My Response to 48 Hours

Last Friday, the CBS News Magazine 48 Hours broadcast a story about Everquest as part of a show about addiction. This broadcast showed such a serious lack of journalistic integrity and left so many questions unanswered that I feel compelled to respond. Clearly, in this case true journalism was set aside, and CBS instead came up with what they thought was a juicy premise and then manufactured the facts to fit, purposefully ignoring the multitude of other facts that repudiated their predetermined storyline. In doing so, they insulted and belittled the hundreds of thousands of us who play and enjoy online games and have no difficulty integrating our hobby into our regular daily lives. (I’m including the DAoC site in this editorial because there is no doubt that had they focused on that game, their premise would have remained the same). The title of their show was “Addiction”, so let me start with the word itself. All too often our media adopts a viable scientific or medical term and warps it far beyond its original meaning to the point where the term loses all actual meaning. Addiction is one of those terms. I am sorry, but Everquest is not addictive. Neither is eating, working, having sex, or any of the myriad other activities our press loves to call addictive. To call Everquest addictive is an insult to the many people out there who are struggling to overcome the many serious and valid debilitating addictions in our world. An addictive substance is something you need, not want, and no matter how you look at it, nobody needs to play Everquest. Playing Everquest is definitely a lot of fun, and some may prefer playing it to doing any of the other activities life may offer, even to the point of ignoring things society deems important. This is not an addiction, but rather a lack of self control. A man sweating with the anguish of withdrawal from his normal dose of heroin is addicted and in need to help to kick his habit. His body needs that heroin. A man who plays Everquest to the point where he ignores his family, job and life is simply out of control. He may want to keep playing the game, but he does not need it. There is a difference. CBS’s premise that this is some sort of evil game that sucks the mind out of its players and causes them to lose control of their lives is simply ridiculous. If someone loses control of his life, it is likely that he would have found some other way to do it even if he did not find Everquest. It makes for a juicy headline, but really is tabloid journalism at its worst. Even more tabloid journalism was the presentation itself. Is there any doubt that 48 Hours interviewed hundreds of people and kept rejecting person after person for being too normal or because the game did not have any negative impact on their lives before picking their eventual subjects? Even the player they eventually did decide to film hardly supported their premise, although they used every trick in their book to make it seem that he did. It’s obvious they had no intention of presenting an unbiased article and routinely rejected anything that contradicted the story they wanted to make. They instead wanted to shock the viewer and make him believe that there are hundreds of thousands of mentally unstable gaming addicts playing this online video game who are probably just steps away from killing themselves and who knows how many others. Obviously the CBS motto is to never let the facts get in the way of a good story. The player they finally chose to interview was a doctor who played Everquest about 20 hours a week. He seemed to be a fairly normal person with a normal family life. They obviously chose him because his wife complained that she wished that he spent less time playing Everquest and more time with his family. The implication was clear that this was an otherwise good and normal man hopelessly corrupted by this evil game. Funny, but I saw something else. Here is a man who manages to hold down a high pressure job, is a loving husband, properly raises his children and provides for his family. Yet CBS wants to excoriate him for stealing 20 hours a week of private time for himself, because he does it playing a video game and, quite frankly, they think that’s weird. They showed him sitting there fighting something in the game and then zoomed in to the reporter so that she could arch her eyebrows and look properly horrified that anyone would be silly enough to waste his time on something like that. “Look”, she said, “he even has trouble looking away from the screen when I’m talking to him”. Oh if only he hadn’t met this evil game, he would surely be the perfect husband and father. Let me add something up here. CBS sports is a very profitable part of their network. Watching two Sunday NFL games takes a good 7 hours. A single college game on Saturday is another 3 ½ hours and there are games on all day long. Add in a couple baseball, basketball or hockey games during the week and you can easily add up to 20 hours watching sports on TV for just your average sports fan. A dedicated sports fan would of course go much higher than that. I’m guessing if that was his hobby, 48 Hours would have never come knocking at his door. “Man ignores family to watch football” does not make as tantalizing a headline as “Man becomes addicted to evil video game”. I don’t see CBS urging their sports division to put a warning label at the bottom of every football game warning that watching sports can be addictive and cause you to spend time away from your family. His wife should be glad he is not going out to the bars every night with his friends like many other men and women and that he instead found a way to blow off steam that keeps him at home and available when she needs him and that comes at a relatively small cost. She was never asked, but would any of us be surprised to find out that the wife who is complaining so much about her husband’s game playing spends far more than 20 hours a week watching television or shopping. I would think just about anyone spends at least 20 hours a week on personal projects and hobbies. Playing golf, sports, television, reading, and shopping are a few obvious examples of activities people spend long hours at, but there are plenty of others. Of course that wouldn’t fit into CBS’s concept for the show, so those facts simply got ignored. Besides, they want to make him look weird, not normal, and pointing that out would simply remind people that this isn’t really all that odd after all. He’s playing a video game, so there must be something wrong with him. This is after all a tabloid and not a real news show. 48 Hours also interviewed Ben Stein about his son’s Everquest playing. I guess this was to show that even pseudo-celebrities like him are not immune to this scourge. (If they wanted to interview a celebrity, why not a real one who actually plays Everquest like Curt Schilling? – Oh yeah, Curt would have told them they were full of it and blown a hole in their whole false and demeaning premise). Am I the only one struck by Mr. Stein’s method of stopping his son from playing EQ? He sent him off to a boarding school where, according to Mr. Stein, they did not allow games like that to be played. After a stint of time away from Everquest, and not coincidentally away from his parents, he was suddenly cured. (and I’m glad we were spared the manufactured scenes of his son lying in bed at the boarding house, body shaking and sweating profusely, and mewing pitifully about “just one more orc, please just one more”). Well, Ben, why didn’t you just not allow those games at your house? If your son is playing video games to what you consider an excess, maybe you should just put your foot down and pull the plug on his computer. If he instead spent his time downloading online porn, would you have let him do that for a while until you finally threw up your hands and sent him off to a porn-free school somewhere? Who is the problem here? The teenager who plays a game to excess, or for that matter does anything to excess, or the parent who allows it? Sorry Ben, but don’t blame the manufacturer of a game for your bad parenting. Finally, there is poor Mrs. Woolley. It must be terrible to lose a son, and we all feel sympathy for her. But eventually she is going to have to face up to the fact that Everquest did not have anything to do with it. Shawn was a troubled and mentally disturbed child and had been so for all of his life. Something was bound to set him off eventually. Maybe it was indeed something that happened to him in the game. Everquest is after all populated with real people, and the inability to interact with people seemed to be at the root of his mental illness. It really could have been just about anything that brought about his suicide. The unfortunate fact in life is that sometimes bad things happen and there’s not much we can do about it. Blaming Everquest for her son’s death probably makes Mrs. Woolley feel better and gives her an outlet for her grief, and you know what? I really have no problem with that. Let her deal with her grief in whatever manner she wishes. What is wrong is for a news outlet like CBS to exploit her grief for the sake of their ratings. And make no mistake that this is pure exploitation on their part. “Satanic Video game convinces man to commit suicide” was just too good a headline for them to resist. The tabloid journalists who make up the 48 Hours staff must have truly started salivating when they thought that one up. So they hauled their cameras into that poor woman’s living room and helped feed her delusion so that they could broadcast it to the rest of the world and sell a lot of commercials. Frankly, this part makes me sicker than any other part of their story. Manufacturing facts to make up a false story you hope will bring big ratings makes you a poor journalist, but exploiting a mother’s suffering and grief from the death of her son for those ratings makes you a poor human being. The journalists who made their trek to the Woolley residence to get their juicy video game murder story were simply parasites feeding on that poor woman’s grief and delusions. I’d like to think that Susan Spencer, the journalist who did this story, has a little more trouble sleeping a night because of her actions, but unfortunately I doubt it bothers her in the least. It is sad to see that the network of the great Walter Cronkite has sunk to such depths. I had always thought journalism was about facts first and story second. Yet CBS managed to do an entire story on the supposedly addictive and evil nature of this game without displaying a single fact to prove it and by ignoring the many facts that disprove it. In the end they made fun of something they know nothing about, exploited something that should be pitied instead, and succeeded in nothing more than insulting the hundreds of thousands of people who consider playing Everquest and other video games a normal, healthy and enjoyable part of their lives. For what it’s worth, they also lost my respect and viewer ship. If you wish to contact CBS about this show, here is the contact information: 48 Hours 524 West 57th St. New York, NY 10019 E-MAIL: 48hours@cbsnews.com. PHONE: (212) 975-3247
Tags: General, News

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addiction
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:51 AM Rating: Good
Being a mom yes I am concerned about time my children spend on video or online games. I am responsible for my childrens actions. I must teach them to set limits. If my kids play to much EQ, Playstation, Nintendo I have the power of the plug. Same for watching to much tv. When willl more parents learn this and quit blaming others for their childrens faults?? We have one computer in the house and 2 EQ accounts. I allow my child to play, horrors huh? The other account is mine. The main problem we have with EQ is we really need a 2nd computer so my son gets time to play.

49 rogue on Veeshan (mom)
11 bard on Veeshan (son)
Posting Rebuttal on CBS Site
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:50 AM Rating: Decent
I attempted to post a rebuttal on the CBS site, and have been stymied by an inability to leave any messages of consequential length. Echoing everyone's sentiment, this editorial comment is very well done. I again urge everyone who took offense to CBS's Yellow Journalism, and take a more active role by submitting your well thought-out emails to CBS, and adding your voice to those of us who submitted our displeasure at their treatment of the game. In addition, emails and letters to your local television stations, can also provide a role in rebutting the harsh, inaccurate treatment that the 48 Hours writers made in their judgement of our community.
Bofla
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:49 AM Rating: Default
I haven't seen the show, but i read the report on CBS hp.

It's allways sad to see someone commit suicide, and it's easy to make false presumptions about why the suicide happened.

The mother shouldn't use EQ as a shield of protecting herself. She should have done more, when she had the opportunity.

If I ever loose my job, friends, money etc. and all I have left is my family and EQ.I sure hope my family will knock down my door, if I play EQ all day.

Bofla Headhunter, 60 Baron Warlord, Karana
well ...
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:43 AM Rating: Default
Yeah, the show was sensationalist. But, so much of our society is, just look at the extreme sorts of posts people spew all over this websight. I'm not going to take the 48 hours show too seriously, just like I don't take the posts in defense of EQ too seriously, or any of the rest of the junk ppl post about EQ.

How should ppl think about EQ as an addiction? Its obvious that lots of ppl are addicted, and to argue over that language is rediculous. There is another word you could use too, denial. Want to argue over the summantics of using that word too? Give me a break, I know lots of ppl who are addicted and play EQ too much, just like alot of ppl watch too much football, etc.
You should know that the game has a pull to it, and remember to get out and do things that might help ya experience life in different ways. The moral is: don't kill yourself or anybody else over EQ and try and do some other creative things in your life outside of EQ. If you don't have any friends that are tolerant of your gaming, but think its funny, you need to make some new friends. So what if some ppl call EQ an addiction, they are right. If you have a problem with that, you probably play too much. If its not a big deal that ppl call the game addictive, log on and waste some time and have fun for a few hours.
RE: well ...
# Oct 21 2002 at 12:31 PM Rating: Default
EverQuest is not an addiction. It doesn't meet the clinical definition of addiction, and it isn't inherently harmful to the vast majority of the its "addicts". If wasting too much time on an unproductive activity is an addiction, then why aren't we all in an uproar about the Television Epidemic that has been ravaging the world for decades now? People are spending every spare moment staring at some moronic crap on the TV screen, hours and hours a day!

Well, we aren't all in 12 step TV-ANON programs because watching TV isn't a downward spiral of self-destruction. You don't start robbing your neighbors houses to get more Televisions, it doesn't lead to staying awake for days on end flipping channels, and nobody overdoses on television and drops dead after watching their 4the Simpsons episode in a day. Neither TV nor EQ carry the risks that define PROBLEM addictions such as drugs or gambling, where lives are lost and ruined because a person is unable to control a *destructive* impulse.

And I'm sorry, but blowing your kids off to play EverQuest isn't a problem with the game, it's a problem with the person choosing to do it. And if you can point out a person who has ruined their life in a pursuit of level 60, that's sad, but generally when a behavior manifests itself in 1 person out of 300,000 who are engaged in an activity we come to the conclusion that it was a problem with that individual and not the rest of the world.

How we define addiction isn't simply a matter of semantics, unless by addiction you mean to include any and all human activity that is engaged in on a persistent basis. I agree strongly with Allakhazam, classifying EverQuest as an addiction only serves to trivialize genuine addictions and distort the issue in people's minds. Using drugs is a choice, but for an addict it's a choice that is made under extreme psychological duress, physical craving, and irrational compulsion. Their body is screaming at them to use drugs. Ultimately, if they are to stay sober, they'll have to learn to live with that feeling and find ways of coping and staying in control.

So, no, it isn't a big deal to call EQ addictive under your working definition, which includes any repeat activity up to and including breathing. But if we are equating EverQuest to the horrible societal epidemic of drug and alcohol addiction , thats grossly misleading and an insult to addicts who have a HARMFUL habit.



Fantastic View
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:43 AM Rating: Default
I really wish that CBS could see this editorial, and would broadcast it in response to their show. As for Mrs. Woolley I'm sure anyone in the everquest community who saw the show had heartfelt sorrow for her. However, we have to look at the fact that this was a person with a history of not just mental illness, but a person who had real problems dealing with people. If everquest had been that large a concern on his mother's mind she should have done anything in her power to stop. All that said I feel very sorry for Mrs. Woolley and the entire family, and I wish they could realize how CBS (not just 48 hours...60 minutes replayed the piece later in the evening) exploited their sorrow.

Teidiani Loresinger
Wow
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:42 AM Rating: Default
Damn good response, very well written. Reading this was much more intriging than the worst 15 minutes of news reporting I have ever seen.

Fight the Power!

Kalerith of the Nexus
Blackguard
E'ci Server
Cheap Shots at a competitor
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:41 AM Rating: Good
*
159 posts
I own a successful business with offices in two cities. My wife and I have been married for almost 24 years. We have two children. One has graduated from college and the other is a junior in college. I have played EQ for two years.

I have noticed that since I started playing that I don't watch TV in the evening and I would say that I am better for it!! The major media is liberally biased and the content of the majority of the TV shows involves an endless repetition of vulgarities and sexual innuendo or sensationalism packaged as "news".

The CBS staff sees EQ as competition so it took its best shot at distorting what EQ provides as entertainment. Best revenge is to keep playing and make sure that the CBS logo never appears on your TV set when you chose to watch the "boob tube". (That is what my parents used to call the TV back in the days when people thought TV was addictive!)
Editorial
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:39 AM Rating: Default
Excellent editorial. I'm surprised someone addicted to EQ could have written so well.

This is the same BS that was heard when D&D reached it's peak of popularity. The game did it. My son was normal, it was the game!

I'm really sick and tired of people not taking responsibility for their own actions, and for parents not taking responsibility for their own inactions.

Thanks for the write up. I missed the show but your editorial confirmed my fears that it was going to be a biased viewpoint from a bunch of sensationalist writers.
Editorial
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:36 AM Rating: Decent
This editorial was very well written. I am also of the Medical Community (Thaeorin Silivren, Eryndyl's Husband) and I must also agree with the anonymous post about the disagreement with addictions being only physical. Currently in the medical world the BioPsycho-Social perspective is taken when looking at this. This theory simply states that it can be a sum of physical (chemical) and social settings that can cause any form of psychosis, including but not limited to addiction. I do agree wholeheartedly that this was "Red Journalism". They took something that provides a matter of happiness in the dim world for many of us and made it an evil monster for "all to see". Everquest, nor any other game, music, etc., causes suicides or murders but rather a psychiatric incident takes place. I commend Allakhazam's for sending this editorial. I have given up on the media a long time ago to portray anything in a completely truthful light... it is all sensationalism these days.

For the post concerning the mother asking about her child's account. The information about the child's account... race, class, what have you is a matter of confidentiality and cannot be given out by law. It is much the same in the hospitals and I think is similar to the NPNI acts (No Press No Info).
Addiction.........Yes!
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:36 AM Rating: Default
I agree that this story was a ratings/agenda/biased story. I did want to say, that I EQ is addictive. Not in the physical maner, as in your bodies cells going through withdrawl over the product being removed from normal usage. I refer to a more mental/psychological addiction, like that of LSD or "mushrooms" and yes even sex. I have read authors, doctor, researches and the like suggest at anyonetime the average human is in a deluded fantasy world either they create or find some other activity to create. I have heard that this is 50-85% of the time of a humans daily life. When that activity, ie sex, drugs or in this case EQ is taken from the person that uses it to forget "reality" they have been show to, clinically, go through a withdrawl. EQ most surely takes one from reality and makes a new one for the player. Does VI/Sony intend this.........NO! I do contend that there are probably many people in the world of video games that know this, and may even try to build games to grab more and bring them into a world that is digitally real, but not physically, with the hopes that is will cause addiction. That is just suspect, no valid proof. I myself play EQ, but can step away when work,life or my fiance calls, yet I have to admit it does not come without a distaste at times, a strong desire to stay and play. I also knew some players who had to quit for sometime and they admitted to me they felt a sort of EQ withdrawl, baring these are players that player 20 plus hours a week. I do feel that what CBS did was wrong, yet they have done that for song long, like most media today, I suppose I have grown weak and fallen in line. The vast majority of media from the New York Times to CNN have there own agenda on certain issues it seems and true journalism is gone. Furthermore in this situation, i am sure there is someone who was running this story found out that EQ has like 500,000 plus players and just thought if EQ died because of there story, thus more viewers. That may seem extreme of me to think, but the way media is today, i will never put anything past them. Mainly my point is EQ most certainly can be addictive, but that is not the fault of the game, that would be like lecturing a crack rock for making someone an addict. The CHOICE is always of the person using. They choose to use herion. They choose drink a few beers everyday after work to "knock the edge off". They choose to watch TV every waking moment they are home from work. They chose to put EQ over family, friends, work. These are all levels of addiction, from physical to psychologcial. I have no doubt of this. Again, it is not the EQ's fault or even the creators hope. That is just baseless and foolish. Have a good day and good hunting.

Ironflesh Voxslain 36 monk Tunare
Agreed
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:33 AM Rating: Default
I agree with you Allakhazam. I would think that parents would think Everquest a good idea. They may not love it, but wouldn't they rather have their children playing a fun and interactive videogame than doing any one of the many addictives out in our world? Like drugs or instance. And In my opinion, Everquest is a great way to relieve stress from maybe a bad day at work, school etc.

Traelden Keio`Tenien
54 Assling Warrior
Proud Member of Divine Legion
Report
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:25 AM Rating: Default
Heres a link to their report. This is total *********

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/10/17/48hours/main525965.shtml

Ytren Warpspeed
Well Done
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:24 AM Rating: Decent
A very well written response. I wish I could have seen the show. So I too could not watch CBS anymore (not that I waste my time and such an unstimulating hobby).
/agree
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:22 AM Rating: Decent
1 post
I agree with your review. I sent feedback to 48hours after that story aired informing them that the story had little or no journalism in it. It was shock news meant for ratings.

If you want news, go read a paper. TV News is all about ratings and shock value. Our News-Papers are about the least biased and neutral you will find right now.
____________________________
Tapeworm - Troll Shaman of the Quellious Realm
I Agree
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:15 AM Rating: Default
The mother in that story said she tried to get details of her son's character/race/dialogue was. Sony/Veriant They would not allow her access to that information? Anyone know what thats all about? I agree with your response Allakhazam it was definately tacky and done in bad taste.
RE: I Agree
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:31 AM Rating: Decent
Sage
*
75 posts
From what I've seen, his mother believes that her son was spurned by an in-game love, and she wanted to find out who that person was. Sony wouldn't release the logs of her son's character. I think that was for the best, she seems likely to blame and harass her son's in-game acquaintances for her son's actions.
Addiction
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:14 AM Rating: Default
I would disagree with you that addictions are only physical. There are emotional addictions too. Though that would still be a very very small percentage of the people we are talking about.
hehe
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:14 AM Rating: Default
Excuse my poor grammar
Cbs Sucks anyways
# Oct 21 2002 at 10:13 AM Rating: Default
That CBS report is total BS , Ive always used that argument , Everyone has their own personaly things they do for fun that equal well over the time i play Eq or videogames in general . I play 2 hours a day , I know people that love taking 2 hour showers , does that make showering addictive? Eh anyways Just like to say Very intriguing Thing on the cbs report thing .

Tuxtha Pengwenn 42 monk of xev
Asgoroth 27 ranger of xev
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