Loopey
Tuesday 21st August 2012 1:54pm
Fairyland
2,635 posts
“The huge difference is our ettiquette to the disabled is being strongly challenged and we cannot react as we would to the able bodied. When we are being played with in public view by a disabled prankster it puts us in a difficult social position, to put it mildly.”
So if someone saw a person in a wheelchair attached to a parachute stuck in a tree and then discovered it was a joke, they couldn’t react as they would to someone able bodied?
It’s a prank show, people react to pranks. The prankers have set themselves up for a reaction, good, bad or indifferent. People are ‘played with’ in any prank show. If this one causes them to feel they have been put in a difficult social position that says more about them than the prankster.
“When social protocol has it that we treat disabled people with respect and dignity, and then they play a cheap prank on us, with their disability as the centrepiece of the practical joke, then this social protocol is severely compromised or even subverted. To me, this isn't a very nice idea. The bits I saw, the victims or onlookers looked very uncomfortable with it but still showed dignity to the pranksters.”
What does social protocol tell us about how we should treat non-disabled people? With respect and dignity? When they play a cheap prank on someone, with the centrepiece being their particular brand of humour, talent, strengths, weaknesses - isn’t social protocol severely compromised or even subverted? To me, this isn’t a very nice idea. Victims and onlookers often look uncomfortable with it all, but still show dignity to the pranksters – assuming dignity means going along with it, laughing, not showing anger or distress.
Respect and dignity are not generically exclusive.
“But what happens when they prank some lesser person who treats them with disgust and revulsion and tells them what they think of them? Will they screen any like that??? I doubt it, but at the core of the idea, it seems this is what the show is attempting to provoke.”
It seems to me that at the core, the programme is attempting to prank people and provoke a reaction, just like other prank shows.
If all prank shows were to screen all pranks and reactions, some of which no doubt are not favourable towards the pranksters, this would give the viewer an accurate picture of how the public perceives pranksters of any ability. Those who are pranked could be disgusted and repulsed by any prankster.