Editorial from Women and Guns January 01, 1997

Hurray for 'Cybill'
by Peggy Tartaro
Executive Editor

An episode of the CBS situation comedy "Cybill" has come under fire from a Los Angeles-based group for its depiction of firearms ownership among women.

Susan Shaw, executive director of Women Against Gun Violence in Los Angeles, wrote a recent commentary for the entertainment section of THE LOS ANGELES TIMES, calling the Oct. 14 program "son one-sided it could have been written by the gun lobby..."

The episode, about a woman, played by Cybill Sheperd, who is an actress with two grown daughters and a grandchild, had the title character responding to a burglary, as well as her unease with one of her daughters' move to an apartment in a bad neighborhood.

during the course of the program, Cybill reacts to a variety of dangers, which culminate in her acquisition of a handgun. While viewers familiar with reality an California law might quibble with the shortened time-frame, the show did do a competent job of showing the reaction to the threat continuum: uncomfortable with her daughter's living arrangement, Cybill buys a "safety product" (an inflatable man); her own burglary raises her concerns further, she has a home security system installed; she takes a self-defense class, and, finally, her concerns unallayed by these steps, she purchases a handgun. To be sure, the program did play all of the situations for laughs, and I was uncomfortable with the friend's, (Maryann) attitude toward firearms, since regular viewers of the show would charitably characterize her personality as "unstable."

Even so, I found the show refreshing, in that it dealt with a responsible woman character making a decision without a lot of hand-wringing, not unlike the way real women would. In an imperfect, sometimes threatening world, a woman with concerns about her safety, the safety of family members not under her immediate care and the security of her home, might reasonable conclude that the firearm was a useful tool.

The final scene had Cybill and Maryann return to Cybill's house only to be confronted with a man in the living room's shadows.

Had this been either one of the popular "Women-in-Jeopardy" (the official Hollywood term for movies in which women are stalked, tortured, kidnapped, raped, etc.) genre of television movies or a less thoughtfully written comedy, the consequences of the women's return would have been quite different: in the former, the character would have shot first only to find out the she had wounded or killed one of her ex-husbands; in the latter, the "man" would have been an ex-husband, Cybill would have ineptly turned her gun him and everyone would have learned one of those fatuous "morals" television comedies have become so fond of. Instead, the "man" was the inflatable dummy, returned by the daughter to "frighten" her mother. Exit laughing, no moral, no dire consequences. We are left with the impression that Cybill is intelligent enought to assess a threat, perceived or real, and deal with it competently. We are not told, but surmise, that the character will retain her handgun.

Despite flaws in the storyline, particularly the telescoping of the time in which it would take an actual resident of Los Angeles Count ot acquire a handgun (the state has a 15-day waiting period and the county has a woeful record of granting carry permits to ordinary citizens), the program surprised me with its matter-of-fact treatment of the subject matter.

It should be noted that Shepherd, who is executive producer of the show, is an on-the-record gunowner. Her supportive "blurb" appeared on Paxton Quigley's first dust jacket, and she has mentioned guns in a number of interviews.

Shaw's commentary, of course, takes a completely different view of the program. "Have we become so inured to gun violence that handguns have become a mere sitcom plot device or the lure of our kids movie-going dollars?" she wonders. "As too many women who have lost children to gun violence can attest, there's noting funny, smart, glamorous or powerful about these weapons," Shaw writes. She then recounts the standard, unsupported statistics about suicides, family injury and domestic violence that "prove" that a gun in the home is a grave danger to the owner.

Because of the characters says that "a lot of my women friends have guns," Shaw calls the show "unbalanced," and egregiously massages a University of Chicago study on ownership of firearms among American women. (see From the Editor, June, 1995). that study merely says that ownership among women has remained fairly constant at between 4.5 and 8% of the population (a not inconsiderable number), not, as she suggests that "women have resisted gun manufacturers' sales pitches."

"For shame," says Shaw, because the same character quotes suffragette Elizabeth Cady Stanton, "women will continue to be the victims of men until they learn how to use the weapons of men," calling the use of the quote "misleading." Her assertion that Stanton was talking about the right ot vote, not guns, does a disservice to pioneer feminist' how could disenfranchised women use the "vote" as a "weapon if they didn't have the right?

A caption that accompanies Shaw's commentary said her sentiments were echoed by "several letters" to Shepherd and her producers, but did not mention how many were "several" nor reveal if any viewers praised the episode.

Peggy Tartaro,
Executive Editor


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