What’s in the Daily Pope Today?
Hurrah for Ian Jack. Hurrah for Polly Toynbee and now for Ian Jack. I love this comment on the Guardian’s popification – I feel like flapping my hands and saying ‘that is so true‘ like a Valley Girl. (I am a Valley Girl at heart, actually. I just cover it up well. But underneath the cynicism, the sneers, the bad language, the bloodshot eyes, the duelling scar – underneath all that I’m basically just a San Fernando valley high school sophomore who wouldn’t hurt a fly.)
The Pope — this is a crude and prejudiced paraphrase of the coverage — had ended the Cold War, brought down the Berlin Wall, and defended the world’s poor against the depredations of the world’s rich. He was ripe for beatification. No more humane, more spiritual or more important individual had recently walked the globe.
And that’s not new, either. It obviously got a lot worse when he snuffed it – a whole lot worse – it turned into a complete explosion of imbecility – but the kind of thing was bad before. I’ve been shouting at the radio for years because of the solemn pious deeply-impressed way it used to talk about the pope and his every move – as if – hello? – he were everyone’s pope, as if we were all Papa’s children. ‘Not this cookie!’ I used to yell at NPR, before changing the channel to the all-blues station. But what was that about? That childish uncritical worshipful tone that crept into papal coverage – as if the wretched man had never done a thing wrong, as if the Catholic church were an unmixed blessing, as if – oh never mind.
Jack compares the pope festival to the Diana festival.
There was no end to grief. It is worth recalling some details. William Hague wanted Heathrow to be renamed Diana Airport, Gordon Brown was said to be seriously considering the idea that August Bank Holiday be renamed Diana Day. Three foreign tourists were sentenced to jail for taking a few old teddy bears from the tributes heap. Newspapers instructed the Queen and her family to grieve, and to be seen grieving. Many people were recorded saying that they grieved more for Diana than for their dead mothers and husbands. Not to grieve was to be odd, cynical, wicked.
Diana airport!! That is hilarious. I didn’t know that. Can you imagine – Heathrow is bad enough just as a place to be – but can you imagine having to fly into and out of Diana airport?! The shame of it!
But anyway, I remember the frenzy very well. I was fascinated by it. I remember the insane stuff about the people arrested for taking a teddy bear or two. Because – what? Diana wanted them? All of them? To do what with? And how? And boy do I ever remember the stuff about the Queen. I found it sort of funny in a way – still do in fact. Because it was so Not One. One does not emote in public (or in private either actually). One certainly does not emote on television. A passing mention of an annus horribilis in an after-luncheon speech at the Guildhall (or wherever it was) is one thing, but a command performance of sorrow for a pack of drooling subjects is quite another, thank you. And One frankly does not feel all that much sorrow in any case, to be quite honest. One has known a good many other people whom One regrets more than One regrets One’s silly narcissistic publicity-mad daughter-in-law. One wasn’t made to go on television to emote for any of them, so why is One being made to do so now? One really finds it all quite insufferable, and One will read One’s careful speech with about as much emotion as One would read the breakfast menu.
Yep, that was pretty funny stuff, but it was also pretty disgusting. Because the whole thing boiled down to the fact that Diana took a good picture. Period. If Anne had been the one to get killed, driving the Range Rover 120 miles an hour and bumping into something, would there have been all that fuss? Would there have been a tenth of it? Don’t be ridiculous. No, it was classic pseudo-event, as Boorstin called these things (and he called them that a long time ago, before they’d really hit their stride. These days pseudo-events are really pseudo-events. Pseudo-events with hair on their chests.)
My resentment — a popular resentment, so far as I can tell — came from something else: an instruction from the media to have me see as hugely important something that I regarded only as reasonably interesting, and to feel something (sorrow, awe) that I didn’t feel. The more that television and newspapers leave cold information behind in pursuit of warm emotion, the more authoritarian they seem: their tone is not so much an invitation to know as an order to feel (which is a good definition of sentimentality) —there was, in Diana’s case, a dictatorship of grief.
Just so. There’s a lot of it about. Coverage of Michael Jackson, for instance. I always drop things in shock and surprise when I’m listening to the World Service on the radio and the news leads off with something about Michael Jackson – as if that’s the most important thing they could mention. For the whole world! Michael Jackson! We’re not ordered to feel grief about him, as far as I know, but we are ordered to be interested, and pruriently interested at that. We’re ordered to feel intensely interested in and concerned with various pointless celebrities like Arnold Schwarzenegger and Brad Pitt and ‘J-lo’. That was the deal with the pope, I guess – he was famous. That’s all. He wasn’t quite as young or as pretty as Diana, but he was maybe even more famous. It’s a wonder nobody made the Queen go on television to say how wracked with grief she was.
I remeber when Charlie and Di got married, my girlfriend and I took the dog out for a walk in the countryside wheile it was all going on. We did not see another soul all the time we were out there.
Then on the day of Di’s funeral, all the streets were deserted, quiet and still. It was like one of those SF films where everyone has disappeared and the hero walks down the street alone.
It’s like the groupthink thing we discussed the other day. You see all these people who seem to think the same thing, and you, you think the complete opposite.
And you have to wonder.
What is it about them?
What is it about you?
“My resentment — a popular resentment, so far as I can tell — came from something else: an instruction from the media to have me see as hugely important something that I regarded only as reasonably interesting, and to feel something (sorrow, awe) that I didn’t feel.”
I felt no obligation whatsover to feel that way. I only felt motivated to switch channels, because the media product was not of my interest or taste.
Q1: Don’t the media have freedom of speech?
Q2: And was the pope show so much worse than the regular program? If so, how?
Are you really from the valley? I thought you were from England.
Groupthink is powerful stuff. ‘What is it about them?
What is it about you?’
I know. Is it just something to do with bloody-mindedness? I often wonder – or nerdishness, or obstinacy, or all those? I think bloody-mindedness should be taught in schools. (I’m actually serious. Schools are such great little groupthink factories – the desire to fit in is so overwhelming to unformed children and adolescents. Schoolchildren of all people need to learn to resist. Then maybe more of them would be able to manage it as adults.)
Of course the media have freedom of speech. What a silly question. (I say that because it’s one that I hear in various forms so often – people do so love to equate criticism with censorship, in a way that simply baffles me.) Pointing out something stupid the media did or said hardly implies that they don’t have freedom of speech, so why bother to ask that?
No, I’m not from the valley! That was just one of my silly jokes. I’m not from the UK either though. I’m from New Jersey (different valley), live in Seattle.
“[…]people do so love to equate criticism with censorship, in a way that simply baffles me.”
Ah well, I think you like to juggle with balls and grenades at the same time. The balls are wonderful and shiny, but the grenades are a bit… distracting. From the balls, that is. ;)
Hmm. Well, that is an amusing way of putting it – but on a literal note, what do you mean? What are these grenades? I do definitely think that bad reporting can do harm – as who doesn’t? Think MMR, for just one example. But is that a grenade? I’m not saying bad reporting should be a criminal offence after all. See the Academic Bill of Rights question. I do think there is groupthink in universities, but I don’t think the Academic Bill of Rights is at all the way to deal with the problem – not even close. So what are you trying to argue? That strongly-worded criticism is tantamount to grenades or demands for censorship?
I think Diana Airport would’ve been great! Imagine explaining to relatives that you’d come late after getting stuck in Diana…
Lost luggage.
Speaking of Michael Jackson, the American media’s fascination is nothing compared to much of the thirld world’s near obsession with the one-gloved wonder. Several friends of mine who grew up in remote, dusty villages in North Africa and Latin America–sensible people, by the way, with good taste in music–still think very fondly of MJ because he actually visited their poverty-stricken backwater hometowns and put on lavish concerts there. Shrewd move by Mr. Wacko. That way, when he wears out his welcome in North America and Western Europe (no sign of that happening yet), he can still find throngs of grateful, adoring crowds elsewhere who will always support him. If forced to flee the U.S., he can find asylum in dozens of countries. Reminds me of that darkly funny scene in Three Kings, where the CIA-trained Iraqi thug applies the juice to a captured GI, demanding to know what America has done to the great Michael Jackson to make him so weird.