Iceland review - 2007, Side 57

Iceland review - 2007, Side 57
ICELAND REVIEW 63 attention. It’s important because it’s something we know, something that is relevant to us,” explains Helga Thorberg, f lorist, actress and host of Klipptu kortid. Randver Thorláksson, comic actor and host of Randver, is also dissatisf ied with the bread-and-circus programming broadcast by Iceland’s other networks. “We have become so used to American culture, which is not good. It’s not our culture,” Thorláksson complains. “I find American programming too stupid to watch. Those shows with a fat, dumb guy married to a smart, sexy woman, like King of Queens, are put on us all the time and those terrible reality shows. You are trapped in it like a soap opera – it’s a drug.” Ólína Thorvardar- dóttir, a veteran of television media, school administration, and civic politics who hosts Mér finnst, has her own theories about the toll this sort of cultural imperialism takes on a small nation like Iceland. “As every other civilized nation nowadays we are occupied with global- ization,” explains Thorvardardóttir. “But it’s not healthy for a nation to forget itself in this trend.” She believes it is important to create a space “in our Icelandic environment having Icelandic debates on Ice- landic issues with other Icelandic people.” She continues, “You have this globalization trend, which is f ine. But we can’t all jump onto the same side of the boat in that sense. We’ll f lip over!” But this question of how much Iceland pipes in from abroad and how much is drawn from its own cultural wells is no new question – even the issue of what Iceland’s rabbit ears should and shouldn’t be tuning in to is as old as the medium itself. elevision will eventually make radio as obsolete as the horse – and empty all the nation’s movie houses. Children will go to school in their own living rooms, presidential candidates will win elections from a television studio […] Housewives are the greatest worry. Will they have time to sit down and watch television?” This was the prophecy espoused in a full-page editorial from a 1948 edition of Morgunbladid, Iceland’s daily paper. Some of these predictions hold water today, but ask any Icelander for their litany of concerns about television and you’ll be hard pressed to find stealing the good housewife away from her chores. However, the birthright of Icelandic television is inextricably linked to the greatest concern the nation has ever had (and still has) about the medium: should Icelanders be watching first and foremost Iceland on their TV screens? Back in 1948 this proposition verged on absurdity: producing programm- ing exclusively for a population of just over 135,000 people – a viewership about the size of modern-day Fargo, North Dakota. But it wasn’t until the threat of foreign programming entered the picture that Icelanders took the proposition seriously. In 1955 the US Naval Air Station in Kef lavík, 55 kilometers west of Reykjavík, decided to begin broad- casting American programming. The signal was strong enough that it could be picked up in the Reykjavík area, so anyone with a set became the envy of their neighbor. But dissent was brewing. By 1964 opposition came to a head and a petition was delivered to parliament demanding that the Americans’ broadcast be limited to the base. The petition was signed by several notables of the time including Nobel laureate for literature Halldór Laxness, the rector of the university, the national conservator, professors, writers, composers and other revered minds. For the first time, Iceland stated it would only have its own, or none at all. In 1965 Sigurdur Líndal, secretary to the supreme court, deli ve- red his Cassandra speech at the university, stating that the most daunting problem facing the Icelandic people is that “a foreign empire… [has] managed to slink into Icelandic society through the most effective propaganda tool of the modern age”: the television. He forebodes a fate in which Icelandic society would be stripped away and the people assimilated into American mass culture. Some might even argue that Líndal’s prediction wasn’t too far from the truth. In response to these worries the base’s broadcast was finally limited, and on a chilly fall evening in 1966, RÚV, the national broadcasting service, began its television transmission and the island saw its f irst native broadcast. On September 30 at 8 p.m. Prime Minister Bjarni Benediktson sat for a Q&A session with the Icelandic press, followed by the documentary about the Icelandic settlers in Greenland, and then Skáldatími (The Poet’s Hour), which saw Halldór Laxness reading from his latest novel, Paradise Found. Programming emphasized Icelandic content with broadcasts two nights a week, then later, six. Thursday nights there was no TV. And never in July. In fact, it was not until 1983 that programming was delivered year round and not until 1987 that the state broadcasting network began Thursday programming, and only then because of competition from the nation’s f irst private channel, Stöd 2. Today there are two Icelandic channels broadcast to the public (three if you count the Christian televangelism network, Omega), plus a handful of private channels like Stöd 2 and the sports channel Sýn. With the dawn of cable many households have nearly 80 channels now – MTV, CNN, Cartoon Network, E! Entertainment, Zone Reality, etc. – all broadcast from overseas or featuring foreign programming, with the exception of one. ÍNN has entered the arena and is vying for the nation’s primetime attention under the righteous banner of local-grown pro- gramming. At the bustling table of the evening television lineup, some believe that Icelanders have become so culturally anemic that they will indeed choose to eat the Brussels sprouts of local programming instead of the super-sized American export sitcoms and reality shows. “T

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