HAMMER: Tonight, in a "Showbiz Newsmaker Interview," a controversial video game in which players kill police officers, which has some people in law enforcement calling for a boycott of the game. "25 to Life" is its name. It lets players assume the role of drug dealers, criminals and thugs, who are able to shoot police officers at will.
Joining me live from Washington, D.C. Craig W. Floyd. He`s the chairman of the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund.
Craig, thanks for being with us tonight.
CRAIG W. FLOYD, CHAIRMAN, NATIONAL LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS MEMORIAL FUND: Good to be with you, A.J.
HAMMER: I do want to point out, we did invite Eidos -- that`s the manufacturer of this game -- to join us. They declined, but they did point out to us that the game is not intended for kids, it`s not marketed for kids, and is, in fact, intended for adults. So what is the problem that you guys have with it?
FLOYD: Well, our message is really quite simple. You should never glorify violent acts and killing police officers, plain and simple. On average in this country, we`re loosing one police officer in the line of duty every 53 hours. An over the last 10 years alone, there have been 54 cop killers under the age of 18.
I think you look last week in Ft. Lauderdale, when we saw those scenes of young teenagers beating homeless people over the head with baseball bats, tells us that there are young people who are easily impressionable, who are prone to violence. They don`t need any further encouragement, and this game, "25 to Life," appears to be the worst of the worst.
HAMMER: And in the game, you are offered the chance to either play a thug or play a police officer, so it does give people that kind of a choice. But what you`re saying is that the problem is not necessarily the violence specifically against police officers that you guys have, it`s violence in general?
FLOYD: Violence in general. I mean, if you take the role of the police officer in this came, you`re going to be killing gangsters, all right? The average police officer will go their entire career without ever having to fire their weapon at a criminal suspect. In New York City, you`d have to serve 694 years before you ever shot a criminal suspect, on average.
Police do not use force normally to do their job. And I think this game helps to feed that stereotype that police officers are out there committing violent acts against the citizens of our nation.
HAMMER: And, Craig...
FLOYD: And that`s not true.
HAMMER: ... we`ve seen it before. There was the similar controversy in the "Grand Theft Auto" games. One of the problems that happens though is here we are talking about it and we`re bringing more attention to the game than perhaps if it wasn`t in the news. Are you fearing that that maybe the case here, because you`re calling for this boycott, it`s going to get lots and lots of attention?
FLOYD: Not at all. The video gamers who want this game are going to find ways to get it no matter how old they are. Our message is directed at responsible parents who care about how they raise their kids and want their kids to grow up with good values, of right and wrong. Also, the retailers out there that are responsible and who don`t want to have games that glorify the killing of police officers on their shelves.
And if you`re one of those responsible parents out there or one of those retailers, go to our Web site at www.nationalpolicememorial.com, and sign our petition protesting this very violent game.
HAMMER: Craig W. Floyd`s from the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. I want to thank you for joining us tonight.
FLOYD: Thank you.
HAMMER: The game`s maker, Eidos, did provide SHOWBIZ TONIGHT with this statement: "`25 to Life` was specifically created for adults, as the average age of gamers is currently 30 years old. `25 to Life` will have an ESRB rating of M for mature. And it will be marketed and distributed only to those over the age of 17."
All of this leads us to our SHOWBIZ TONIGHT "Question of the Day." We`re asking: Cop-killer video games: Should they be banned?
Keep voting at CNN.com/showbiztonight or write showbiztonight@CNN.com. Your e-mails at 55 past the hour.
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It's not often that I'd post something like this. And I'm not defending 25 to Life either. But listening to an old guy broadcast his load of garbage to millions of people across the US just got to me. Please, write Showbiz, and sign that site's guestbook. You know? I'm sorry that people have died- but in no way could it be the fault of a game.
Parents are just as gullible as children. They'll see this and think their kids are playing killing-simulators.
Unfortunately the problem lies within the parents. It always does. Did they even have parents? Anyone with a reasonable mom and dad would know the path between right and wrong. Uh... they wouldn't kill a cop. I know alot of people are born into unfortunate lives- its their job to make something of themselves. And yet, rather than spending our time and resources to help people who have bad parents, or teaching GOOD parenting skills, we're trying to ban a video game.
Don't let the government raise your children.
You have a child, its your job to raise it. Not the government's. Do your own censorship, KNOW what your child is playing and BE involved in your child's life. Don't have time? MAKE time. It's your child, your responsibility.
What gets me... is that they mention GTA. I mean, it's sold millions of copies. It's like saying my son saw Star Wars, he killed a cop. He killed a cop because they kill people in Star Wars! ...or any other movie that's moderately popular.
In short, write showbiztonight@cnn.com
Vote at www.cnn.com/showbiz
Post at www.nationalpolicememorial.com
Keep it reasonable, no language. But express concern.
Joining me live from Washington, D.C. Craig W. Floyd. He`s the chairman of the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund.
Craig, thanks for being with us tonight.
CRAIG W. FLOYD, CHAIRMAN, NATIONAL LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS MEMORIAL FUND: Good to be with you, A.J.
HAMMER: I do want to point out, we did invite Eidos -- that`s the manufacturer of this game -- to join us. They declined, but they did point out to us that the game is not intended for kids, it`s not marketed for kids, and is, in fact, intended for adults. So what is the problem that you guys have with it?
FLOYD: Well, our message is really quite simple. You should never glorify violent acts and killing police officers, plain and simple. On average in this country, we`re loosing one police officer in the line of duty every 53 hours. An over the last 10 years alone, there have been 54 cop killers under the age of 18.
I think you look last week in Ft. Lauderdale, when we saw those scenes of young teenagers beating homeless people over the head with baseball bats, tells us that there are young people who are easily impressionable, who are prone to violence. They don`t need any further encouragement, and this game, "25 to Life," appears to be the worst of the worst.
HAMMER: And in the game, you are offered the chance to either play a thug or play a police officer, so it does give people that kind of a choice. But what you`re saying is that the problem is not necessarily the violence specifically against police officers that you guys have, it`s violence in general?
FLOYD: Violence in general. I mean, if you take the role of the police officer in this came, you`re going to be killing gangsters, all right? The average police officer will go their entire career without ever having to fire their weapon at a criminal suspect. In New York City, you`d have to serve 694 years before you ever shot a criminal suspect, on average.
Police do not use force normally to do their job. And I think this game helps to feed that stereotype that police officers are out there committing violent acts against the citizens of our nation.
HAMMER: And, Craig...
FLOYD: And that`s not true.
HAMMER: ... we`ve seen it before. There was the similar controversy in the "Grand Theft Auto" games. One of the problems that happens though is here we are talking about it and we`re bringing more attention to the game than perhaps if it wasn`t in the news. Are you fearing that that maybe the case here, because you`re calling for this boycott, it`s going to get lots and lots of attention?
FLOYD: Not at all. The video gamers who want this game are going to find ways to get it no matter how old they are. Our message is directed at responsible parents who care about how they raise their kids and want their kids to grow up with good values, of right and wrong. Also, the retailers out there that are responsible and who don`t want to have games that glorify the killing of police officers on their shelves.
And if you`re one of those responsible parents out there or one of those retailers, go to our Web site at www.nationalpolicememorial.com, and sign our petition protesting this very violent game.
HAMMER: Craig W. Floyd`s from the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. I want to thank you for joining us tonight.
FLOYD: Thank you.
HAMMER: The game`s maker, Eidos, did provide SHOWBIZ TONIGHT with this statement: "`25 to Life` was specifically created for adults, as the average age of gamers is currently 30 years old. `25 to Life` will have an ESRB rating of M for mature. And it will be marketed and distributed only to those over the age of 17."
All of this leads us to our SHOWBIZ TONIGHT "Question of the Day." We`re asking: Cop-killer video games: Should they be banned?
Keep voting at CNN.com/showbiztonight or write showbiztonight@CNN.com. Your e-mails at 55 past the hour.
-----
It's not often that I'd post something like this. And I'm not defending 25 to Life either. But listening to an old guy broadcast his load of garbage to millions of people across the US just got to me. Please, write Showbiz, and sign that site's guestbook. You know? I'm sorry that people have died- but in no way could it be the fault of a game.
Parents are just as gullible as children. They'll see this and think their kids are playing killing-simulators.
Unfortunately the problem lies within the parents. It always does. Did they even have parents? Anyone with a reasonable mom and dad would know the path between right and wrong. Uh... they wouldn't kill a cop. I know alot of people are born into unfortunate lives- its their job to make something of themselves. And yet, rather than spending our time and resources to help people who have bad parents, or teaching GOOD parenting skills, we're trying to ban a video game.
Don't let the government raise your children.
You have a child, its your job to raise it. Not the government's. Do your own censorship, KNOW what your child is playing and BE involved in your child's life. Don't have time? MAKE time. It's your child, your responsibility.
What gets me... is that they mention GTA. I mean, it's sold millions of copies. It's like saying my son saw Star Wars, he killed a cop. He killed a cop because they kill people in Star Wars! ...or any other movie that's moderately popular.
In short, write showbiztonight@cnn.com
Vote at www.cnn.com/showbiz
Post at www.nationalpolicememorial.com
Keep it reasonable, no language. But express concern.
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