I watched Spectre of the Gun.
Sigh.
First, I want to say what was wrong with the episode. To begin with, this event was way overplayed by the writers. Shootings like this happen just about once a week in Star City. Often, they happen in the Mayor's office. Usually, the sitting Mayor dies. Having a madman kill seven people is actually not that big of an event for this city, so the heightened emotions and candlelight vigil were all very disingenuous. The emotional beats of the story were false. The character arguments were unnatural.
To have a team of people who all (aside from one or two) are very familiar with guns keep referring to the rifle as an "AR-15 assault rifle" is BS. I know a lot of gun people. None of them use the term "assault rifle" (unless they're joking around) because it is not a real term. It's a slogan, created to make the scary looking black guns sound even more scary. People think that "AR" means "assault rifle" or "automatic rifle", but this isn't true. And yes, the AR-15 is incredibly popular, because it's a great gun. However, it is not traditionally "military style". A military style rifle would be fully automatic. Most AR-15s out there are not... and I say "most" because they can be converted, but it's not a simple process and there aren't nearly as many of them out there as you'd think by watching TV shows. It's not realistic for the one used in this episode to be an automatic. In fact, I can't think of a quick example of a mass shooting occurring in the US with an automatic weapon since the Los Angeles shootout of 1997. Correct me if I'm wrong on that.
A lot of this language and the visual of an automatic weapon is a dishonest representation of the debate that we're having in this country. The process of legally owning a fully automatic weapon is quite rigorous and not many people do it. These guns look great on TV, firing never-ending rounds of ammo, but the fact is, they don't really factor into this issue in any meaningful way.
Then we have Rene's backstory. He is the main pro-gun person in this episode and uses guns all the time (illegally). He even manages to strike an emotional chord with Curtis by saying that he'd have been able to save his wife if he'd had his gun. But the writers discredit that character and his point of view by showing us that he was lying. He had a gun. He killed the bad guy. Then it's implied (though not shown) that a magic bullet (not the blender type) fired from the bad guy's gun as he hit the ground, killing Rene's wife. She'd have lived if he hadn't had the gun and killed the bad guy!?! The scene was poorly filmed and edited. In fact, it seemed like it was set up for him to open the safe and find the gun gone, or maybe have him not get in the safe at all. It seemed like the whole climax of that scene was reworked in some way, because it doesn't flow right.
So, a lot of the language and a lot of the visuals used in this story make it a half-hearted, kinda silly, "very special" episode. It's simply not presented well.
That said, I do think that they probably tried to do it right. They made points about the uselessness of a registry that you don't normally see on TV. Kudos for that. I just think that they didn't really have a grasp of the other side of the debate. Maybe they should have consulted with someone who knew guns a bit more and knew this debate a bit more. They didn't know how to write the side that they don't agree with, so while their pro-gun characters hit a brick wall and don't know what to say next, everyone at home is just screaming at the TV.
They tried to do it right. I just don't think they did. And I don't think this show was a good fit for this issue, because it was really silly for them to seem so torn up about this shooting. Why doesn't that office have bulletproof glass by now? And why was their a warning before the episode? It was absurd.
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