Good Morning, Saudi Arabia

From Meryl Streep to M.C. Hammer, dozens of celebrities sign up to beam their songs and greetings to troops in the gulf

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Troops in the gulf can tune in 24 hours a day to the U.S. military network, which is broadcasting the most comprehensive schedule of programming ever provided for fighting forces. In a region where a night of R. and R. means downing a couple of cans of nonalcoholic beer and practicing the steps to a new Marine-invented dance, the "Gas Mask Rag," the outside diversion is welcomed. "It is very important to keep up morale in the midst of such a lonely and isolating experience as a war in a desert," says Army Lieut. Colonel Robert Dawson, deputy director of the military broadcasting center in Los Angeles, which gathers the bulk of its programming from U.S. radio and TV stations. The armed forces usually pay a small fee for entertainment, but scores of producers and show-biz executives are donating their programs. Both the Super Bowl and last week's Grammy Awards were beamed in live. Taped segments of Los Angeles Laker games, boxing and wrestling matches, and favorites like The Arsenio Hall Show have also been shown. Disney even paid for a musical special, headlined by singer Greenwood, whose patriotic anthem God Bless the USA is one of the songs most requested by the troops.

Saudi Arabians can eavesdrop on armed-forces radio but not on the military's closed-circuit TV signals. Even so, all tapes and transmissions coming into the country are monitored to avoid offending the sensibilities of the Saudi hosts. That rules out programs containing make-out scenes, women wearing tight or revealing clothing and displays of religious icons. Some soldiers were concerned that the restrictions might cause the censorship of Cher's Video Canteen, a two-hour special of music videos hosted by the actress, whose scanty costumes are her trademark. Programmers for the VH-1 cable network, which sponsored the show, did exclude some videos from the program, including all by Madonna, but Cher passed muster by wearing jeans and a jacket. When Bob Hope staged his Christmas show for the troops, the Saudis passed the word that they weren't happy about his female troupers and that only women accompanied by their husbands were welcome in the kingdom. Thus the only woman on the tour was Hope's wife Dolores.

For shows broadcast live from the U.S., the biggest problem is the time difference of eight to 11 hours, which means that many sports events must be taped in the middle of the night and watched later. Even so, the young men and women in the gulf are grateful for such diversions and the good intentions behind them. "It brings a bit of home to you," says Francis Gitro, 47, a chief warrant officer from Rochester. And that explains why, even though the troops enjoy star-studded extravaganzas from Hollywood, the most popular TV show of all is a videotape of loved ones back home.

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