back to article That steady diet of EastEnders is turning her into a shrew

Just as the viewing of violent movies or videogames can turn people nasty, so it seems that hours spent watching angry fictional drama protagonists cheating, bullying, deceiving and shouting at one another will also have evil effects. The revelation that EastEnders and Coronation Street cause at least as much human misery as …

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  1. Arctic fox
    Flame

    "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

    .

    I personally think that watching that shit would wind anybody up, male or female. I only have to hear the theme tune from A Certain Famous Soap to feel my blood pressure rising.

    1. MJI Silver badge

      Re: "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

      That music - try imagining the theme - then the theme to Thomas the Tank Engine - yes they do merge weirdly.

      I will admit I have seen the early genuine shows, before they made up silly stories.

    2. Michael H.F. Wilkinson Silver badge
      Thumb Up

      Re: "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

      " personally think that watching that shit would wind anybody up, male or female. I only have to hear the theme tune from A Certain Famous Soap to feel my blood pressure rising."

      Absolutely! My wife frequently wonders why I leave the room when certain shows are on TV (not just soaps, "talent" (word used without prejudice) shows have an even more pronounced effect). I tend not to say I am looking for more fun things to do, like stapling my ears to a wall, or putting my hand in a meat grinder. Somehow, remarks like that do not go down well.

      1. MJI Silver badge

        Re: "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

        Eastenders music

        "Come on boys time for a shower"

        Wash 2 small boys, then I have a shower, hopefully it has finished by then.

        1. Jonathan Richards 1

          Re: Wash 2 small boys

          Is that you, Father?

          1. MJI Silver badge

            Re: Wash 2 small boys

            Are you small with an identical twin?

            And they call me dad, used to be daddy but they are more grown up now.

            My worry is when they are a little older, they will shower themselves and I will be stuck with Deadenders downstairs. I suppose on computer, headphones on and see what Steam games I have.

            But then you can't shower a teenager anyway!

      2. Arctic fox
        Happy

        @Michael H.F. Wilkinson "like stapling my ears to a wall.............,

        ....................or putting my hand in a meat grinder."

        Happily Madam AF shares my feelings on the matter, I have therefore been able avoid having to resort to self-harm.

        -:)

        AF.

    3. unwarranted triumphalism

      Re: "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

      Every time I hear 'that theme' I think of Bill Bailey's lyrics:

      'Everyone is going to die

      We're all going to die

      In a variety of different ways...'

      Seems much more appropriate than the original...

    4. Haku

      Re: "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

      I'm with you 100%, I can't stand soap operas, especially UK ones where virtually all the characters are back-stabbing lying deceitful cheating sub-intelligent people who are only ever looking out for no.1 and all the 'plotlines' revolve around the nasty spiteful things the characters do.

      It's all just depressing shite that should be banned.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

        Ah yes. Hansard.

      2. Euripides Pants
        Joke

        Re: "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

        On the left side of the Atlantic, we think that all English people are like the crazy, screaming wastes of protoplasm on "Eastenders".

        And for those of you in England who think that all Americans are like the crazy, screaming wastes of protoplasm on the Jerry Springer Show, let me tell you we're not at all like that. We're worse - lardier and with 73.2% less self control.

      3. Peter Holgate
        Big Brother

        Re: "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

        Personally, I've always believed that the goverment is slipping subliminal messages in these programs to keep the brain-dead masses suppressed and depressed so as to be so complacent for their manipulation.

        Paranoid

    5. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

      One of the cast seems to have been beheaded by her brother, if the police are right, and then thrown in the local canal.

      However, I think it will be alright in the end, as apparently we find out on Christmas day that her brother wasn't actually her brother, she was his lover, and the body in the canal is actually an already dead body, from a bizarre cloning experiment, shortly before there's a party in the Queen Vic, and someone dies outside.

      On boxing day, Booby Ewing will be seen in the shower, because his post SOAP career failed, and the whole last five years of telly will turn out to be a dream.

  2. Destroy All Monsters Silver badge
    Mushroom

    Just another sign...

    ...that modern patriarchal society is out to destroy and demean women by any means necessary, now even attacking the last redoubt, their Emotional Intelligence, via the cocaine-like delivery vehicle of Chauvinist Soap Operas depicting lurid male fantasies of how women supposedly behave.

    Wake up!!

    1. MnM
      Alert

      Agreed, and yet

      this article perfectly describes my step-mother.

    2. honkhonk34
      Black Helicopters

      Re: Just another sign...

      What are you rambling about? Soap Operas are traditionally marketed at women! It's less prevalent now than the 80's and 90's but certainly in my own personal experience the vast majority of people I know who watch soaps are women. If they depict chauvinistic fantasies then why would women watch them at all? If anything one of the reasons I dislike soap operas is the misandry that quite often can be found in the plot lines.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Just another sign...

        /sigh

        Poe's law strikes again.....

  3. Anonymous Coward
    Holmes

    Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women

    No shit Sherlock.

    It is not only women, and most people could have told you that without the research (and associated grant no doubt)

    That is all.

  4. Pete 2 Silver badge

    It's on TV - it must be true

    We see this stuff on major channels. That makes it OK. After all, to get there it's been approved by the programme makers, tacitly blessed by the "powers that be (be cee)", got through the political tests for fairness, sensitivity, balance and blandness and ultimately doesn't get complained about by the viewing audience. That means that whatever is shown in a soap, cop-show, talk show, reality programme or any other "pulp" TV must be socially acceptable ... and if it's acceptable, well then, shouldn't we all be doing it?

    We know that TV has a huge influence - if it didn't nobody would advertise on it. What would be the point of telling people to buy "wonder-goop: (it'll make you look younger, thinner and more attractive to all of those weirdo's whom you don't want to attract)" if none of them ever did? So it's not exactly an intuitive leap to recognise that people will also ape the behaviours they see, as well.

    The worst part though, is when audiences fail to distinguish between a character they see on telly and the real-life person who plays that role. Not only can their love/hate of the character leak out of the TV, but they start to believe that (somehow, god knows why) that actors they "know" from TV somehow have valid views on things outside the narrow characters they play on the idiot box. Hence we see celebrities getting involved in causes or politics and gathering a herd of followers simply on the basis of "ooooh, we _like_ her".

    Maybe it's time TVs came with a health warning printed large, across the screen,

    1. Haku
      FAIL

      Re: It's on TV - it must be true

      "The worst part though, is when audiences fail to distinguish between a character they see on telly and the real-life person who plays that role."

      That unfortunately happens too often, the studios which produce this stuff will often receive things like baby clothes in the post whenever a character has a baby etc. - a perfect time to use the fail icon.

      1. perlcat
        Facepalm

        Re: It's on TV - it must be true

        Yep, and they don't even notice that the baby was born a healthy 12-month-old. That from the distaff side -- surely, they'd think a 14lb baby would be a tad hard to pass.

    2. skeptical i

      Re: It's on TV - it must be true, characters -v- real life people

      Many moons ago I read an article in which actor Brad Pitt recalls being asked what should be done about the situation in Tibet after the movie _Seven Years in Tibet_ (in which he starred) was released, and responding to the reporter "How the f#ck should I know? I'm just an actor!" or something to that effect. 'Twould be nice if more celebrities had a clue.

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: It's on TV - it must be true

      "Maybe it's time TVs came with a health warning printed large, across the screen," At least that would hide the rubbish being shown!

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Monkey see, monkey do.

  6. Chris Miller
    Happy

    Am I alone

    In finding Mr Page's familiarity with the Barbie œuvre disturbing on many levels?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Am I alone

      Disturbing, but a relief - nice to see he has some knowledge about something he's writing about, at least.

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Just to clarify, is it the stories presented which make people aggressive or is it the reminder of how much shit is on television these days?

    1. perlcat
      Trollface

      To clarify:

      Yes.

  8. Spanners Silver badge
    Holmes

    Makes a nice change

    Something from trick cyclists that not only makes sense but many people have actually seen evidence of. I certainly have.

    These 'soaps' are about nasty people being unpleasant to each other. The trouble is, they look just like people you might see at work/pub/market or even at home. They are in situations that we can all recognise and they take pride in their "gritty realism" and "real life story lines". That is the precise opposite of entertainment and it shows.

    Let's see if our ever more conservative leaders have the gonads to regulate this then!

    1. Pete 2 Silver badge

      Re: Makes a nice change

      > Let's see if our ever more conservative leaders have the gonads to regulate this then!

      Regulate? Hell, Boris Johnson's even appeared on Eastenders. They're more likely to queue up for bit-parts than try to regulate it.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Makes a nice change

      I bet if you ask the average soap addict that some will come out with stuff like:

      "I watch it because even though I know it's not real it makes me feel like my life is better because the characters on screen are going through much worse things than I am"

      If you watch soaps to help make you feel good about your life, you must have a bloody miserable life and the soaps are just acting as a bandaid.

      Makes you wonder how many relationships have deteriorated due to one or both partners being influenced by watching too much soaps.

      1. riparian zone
        Childcatcher

        Re: Makes a nice change

        I've worked in day centres for people with learning disabilities, and they asbolutely couldn't get enough of Eastenders, especially when they could get to the iplayer/subsite, etc.

        I reasoned exactly what you mentioned, and these people stuck in an institutional life, saw these horrible TV people having some vague, inferred 'life' and thought either they were better off than those poor souls they're watching or wanted to have some drama in their very very controlled lives. Sad on either counts.

        And having a go at wimmin because they like it - I tend to prefer the Archers rationale (though I never listen to it) that people need to learn new agricultural stuff and story telling is a great way of doing that...I recall a Pakistani radio station using this model and putting in a story line about a farmer caught in a minefield; seemed the Taliban liked the show too...

  9. Dan 10

    Makes my blood boil

    She says things like "We never just sit and watch TV together anymore", but it's like sitting down to be lobotomised with a power drill.

    Then again, how can we agree with this, but disagree with the idea of video games having the same effect? Can't have it both ways...

    1. Paul_Murphy

      Re: Makes my blood boil

      Well at least video games requires a little inter-action, you're not just sitting there, though I could hardly call solitaire a workout games like skyrim can demand some concentration..

      We tend to turn the sound off when the adverts start - something my 6 year old thinks is fun ('silly adverts!')

      My wife doesn't watch soaps, but watches weight-loss and surgery documentaries instead - that's when it isn't a horror film or similar.

      ttfn

      1. Minophis
        Happy

        Re: Makes my blood boil

        My fiancée doesn't watch sops or medical documentaries, but she is always happy to play a bit of Skyrim or join me in a bit of Portal 2 co-op mode.

        She is not even slightly aggressive (apart from hitting me in the head with a rolled up scrunchie thrown across the room with impressive accuracy when she thinks it will be funny).

        Not making a point other than this thread has made me fell quite lucky.

    2. Jimbo 6

      Re: video games having the same effect

      Of course, video games could probably be shown to have the *opposite* effect, if anyone ever released a TV-tie-in first-person-shooter entitled "Mockney Moron Massacre" or "Grand Theft Walford". That would calm me down no end.

      1. MJI Silver badge

        Re: video games having the same effect

        Mind you how about an Eastenders FPS.

        When the twins were being particularly annoying I mocked up a page for a game.

        I plonked the Deadenders docklands & Thames title screen on the cover for a game, and told them to behave or I would get it for them.

        Worked brilliantly

    3. perlcat
      Black Helicopters

      Re: Makes my blood boil

      Actually, Dan 10, there *is* a difference. At the moment.

      Most video games have a more cartoonish level of violence. It is easier to keep reality and game separate. The relational violence in soaps is indistinguishable from 'real life', and certainly suits many women's need for drama, which they supplement by trashing the hearts, souls and spirits of the people unfortunately in their life.

      We are what we consume -- and when I leave the room when the woman wants to watch shite like that, I make no bones about telling her that I refuse to watch abuse. When she told me that she was only watching it because it makes her feel better, I told her that she can always volunteer at the City Mission, feel good about helping the less fortunate *improve* their lives, and not turn herself into an abusive shrew, vicarously feeding upon human misery.

      I don't mind sleeping on the couch. It's just like going camping, only without the mosquitoes.

      This isn't to let us who play the games off the hook. As they get more and more realistic, they turn more and more into training tools -- and paying money to have someone turn me into a killing machine with a detached understanding of the consequences seems like a dangerous thing to release on society as a whole.

  10. Jim Carter
    Mushroom

    Ah, soaps

    Low-cost TV delivered with minimum effort for the maximum profit. No wonder it's so profitable and popular with the advertisers.

    1. A Non e-mouse Silver badge

      Re: Ah, soaps

      I think you'll find the same applies to things like "talent" shows and "voyeur" shows.

      1. perlcat
        Boffin

        Re: Ah, soaps

        Garbage in, garbage out.

        Now, can *I* get my grant money?

  11. Richard Wharram

    Moon phases

    Does the content on Eastenders get particularly nasty, petty and quarrelsome one week in four? There's got to be some reason for this pattern and it must surely be a media-based reason.

  12. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Bollocks

    I think they are clutching at straws, you need to take into effect their lifestyle backgrounds as well, my missus watches countless hours of the crap and she's not exactly aggressive, granted she has "left field strops" but that's just the female of the species, soap-operas or not.

  13. Natalie Gritpants

    kjdjkdkjncjn

    Just leave Barbie alone OK

  14. Anonymous John
    Meh

    "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

    "This might strike a chord with any Reg readers who may have found their significant others somewhat testy after a session".

    So all Reg readers are male. QED

    1. Paul_Murphy
      Joke

      Re: "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

      >So all Reg readers are male. QED

      Yes - it's in the terms and conditions when you set up an account.

      I believe the previous moderator enforced that rule, but I'm not aware of any enforcement action under the new leadership.

      ttfn

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

      The fact that one person in a partnership is female does not necessarily imply that the other is male.

      1. perlcat
        Black Helicopters

        Re: "Study shows soap operas trigger aggression in women"

        Nor is it a good assumption that it is solely women that watch this trash.

  15. annodomini2
    Devil

    So...

    When does The Sims get an 18 certificate?? ;)

  16. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Hello, Princess.

    And if you carried on watching EastEnders beyond that line, you have nobody to blame but yourself.

  17. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Biased sample

    Audience Adverse Selection.

  18. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    I watched East Enders once ...

    Why do none of the characters ever smile?

    1. perlcat
      Joke

      Re: I watched East Enders once ...

      Nobody smiles when they're taking a dump.

  19. tekgun

    "Just as the viewing of violent movies or videogames can turn people nasty"

    I didn't realise this was fact, after just completing Space Marine it must be only a matter of time before I go apeshit.

    1. MJI Silver badge

      RE: "Just as the viewing of violent movies or videogames can turn people nasty"

      So thats where I have been going wrong, perhaps I should stock sneaking about in an invisibilty cloak doing what Ray Winstone tells me to. However we are a bit short of ISA scum around here.

  20. loopyloo

    Bad consequences of Eastenders:

    Acting now means shouting.

    Stiff upper lips have become loose and floppy.

    Couples in real life now have loud, shouty arguments in the street instead of the bedroom or car.

    Every soap is now about shouty relationships.

    Emerdale is no longer about sick animals.

    Casualties is no longer about who will end up with the worst injury and die. Horribly.

    Whenever I glare aggressively and meaningfully at an oik on the street, THAT music appears as if by magic.

    I've got the 'ump.

    1. skeptical i

      re: Bad consequences of Eastenders:

      I hear the "telenovelas" (Mexican soap operas that are broadcast in Amurka by teevee stations pandering to the immigrant market) are just as bad, encouraging all kinds of loud shouty behaviour by yoofs. Maybe if the shouting shrews on the teevee got a bust in the chops occasionally (or some other direct, immediate, and harsh consequence), the yoofs could be given fair warning.

  21. Arthur the cat Silver badge
    Alert

    Barbie and the Three Musketeers

    Lewis you bastard, did you have to mention that? I Googled for it in disbelief and now I've ODed on pink.

  22. This post has been deleted by its author

  23. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    What is sadder, watching a soap to see how the characters you've 'known' for years are doing, to chill out after a crap day at work - or moaning about it on the interwebs?

    It's drama. So what? Anyone with a brain knows it's not real, nobody ever stands up for themselves and so problems escalate, most of us know not to be doormats like that.

    Why not complain about about the news, too? Only the most unusual deaths make it onto the news, we don't expect to go that way. Most of us will die drugged up to the eyeballs in a hospice, or after some other illness or heart attack - not in a horrendous freak accident fireball!

    1. Haku

      What is sadder, watching a soap to see how the characters you've 'known' for years are doing, to chill out after a crap day at work - or moaning about it on the interwebs?

      Neither, it's moaning about the moaners that's the saddest.

      :)

      When expressing your thoughts/ideas/views online about something, you're physically compsing a (hopefully) a meaningful set of words to express what was previously just internal dialogue, whereas watching a soap you're just consuming the mindless pap they serve you.

      Which is worse?

  24. Dale 3

    Control group

    So where's the control group of women who didn't watch the soap or the violent show before having their level of aggression measured?

  25. The Fuzzy Wotnot
    Facepalm

    Don't you love soaps! You only have to catch 5 mins every 6 months to know what current story is running, drugs/death-threat/cancer/adultery!

    1. MnM

      I can actually really help you with that

      Stenderz recap rap:

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FBN2z4i_vas&feature=relmfu

  26. MJI Silver badge
    Facepalm

    I have confused soap addicts

    They were on about Prisoner so I mentioned Portmerion, Number 6 and the Lotus 7 and they wondered what the hell I was on about, seems there is a soap called The Prisoner as well.

  27. John A Blackley

    A slight change

    ""Yet, several studies are starting to show that (relational aggression) _anything we can get a grant to study_ can cause long-term harm."

  28. Graham Marsden
    Pirate

    Let's have the Dangerous Television Programmes Act!

    Since we now have the Dangerous Pictures and Dangerous Drawings Acts based on the idea that looking at that sort of thing will "Make You Do Bad Things[tm]", I think it's time that we started a petition to ban Soap Operas since it's clearly been shown that they are a greater danger to society!

  29. disgruntled yank

    Well, I wonder

    Some of toughest women I know come from a class that looks down on soap operas, unless of course they are imported from British television. Some of them don't even watch TV.

  30. Vladimir Plouzhnikov

    I postulate

    That watching BBC Wildlife Specials turn people into animals.

    Now, where is my research grant?

    P.S. "Eastenders"? Sounds interesting. Is it a show about the Chinese?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: I postulate

      Darwin and state education has already drilled into people that they are just animals.

      Soaps are just the demonstration of that. We're happy to dunk dumb people in a cesspool of anti-social behaviour which will help spoil their real-lives, if we can just punt them a particular brand of tampons.

  31. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Oh my God...

    This article has just made me realise how true this is and how well it applies to everyone I have known who watches this rubbish.

    It's no wonder people are so horrible!

  32. Bernard M. Orwell
    Boffin

    Bad Science, surely?

    Where's the controlled test? Surely this experiment proves equally that women shown videos get more aggressive? Where is the group that was given an article from a magazine to read, or a video game to play? How about a group that was shown "Antiques Roadshow"? What about subjecting men (poor blighters) to the same videos? How did they fare?

    Bad science, I say, possibly just more popularist opinion mongering.

  33. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Mind control

    It's been obvious to me for some time that Eastenders is to blame - my addict sister even adopts a Cockney accent when she starts screaming at the rest of the family. Once she's back to the original West Country, then it's safe to interact again.

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