Culture

Civil rights group files suit against TBS network to stop showing A Christmas Story

Controversial civil rights group ISEF yesterday filed suit in federal court against Turner Broadcasting and its cable affiliate TBS to cease airing the movie A Christmas Story. For several years, TBS has showed the popular movie non-stop over a twenty-four hour period on Christmas day.

“It is shocking in this day and age, given all we know about the horrors of gun ownership, that TBS can irresponsibly inundate the public with these images,” said ISEF spokesperson Martin Baumlot. “This appalling movie is a fetishization of weaponry and an attempt to instill in children the false idea that guns can be used for other things besides murder.”

According to court documents, ISEF claims that the movie A Christmas Story is “nothing but one child’s irrational obsession with a gun. In the movie, he even imagines himself using the gun to kill several people. There is a disturbing image of bodies stacked like cordwood that is chilling in its graphic intensity.”

Well known film expert Dr H. Harrister from the Institute for the Very Clever, said that “While the ISEF’s claim has some basis—the film’s protagonist Ralphie does dispatch several bad guys—that scene is nothing more than humorous dramatization of youthful fantasy.” The scene is one in which noted criminal “Black Bart” attempts an invasion of Ralphie’s home.

When asked about ISEF’s assertion that the film “goes beyond the obsessive mania for gun possession, and enters the realm of sick perversion as we actually see Ralphie go to bed with the weapon, lovingly caressing it as he drifts off the sleep, fantasizing once more about the brutal murder of our winged friends, the duck”, Dr Harrister was unable to provide a response as he choked on his hot dog.

Dr Harrister did later provide email commentary. “The people at ISEF have clearly lost their minds.”

A spokesman for TBS refused comment while this matter is being litigated.

The group It’s Somebody Else’s Fault was founded in 1984 by a group of Upper West Side Manhattan residents intent on proving that anything bad that happens is somebody else’s fault.

Categories: Culture, Fun

7 replies »

  1. You should seriously consider trying to get this put into the press. I mean, look at how long “The Harding Institute” fooled the smarty pants at all the MSM companies.

    Brilliant, by the way. To be fair though, he did almost put his eye out. 😉

  2. By all rights Old Man Parker’s “major award” lamp’s design should have been outlawed by the good taste censors back in 1983, so somebody might still be able to sue someone on this.

    Besides, all the free publicity for Red Ryder Air Rifles seems more than a little suspicious. However, correctly naming The Lone Ranger’s nephew’s horse has be be worth some level of forgiveness.

    Thanks for the memories. Dialogue like this one is simply priceless. Boo to the ISEF. I thought they were still concentrating on last eruption of Mount St. Helens.

  3. I heard today that TBS, after being admonished by the judge to “grow a pair,” filed a Writ of Get A Life against ISEF.

  4. My distaste for this movie (The Movie Whose Name Shall Not Cross My Lips) always gets my a little crosswise with the wife during the holiday season.

    Maybe I’ll file am amicus brief………

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *