Saturday, October 31, 2009

Death and the Media.

Target: Anybody that watches the news on a regular basis.

This is not the blog I have been meaning to write since about two days after the last one but I've been writing a poem (I'm an English major, we do that sometime, don't worry you'll never have to read it) lately that seems to have turned into a rant against the twenty four hour media cycle in iambic pentameter. As I was moving along with the poem, I noted that death is everywhere in the news these days but then I said it is only presented in tiny segments. And after I finished the neat lines and made sure I had my rhyme scheme together I stopped and though, "oh shit, I've talked myself into a corner. How can death be everywhere on TV and still be compressed into sound bites and video clips?"

And then it hit me: this is a problem. I would say "the" problem but we all know damn well that I am not going to unlock the key dysfunction with 21st century media. One problem (and I think a major one) revolves around this idea, however: although death pervades modern media, little or no context is given, we don't get any reflection (unless you count pointing the finger and playing political games). When was the last time you were able to take a moment of silence following a death without spending it contemplating the political maneuvering that must have motivated whatever person just called for the moment? It's been quite a damn long time for me. Beyond that, when was the last time any body even thought to take a moment of silence?

But that isn't my point. I'm not telling people they have to stop and think every time they find out somebody got shot from the evening news. I do think however that the news should be responsible enough to spend a moment reflecting on the significance of the lost lives that they report on even when that life didn't belong to fucking Michael "Probably fiddled with little boys but now that he's dead we're all bat shit crazy about him" Jackson.

Seriously, news is not supposed to be entertaining and I don't even think it needs to be politically motivated. But of course, the only time something important is ever going to be covered is if somebody gives it a political spin and yells at you about it. If naked or nearly naked women/famous people are not involved or nobody is foaming at the mouth, sending spittle flying all over their desk with righteous fury, nobody wants to pay any attention. Which is why every solemn moment of reflection over the death of somebody that didn't make shitty music or spend lots and lots of money to enjoy a political career during which they probably didn't get much done, would lose precious ratings for the news channel that included such an idiotic notion while their competitors took the brainy route and got past the death in a car accident (unless there was alcohol involved because that would require a nice little preachy moment afterward) in the thirty seconds they were supposed to and moved on to the next tramp flashing her pussy for the cameras.

On the other hand, what could anybody do about this? They can't spend any more time than they already do focusing on death and they definitely can't start thinking about the significance of those deaths, even thinking about it enough to write this blog makes me sick to my stomach. People don't really need any more negative shit on TV, right? Thirty seconds of death crammed in between whatever political nonsense is happening is already a lot to deal with after a long day, the only reason some of us still feel the need to get up in the morning is because the nice folks at the nightly news throw us all a bone and ramble about sports and the weather for a while in between real news stories. The really great thing about those topics (other than the fact that they are constant and a lot of people care about them so they keep the ratings up) is no matter how shitty the local sports team did this afternoon and no matter how much snow is going to be fucking with your commute in the morning, there is always hope that things are going to get better on the weather and sports front. Even the political arena offers the occasional ray of sunshine when a bill gets passed that you've been hoping for since you were thirteen and realized you had opinions.

It's too bad when somebody falls down dead for no apparent reason or gets shot in a war zone or loses a battle with cancer there is no hope of a reversal. There is no good trade to improve your teams chances and there is no warm air front that is going to get you to work on time tomorrow. And the only thing any of us can do is bare with it but the least we could do instead of jockeying for political position or carting Michael's corpse around the country is try to prevent the next one.

1 comment:

  1. Not as a rebuttal, but one of the ways I try to avoid all the BS in the 24hour news cycle is to watch BBC news or the Canadian new coverage. It seems alot more up front and to the point about most things and doesn't seem to root around in the muck so much. Just an option until someone realizes how much cable news has ruined our society and outlaws it all together. I'd love to go back to a time when people had to wait until 5 or 6 o'clock to watch the evening news to find out what happened that day. Instant access news has really dumbed down our national empathy. We see so much death so often, it has numbed our national ability to care I think.

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