Courtesy of fravia's pages of reverse engineering
Super-Samantha wrote the following on my messageboard on 24 July 1999
"We had only positive feedback after we questioned the media's assault on Kennedy
trivia and the torrent of "national grief" which was
spoon fed to us for one
solid week as the rest of the world news respectfully stood still. One has to
wonder if the cure for war, pestilence
and poverty could be achieved simply by
flying one Kennedy into the sea each week. If television news and specials can be
used as an indicator, the answer is a resounding "yes". Hardly a mention of
anything else was heard for seven days and we must assume there was a complete
halt to hostilities in Kosovo and all was well with the rest of the world.
I opt for Teddy to be next week's offering.
One last editorial
comment and we shall leave the subject:
--------------
A CASE STUDY IN
SELF-LOVE
This week was a big revenue booster for the networks and a high
stage for their talkinghead netwonks. Not since Princess Diana's Mercedes
Benz
decelerated from 120mph into a Paris tunnel abutment has so much media hype been
heaped on a deceased member of the glitterati.
The numbers released by
Nielsen indicate that viewership of CNN, MSNBC and FNC nonstop Kennedy coverage
exceeded previous highs set after Princess Di's death. Are congratulations in
order?
The death of kindred social celebrities sparks endless fascination
among media celebrities -- undoubtedly because these elites view themselves in
such esteem as to think they are eternal fixtures, invincible. But such "news"
coverage obfuscates the line between journalists and paparazzi, if such a line
still exists. More
importantly, it exposes the celebrity media's preoccupation
with itself.
One can speculate whether or not the coverage afforded young
John Kennedy would be afforded, say, conservative radio talk-show host Michael
Reagan, son of President Reagan, should he meet an untimely demise. We estimate
the latter would rate little more than a footnote. (Sorry, Michael.) He just does
not fit the media elite's
self-image.
The coverage of Princess Diana's
death provided a template for understanding the media's vicarious projection of
its own thin values. To wit: Who else died that fateful week in 1997? (Hint: Her
name was at least as widely known as that of the princess.) Does Mother Teresa
come to mind? If not, perhaps it is because the talkingheads barely gave lip
service to her lifetime of achievement during the flood of Diana coverage.
Of course, Mother Teresa did not die en route to Martha's Vineyard or
rushing to her yacht after an evening at the Ritz in Paris. She died quietly,
surrounded by members of her Catholic order in a barren room in Calcutta, leaving
a personal estate of three blue-bordered saris in
the colors of her
Missionaries of Charity. The glitterati can't identify with that. And the TV
media were not alone in their disproportionate coverage. A summary of pages in
the hallowed weekly print media dedicated to Princess Diana and Mother Teresa,
respectively: Newsweek 47 vs. 4, Time 41 vs. 7, and U.S. News & World Report 16
vs. 2.
The ACU's Craig Shirley noted at the time, "By the end of the week,
I felt certain Diana would be transformed by the media from royal celebrity to
martyred saint. I was wrong. The transformation took less than 24 hours." And
that brings us back to John-John, who, as media editor Wes Pruden notes, "at
38...had the gifts of good looks, charm and enough wealth to indulge harmless
hobbies, among them his airplane and his magazine, George."
Consider these
tributes: "It's been decades since the label of 'Our Royal Family' was applied to
the Kennedys. But now with another generation climbing the political ladder with
another unbelievable meeting of joy and sorrow, this may be one of the rare times
when a manufactured media label may actually be close to the mark." --CNN's Jeff
Greenfield. ++ "Now of the young family that once made the White House into
Camelot, only one is still among us -- Caroline." --ABC's Beth Nissen with another
"manufactured media label." ++ "JFK Jr. was the closest thing this country had
to a prince." --Today's Matt Lauer ++ "I suppose...he was the prince for all of
us." --ABC's Sam Donaldson ++ "A tribute to America's son. ... We
Americans...have
long been fascinated by the Kennedy mystique." --CBS's Dan
Rather
"Royal family"? "Camelot"? "Prince for us all"? These are all
images conjured by the media -- a luxurious trough for glitterati wallowing
and
mesmerizing the masses. Columnist Michael Kelly concludes, "Indeed, the absence
of true grief is what makes it possible to wallow in vicarious grief. The media
understand and exploit this. People are product. The more symbolic the person, the
greater value of the product. (This is why Hillary Clinton on the cover
guarantees
newsstand sales; she is almost pure symbol.) Everything that happens
to symbolic people is product. Especially death; nothing sells like
symbolic
death."
The most arrogant of the media elites set about exploiting the
tragedy as a catalyst for historical revision. Almost 30 years to the
day
after a drunken Ted Kennedy drove his car off a small bridge on Martha's
Vineyard, only miles from where his nephew met his end, ABC News listed among
"Kennedy Family Tragedies" -- "1969: Ted Kennedy in car crash in Chappaquiddick in
which Mary Jo Kopechne died." We were under the impression that was a Kopechne
family tragedy.
ABC even crowned the "royal family's" patriarch,
president. Referring to Ted Kennedy, Peter Jennings reported, "Also in his
statement today,
President Kennedy said what Kennedys have said before on
occasions like this, this family sort of helps to appease its grief if you will,
he said by putting its faith in God." ABC's Barbara Walters followed with, "Prime
Minister Barak...was very pleased with his visit with
President Kennedy...."
(We checked, and Mr. Kennedy is still a Senator.)
Wes Pruden concludes, "
'Losing the horizon' is not a phenomenon peculiar to novice pilots, but a common
affliction of our celebrity culture. Nobody loses the horizon faster, or has more
trouble determining which end is up, than the talkingheads on television when
entertainment tragedy strikes."
The irony is that John Kennedy, like
Princess Diana, loathed gratuitous media exploitation of the variety which
followed their deaths. Under the false pretense of such exploitation, the
humanity of the exploited is desecrated. Of course, the talkingheads counter that
couch potatoes are to blame because they demand all the celebrity hype -- a
"chicken or egg" proposition. But how does such an accusation distinguish
journalist from paparazzi?
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