomes
    a mafioso from watching television," he said.

    "We are following the same path the whole world has. Crime dramas
    are popular everywhere."-AFP
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