U.S. Children Still Traumatized One Year After Seeing
Partially Exposed Breast On TV
WASHINGTON,
DC—As the nation approaches the one-year anniversary of the Super
Bowl XXXVIII tragedy, an FCC study shows that millions of U.S.
children were severely traumatized by the exposure to a partially nude
female breast during the Feb. 1, 2004 halftime show.
Jackson
irrevocably damages millions of American children. "No
one who lived through that day is likely to forget the horror,"
said noted child therapist Dr. Eli Wasserbaum. "But it was
especially hard on the children." The
tragic wardrobe malfunction occurred approximately 360 days ago,
during Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake's performance of "Rock
Your Body," when Timberlake tore Jackson's costume, accidentally
revealing her right breast. "By
the time CBS cut to an aerial view of the stadium, the damage was
done," said Wasserbaum, who has also worked extensively with
orphaned and amputee children in Third World war zones. "I've
found that children can be amazingly resilient, but this event was too
much for many of them to take. The horrible image of that breast is
likely to haunt them for the rest of their lives." According
to the 500-page report filed by the FCC, more than 90 percent of the
children who saw the exposed breast said they were "confused and
afraid." "Mommy
has dirty chest bumps," said a 5-year-old boy quoted in one of
the thousands of case studies compiled by the FCC. "She's like
the bad lady on TV. I'm afraid Mommy will take off her shirt and scare
everyone. I hate
Mommy." Girls
were traumatized as well, often expressing apprehensions about sexual
development. According to Wasserbaum, one 8-year-old girl told her
parents that she didn't "want to get evil breasts." Wasserbaum
said children of both genders associate their trauma with footballs,
presumably because of the context in which they were exposed to the
breast. A
great number of children who witnessed the tragedy are still plagued
by nightmares of sun-shapes that recall Jackson's nipple ring. Of the
infants who saw the breast, 76 percent are unwilling to breast feed or
use a bottle, forcing their parents to nourish them intravenously. "When
the tragedy took place, we knew it would cause psychological trauma,
but we had no idea how long the effects would last," Wasserbaum
said."Our worst fears have been confirmed. It will take years to
repair the damage." Cases
of deviant sexual development induced by breast-glimpsing are
widespread amongst older children. Pathologies range from schoolyard
exhibitionism to gender-role confusion and violent shirt-tearing. "The
FCC imposed the maximum $27,500 penalty on each of the 20 CBS-owned
television stations," Wasserbaum said. "But the government
offered no recompense to the individuals exposed to the breast. And
neither Jackson nor Timberlake has ever specifically apolgized to the
children whose lives they ruined, or donated a penny for the
adolescents' psychiatric care." Across
America, parental concern over the condition doctors have dubbed
Nearly Naked Breast Disorder continues to grow.
Drawings
by children who saw the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show. "How
can my son Brandon be expected to make it through something like that
unscathed?" asked mother of four Shonali Bhomik of the San
Francisco-based What About the Children? Foundation, one of many
social-awareness groups spearheading the fight for increased NNBD
funding in Congress. "For approximately 1.5 seconds, he saw a
breast. The image was seared into his innocent, tiny retinas. He can't
close his eyes without replaying the whole ugly scene over and over in
his little head." "For
the love of God—that breast was almost nude," Bhomik added. Bhomik
said she has concerns about her son's development. "I
shudder to think how this could affect my son once he reaches
puberty," Bhomik said. "Little Brandon just wanted to watch
the fun halftime show with his family. He was only 10 years old."
Bhomik
is one of millions of people facing every parent's worst nightmare:
that their child will see a partially exposed breast. Wasserbaum
said there is no way to predict whether the children will recover. "One
thing is certain," Wasserbaum said. "For us as a nation, the
horrific consequences of almost-nakedness have only just begun to make
themselves apparent." Wasserbaum
added that children who saw the televised breast in Europe, Australia,
and various other nations throughout the world were somehow unaffected
by the sight.
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Children Still Traumatized - Drawing 1
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Children Still Traumatized - Drawing 10
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