Love and Relationships
Moral Maze
BBC
4.5 • 609 Ratings
🗓️ 1 August 2019
⏱️ 43 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Whether you watch it or not, it’s hard to ignore the TV reality show ‘Love Island’, which puts a bunch of semi-naked heterosexuals in a villa and tells them to ‘couple up’. It is firmly part of the zeitgeist and now set for two series a year. There’s a clear generational disagreement about the programme: 16-34 year olds are addicted to it; geriatrics can’t stand it. What does the success of ‘Love Island’ say about the state of television, and what does the state of television say about us, the viewers? Love Island’s detractors say it’s vacuous, vulgar and exploits its vulnerable young participants in a format designed to play with their emotions. They argue it’s also morally corrupting for those who watch it – many of them impressionable adolescents with unrealistic expectations of relationships. Those who stick up for the show, including many parents of teenagers, say it contains moral lessons about modern relationships: fidelity, consent and dating etiquette. It is, they believe, both the Jane Austen of the post-millennials and a sex education primer for the over-50s. We live in the era of Tinder and Grindr where partners are selected with the swipe of a phone screen. Some worry about the effect this is having on the emotional intelligence of young people, while others say nothing’s changed; young lovers were always awkward fumblers and there’s nothing new about our obsession with good looks. Social psychologists talk about passionate love – the kind that grips a couple in the first heady phase of their relationship; and companionate love – the calmer state that follows, based on friendship, intimacy and commitment. Have we got our priorities right when it comes to love and relationships?
Producer: Dan Tierney
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | You're listening to a programme from BBC Radio 4. |
| 0:04.4 | Good evening. The mating game seems to have changed since I was the Acox Green Congregational Church Junior Youth Club's Alpha Male, |
| 0:11.8 | thanks to the leather buttons on my cardigan, my burgundy cravat, and the crisp creases in my cavalry twills. |
| 0:18.2 | Somehow, I don't think the Love Island contestant's loins would tremble at the sight of my |
| 0:22.5 | port-pie hat with its rakish feather, but it might be worth a last throw if eviction loomed. |
| 0:27.3 | Women are funny creatures. The latest Love Island series ended this week. In case you've been too |
| 0:33.6 | deeply immersed in the Badget column of the Econom economist who have clocked it, it's a hugely |
| 0:37.7 | successful, unreal reality show, in which a gaggle of physically attractive but educationally |
| 0:43.3 | challenged young people are banged up in a Spanish villa and have to compete to get off with |
| 0:47.5 | each other. It's harder to get into than Oxbridge, and according to Frontier Economics, more |
| 0:52.6 | lucrative in terms of lifetime earnings. |
| 0:55.5 | Young people love it. Old people can't leave their eyes if they can work out what's going on. |
| 1:00.2 | The dialogue is noted for weapons-grade stupidity, adults who can't make a cup of tea, asking each |
| 1:05.9 | other if Italy is in Rome and what is an earlobe. It's sponsored by superdrug, though whether to promote the |
| 1:12.6 | sales of sedatives or suppositories is not clear. It's easy to dismiss it as shallow, vacuous, trite |
| 1:19.2 | and manipulative. But there are those, perhaps predictably, including the boss of ITV, which shows |
| 1:25.2 | it, who reckoned it's a moral examination of modern relationships. |
| 1:29.6 | Is he or she behaving badly? |
| 1:31.7 | How do you remain true to yourself and get on in a group? |
| 1:34.2 | That kind of thing. |
| 1:35.5 | To hear them talk, Love Island is in direct succession to Jane Eyre. |
| 1:39.5 | Reader, I bunked him. |
... |
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