
Violence on TV has been a major topic during the current TCA press tour, and along with references to the recent massacres in Aurora and Newtown, the discussion frequently included CBS‘ dark and violent serial killer procedural Criminal Minds, which was singled out for its violent content by several network executives,
ncluding NBC’s Bob Greenblatt. “Look, that’s a much-maligned show,” CBS Entertainment president Nina Tassler acknowledged after the TCA executive session. “I happen to enjoy the show. It’s not for everybody. It’s an adult show. It’s a suspense thriller and a character crime procedural. I don’t let my kid watch it. I do. It’s a genre show and it’s done very well.”
Tassler warned that pointing the finger at individual shows with violent content is not the answer. “I think we’re making a huge mistake here — and I’d say it to Bob to his face — to allow the conversation to devolve into a discussion of one show vs. the other. This is a much bigger issue, and thank God it’s being discussed on the level that it is. It’s really a very personal issue.”
Earlier on stage, Tassler noted that “people come to work with a renewed sensitivity, absolutely,” following the Newtown tragedy. But that won’t weigh heavily on CBS executives’ minds when they make pilot decisions. “In looking at our pilots first and foremost it is picking the best material we can,” she said.
TV Editor Nellie Andreeva - tip her here.


If Nina Tassler feels that way about Criminal Minds, then why on Earth is it on at 9 pm and not 10 pm?
This means that it’s on at 8 pm, Central Time.
I suspect CBS will not be repeating Criminal Minds “The Wheels on the Bus” from earlier this season, in which high school kids kill each other.
Great episode.
funniest session comments to date … the accompanying photo says all there is to say …
To all the opportunistic folk’s out there who hope to use the pain and suffering out there to advance a narrow-minded agenda, keep this in mind; a half-ass or incorrect solution will lead to more tradgedies. Will you then brag to more greiving family’s about your “fixing the problem”.
Jonathan Nolan will make his debut as director on Person of Interest episode “Relevance” – February 21, 2013. This will be Sarah Shahi series debut too(her role sound like future POI spin-off). Best scripted and acted drama add and great names as directors. Hope JJ Abrams will direct at least one episode like Nolan. CBS can make one hour TBBT as lead in for this PoI major episode. They already do that on monday block with one hour 2BG. And CBS must advertise Nolan debut and episode “Relevance” like crazy on super bowl and grammys. From now i can say that will take Emmy and golden globe nomination. And if successful PoI spin-off will make fans and CBS happy.
My goodness, Nina Tassler will shamelessly say anything to justify CBS’s position. She completely disregards the network’s and her own responsibility [in the public's best interest] when it comes to what that network airs.
Does a violent show about serial killers really have merit or is it only a way to make money for CBS? Nina Tassler excuses herself from any responsiblity for promoting violence by saying Criminal Minds is a “well done genre show”. What a great spin. I’m sure she was appalled by the violence in Newtown and Aurora. It is good that she has the ability to prevent her kids from watching Criminal Minds. But she can’t guarantee that other kids and impressionable young and or mentally unstable people won’t watch it. Desensitizing the audience to violence is amoral at best. She and her producers are in a unique position to influence people, to pretend she/they don’t “have personal responsiblity “is disingeuous.
Re: CRIMINAL MINDS – Love the show, yet do not appreciate that it now includes more graphic (horror)-scenes than it used to in earlier seasons. An increased love for horror is noticeable. Not everyone wants to see AMERICAN HORROR STORY thouch, thankyouverymuch, especially not when tuned into what used to be a smart crime show. Nowadays you never know what kind of an episode to expect. Crime or horror? So I guess I get why CM would come up in that utterly nonsensical discussion that’s nothing more than a diversion.
“I think we’re making a huge mistake here. . . to allow the conversation to devolve into a discussion of one show vs. the other.”
This is not about tv-shows or video-games and it’s not about guns, either. It’s about mental health. Way too unsexy a topic and apparently on no politician’s agenda. Too complex to tweet about it, too.
There are many shows that portray the criminals as heros. There are entire shows dedicated to this. This show does not glorify violence and the bad guys do not win. The show sends a team to stop the violence. It is an adult show dealing with the psychological aspects of crime. I would be more worried about shows that gloss over the uglier side of crime and make it acceptable and exciting.
Criminal minds is one of my favorite shows because it deals with the psychological aspects of crime. It’s heroes track a complicated mystery that they use behavioral science to solve and bring down a killer. Yes, the show does get into the mind of the killer in a Hannibal lechter type of way. That’s why it’s called criminal minds and continues to be one of the biggest shows in the world. It’s on all the time because people…watch it.
Hats off to those who understand that Criminal Minds portrays the good work done by an actual unit of the F.B.I. whose job it is to root out and negate violent acts, not glorify them. Bob Greenblatt should interview real members of the F.B.I. and ask them if the real incidents they face every day are any tamer. It’s one thing to show violence and mayhem for shock value, it’s another to show it as an example of the horror people in law enforcement have to face every day. Also I don’t doubt Bob Greenblatt wouldn’t hesitate one second to air such a popular show on his own lame network.