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Armenia: Sopranos-Style Tv Dramas Spark Debate Over Crime Rates

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  • Armenia: Sopranos-Style Tv Dramas Spark Debate Over Crime Rates

    ARMENIA: SOPRANOS-STYLE TV DRAMAS SPARK DEBATE OVER CRIME RATES
    Marianna Grigoryan

    Eurasianet
    http://www.eurasianet.org
    June 9, 2009

    Burglaries have doubled in Armenia, homicides have nearly tripled and
    illegal weapons trafficking is up by over 43 percent in Armenia so
    far in 2009. Sociologists see a connection between the crime binge
    and a new collection of wildly popular TV crime-thrillers.

    "The Trap," broadcast on Armenia's private Shant TV channel, garners
    the bulk of the criticism. Broadcast twice daily, the star-studded
    series recounts the adventures of the fictional crime boss Hovo as he
    "fights for justice" against big business, cops and rival Armenian
    mafiosos.

    "Hovo is a classic character. We need to have an honest criminal, if we
    don't have honest police officers," said celebrated poet and confessed
    "Trap" fan Marine Petrosian. "The series is a reflection of real life."

    Hundreds of Armenian TV viewers apparently agree. AGB Nielsen Media
    Research's Yerevan office reports that the series ranks the highest
    among recently surveyed Yerevan viewers, with just over 40 percent
    of 120 households surveyed naming it the most watched program.

    Two Armenian Public Television crime dramas, "The Price of Life"
    and "Happy Unhappiness," rank as the second and third most popular
    programs, the pick of 23.09 percent and 19.05 percent of surveyed
    viewers respectively. Operating under the mantra "might makes right,"
    the series' characters -- a veritable rogues' gallery -- have become
    idols for many.

    "That's how a true man should be -- the master of his word, a man of
    principle, who quickly finds answers to questions!" gushed Yerevan
    university student Aram Galstian in reference to "The Trap's" Gokor,
    one of the show's "good-guy" criminals.

    Sociologist Aharon Adibekian says the characters, portrayed as heroes
    in episodes saturated with beatings and killings, are helping to
    change social mores. "New idols, new standards of morality, new ways
    of conduct . . . are being formed," observed Adibekian, who heads
    the Sociometer polling center. "And, naturally, youth are the number
    one target and that results in a tendency towards an increase in the
    amount of crime."

    Armenian police report that overall crime rates increased by 57
    percent during the first three months of 2009 compared with the
    same period for 2008, an unprecedented rise. Five murders occurred
    in the first half of May alone, they say. Narcotics trafficking has
    quadrupled, while a particularly sharp increase has also been noted
    in gang-related violence, domestic break-ins and assaults.

    While Adibekian and other sociologists tend to blame television, police
    primarily attribute the crime wave to Armenia's deepening economic
    crisis. "We anticipated a situation like this," said Col. Sayat
    Shirinian, spokesperson for the Armenian police. "Most crimes are
    socially motivated, with the world crisis directly impacting the
    situation."

    Still, Shirinian contends that "unfair" TV episodes, which "humiliate"
    police officers, are playing a role. "Scenes showing how easily people
    are killed and blood is spilled to solve problems affect young people
    and can facilitate the increase in the number of crimes," he admitted,
    adding that "the overwhelming majority" of perpetrators of crimes in
    Armenia are under age 35.

    Shant TV programming director Karen Arshakian refutes the
    criticism directed at the show. Armenians, he says, just want
    good television. "'The Trap' is an educational film," Arshakian
    said. "Police officers don't take bribes . . . Even the representatives
    of the criminal world -- the main protagonists -- are just and fight
    for justice."

    Shant TV casting manager Anna Volkova argues that the "The Trap"
    characters and episode plots are drawn from everyday life. "This is
    not about promoting the criminal world. It's about phenomena existing
    in society, and the way they influence the viewer depends on his or
    her own perceptions," Volkova said.

    As far as the less-than-competent police officers depicted in the
    series go, sociologist Adibekian agrees that viewers identify with the
    characters. "Who will believe in the existence of a police officer
    fighting for justice? There are no such people in real life to make
    viewers believe in them," he said.

    In effect, the criminals who outwit the police officers have
    become new models for good behavior, noted Yerevan State University
    social psychologist Nelli Haroian. "Although they are criminals,
    the protagonists possess positive features," Haroian said. "They are
    people of principle, sharp-minded, self-confident and, therefore,
    are appealing to viewers."

    While Haroian contends that any influence from the series will only be
    felt "over time," one Education Ministry official contends that some
    impact is already discernible in the country's high schools. "Teachers
    complain that children are using criminals' jargon, [they repeat]
    whatever they hear on TV, and become uncontrollable," said Narine
    Hovhannisian, head of the Ministry of Education and Science's secondary
    education department. "This is a very worrying matter. We don't know
    where this will take us."

    According to Shant TV programming manager Arshakian, series like "The
    Trap" will only place Armenians in closer contact with reality. "Humans
    are humans. That's why they are accepted by the public," he said,
    referring to the show's crime idols.

    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based
    in Yerevan.
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