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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1995-02-26
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<text id=93TT0443>
<title>
Nov. 01, 1993: Lie Down In Darkness
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Nov. 01, 1993 Howard Stern & Rush Limbaugh
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
YOUTH, Page 49
Lie Down In Darkness
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Does a death on the highway implicate the entertainment industry?
</p>
<p>By DAVID VAN BIEMA--Reported by Wendy Cole/Polk, with other bureaus
</p>
<p> Except for Michael Shingledecker's friends and family, everybody
seemed to know exactly how to interpret the 18-year-old's death
last week. The reason was timing. He was killed just as the
debate was heating up once more about pop culture's effect on
young people and raising some old questions: Just how vulnerable,
how suggestible, are these young consumers? Will they parrot
anything they see done on a screen? And if so, who's responsible?
</p>
<p> Shingledecker's death was easy to portray as a clear-cut case
of cause and effect. On Oct. 10, he and three carloads of friends
saw the movie The Program at a drive-in theater not far from
his home in rural Stoneboro, Pennsylvania. Early in the film,
its hero, a college quarterback, tries to prove grace under
pressure by lying down in the middle of a busy highway flipping
through a magazine as the trucks swerve to avoid him. He goes
unscathed. Shingledecker did not seem especially moved by the
film, his girlfriend reports. But the next weekend, he tried
the same stunt himself on the double yellow line in the middle
of Pennsylvania Route 62--and was hit by a pickup truck.
</p>
<p> Almost immediately his fate was appropriated by columnists and
talk-show hosts, who compared Shingledecker with the five-year-old
alleged to have been under the influence of MTV's Beavis and
Butt-head cartoon when he started a fatal fire. And on Capitol
Hill, Shingledecker haunted a long-scheduled Commerce Committee
hearing on screen violence, where Attorney General Janet Reno
took off after a brace of entertainment executives.
</p>
<p> In rural Polk, 80 miles north of Pittsburgh, people had more
trouble making sense of the tragedy--not just because they
were closer to Shingledecker, but because some realized that
for at least two years, without the benefit of any cinematic
model, Venango County youths have been lying down in the middle
of the street, daring the cars to come.
</p>
<p> "I've done it," says Lona Mott, a ninth-grader at Franklin Area
High School, from which Shingledecker graduated last spring.
On Halloween two years ago, she recalls, she and 20 other kids
took turns arranging themselves like sardines across a road.
When they saw headlights, most bolted, but a few stayed pat.
Says Mott: "All my friends were doing it, so I did it. I wasn't
even thinking of getting hit."
</p>
<p> Adults are reduced to hazarding standard, sad guesses about
what motivates these daredevils. "They're probably bored," says
local psychologist Robert Craig. "It's cold and rains a lot.
It's not the most exciting place to be if you're a teenager."
Mimi Mahon, a nursing professor at the University of Pennsylvania,
offers the truism that "kids believe they are impervious to
injury." Patricia Shingledecker, Michael's mother, suggests
helplessly, "All people somewhere are looking for a thrill."
</p>
<p> Most disturbing for parents is that Michael seemed a perfectly
normal teen. He was no self-destructive brooder--"a bouncy,
real nice guy," remembers Cathy Willis, the high schools student-activities
coordinator. College-bound, a pole-vaulter who also subbed on
the basketball team, he had little to prove. He rode horses,
hunted and took part in adult-supervised "demolition derby"
auto races, but was hardly a risk addict. Nor was peer pressure
a problem, says his girlfriend Raina Hedglin: "I don't know
anyone who could influence him." At his funeral, friends and
family buried a large jar of Jif peanut butter and a pack of
instant pudding with him; they were his favorite foods. Hedglin
dropped in a napkin she had saved from their prom.
</p>
<p> Any crusade planned around him might focus as appropriately
on alcohol as on movies. State police say that evening he and
his friend Dean Bartlett (who suffered substantial injuries
but will survive) had consumed enough beer to "impair their
mental functioning." But laws on that exist already--the police
are searching for whoever sold liquor to two teenagers in a
state where the drinking age is 21.
</p>
<p> In the meantime, Shingledecker's death contributed to the extraordinary
Senate hearing on Wednesday at which Reno delivered a straightforward
threat: if the television industry didn't do something to curb
violence in its programs by year's end, she said, government
regulation would be "imperative." Some media executives suggested
that the Attorney General might be on shaky constitutional ground
with her attack. But many nonetheless felt compelled to point
the finger at their competitors. And in Hollywood the company
behind The Program, Disney's Touchstone Pictures division, announced
that it was shipping new prints of The Program without the offending
scene.
</p>
<p> That gesture may make little difference in Venango County, where
two more youths attempted the roadway stunt on Wednesday--one a fourth-grader, the other a first-grader. And it will complicate
things for Patricia Shingledecker. She vows to go and see the
movie, including the highway scene. "I want to see what prompted
them," she says. "Everyone says Michael and I were a lot alike.
If I see it, I think I could understand better." If the movie
does enlighten her, then she will have achieved an answer that
so far seems to elude the nation.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>