Life as a Spectator Sport

A proud member of the reality-based community


Wednesday, April 28, 2004

From Scout at and then . . .
Think Inside the Box
CNN reports that three Italian civilians have been taken hostage in Iraq. Their captors are demanding one thing: Mass Protests to be organized in Italy.

It reminds me, in no small way, of Robert DeNiro's character in "The King of Comedy", Rupert Pupkin, a failed stand up comic who kidnaps a late night talk show host, and won't release him until the show's producers make Pupkin the guest host of the show for the evening. In the film, the scenario plays out as a mixture of horror and farce, about the extent that media has damaged people's sense of identity. In the end, everyone in the (unaware) audience laughs at Pupkin not because he's funny, but because he has to be funny if he's on TV. Which is precisely the power that Pupkin wanted.

We're no longer just fighting a war in front of a live television audience, we're literally fighting it inside the television. Italians have already organized authentic protests against this war, some of the largest numbers in history were in Italian Protests. What is outrageous is the notion of terrorists blackmailing an entire nation into going through the motions of protesting a war they are already against in massive numbers, just so that several hostage taking guerrillas can place an image in the cap of the American Resistance.
The last paragraph of his post was what really caught my eye. Last year I posted that war was inevitable, because Fox had been running promos for it for weeks. In a more detailed restatement of that observation, Scout says:
It's like watching how a five year old changes when he knows the video camera is looking at him. In that same way, terrorists are now "pretending" to be Religious Freedom Fighters in a war that America is "pretending" to wage for Democratic Liberation. We're looking at a war that is being fought exclusively for the benefit of television, where even the authenticity of protest is being manipulated for the sake of obtaining power through the staged image of protest. What we are looking at is not a war of ideas or cultures or Democracy vs Theocratic Fundamentalism. It's a ratings battle.
Fundamentalists, whether Christian or Muslim, like to talk about absolutes of good and evil. It's more than a little ironic that both sides have abandoned what is real good and evil for what people can be persuaded to perceive as good or evil.

On the other hand, the cynic would say that religion and politics both depend on expert PR for their survival.
posted by Liz @ 9:54 AM     |


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