Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons
Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Marybeth Hicks :: Townhall.com Columnist
Consider What We Know About Folks We Don't Know
by Marybeth Hicks
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
Poll
Was the Copenhagen Global Warming Summit Walk-Out a Win for the U.S.?


“Wow,” my daughter said as she strolled into the kitchen on Sunday morning. “Billy Mays died. It’s officially celebrity death week.”

News of the passing of TV’s most famous pitchman had barely broken and we were already speculating, over breakfast, about what might have happened.

Mr. Mays was among the passengers on a Tampa-bound US Airways flight that blew out its front tire upon landing. One report mentioned he hit his head but claimed to feel OK. “Maybe it’s one of those Natasha Richardson things,” my daughter wondered, referring to the actress who died earlier this year of a brain bleed after a seemingly insignificant fall on the ski slopes.

Our conversation moved quickly from one celebrity story to another – from the deaths of Michael Jackson and Farrah Fawcett on Thursday to Ed McMahon’s passing on Tuesday – with the sort of familiarity you would expect if we actually knew any of these folks.

Listening to the banter over coffee and the Sunday paper, I thought, Somewhere in Argentina is a woman thanking her lucky stars that Americans are as celebrity obsessed as we are.

You might think Maria Belen Chapur would have taken advantage of that fact and stayed under the radar. Ironically, the Argentinean mistress of South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford appears not to have been content with a strategy of media silence, as she ultimately released an unsolicited statement to the press about the hacker who stole her private love emails from the governor.

Oh yeah. There were private love emails. I’d forgotten all about those, what with all the attention being paid to “MJ’s” passing and the moving vans at his rented mansion and the debated authenticity of a 2002 will and the custody issue surrounding his children.

Truth be told, I’m starting to feel a little creepy about how much I now know about the various people who shared the limelight last week.

Thanks to our cultural need for every personal detail about our celebrities, I know about the progression of Ms. Fawcett’s anal cancer and the condition of Mr. Mays’ left ventricle.

I’m aware that Jenny Sanford found out in January that her husband was carrying on an affair.

I know about Mr. McMahon’s financial woes, and about Mr. Jackson’s mammoth pile of debt.

In fact, I now know more about Mr. Jackson’s finances, his medical history, his childhood and his sexual proclivities than I do about members of my own family.

More than once in the past week, the people at the center of these dramatic stories have stood at a microphone in front of banks of cameras and asked that their privacy be respected during the difficult and stressful days ahead.

These folks aren’t just talking to the members of the media camped outside the coroner’s office or staking out the bushes in search of an ambush photograph.

No, they’re talking to all of us, asking us to be satisfied with what we know.

They’re pleading for the compassion we would all want for ourselves – the right to grieve in private, to adjust to their new realities, to work out their problems – without also having to worry about how such tasks will play out on TV and over the Internet.

They’re asking us to be respectfully disinterested.

We’re so used to being fed an unlimited diet of salacious gossip and speculation along with our news that we forget we’re dining on the tragedy and misfortune of others.

Don’t we owe it to the people we don’t know to remember that we don’t know them?

Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author
Marybeth Hicks is the author of Bringing up Geeks: How to Protect Your Kid’s Childhood in a Grow-up-too-fast World (Penguin/Berkley, July 2008).
Jamais deux sans trois.
Leaving a Parisian restaurant one night in November of 1991, I spotted one of those throngs of angst ridden people that announce a celebrity's passing with flowers and bloodshot eyes as they gathered before a door on a travelled Paris street.

Yves Montand was dead.
For Americans that are not involved in film or of the age of Shirley Maclaine, Mr. Montand is not likely to be known but to the French in 1991, he was still a man of Olympian heights and halcyon days.

I remembered this last week, those faces that cried and stood before that Paris door as I learned of the end of days for loyal Ed McMahon, the strictly female Ms. Fawcett and the unreal Mr. Jackson.

It was a moment remembered as well, as I turned a neighborhood street and saw the assembled satellite trucks in front of the Jackson family home that normally is just another gate in north Los Angeles.

What is best remembered, is what we have impressioned of those we have watched, heard and relished as the glitterati among us.
The first impression, the viewers response, 'the roar of the paint, the smell of the crowd' so to speak.

In death, we are allowed to see the fascinating brought to the stainless table where it just lays there. Too much information, too much nothingness, not enough being.

In "The Man that Shot Liberty Valence", all audiences, those in theaters and those that gather in front of doors, are reminded that, “when the legend becomes fact, print the legend"

I'm avoiding the ‘Jackson’ Street this week.

CELEBRATES
I think the American people are way too obsessed with the lives of so-called celebrities. these people are just that people just like you or I or anybody else there is nothing special about them they are just people doing a job and getting very well paid for this job. A singer actor dancer or any other artist uses these natural god given skills to entertain the people around them and these so-called celebrities should not be idolized as if they were anything but regular ordinary people. A singer or a dancer for example uses props and music top make his or her show more entertaining, without music their show would not be so stunning and would probably be quite dull. An actor uses props also in his or her show and these days special effects are used to make the show much more dramatic and entertaining and without special effects their performance would probably be laughable at best. It is just appalling to me at how many people in this country try to make these so-called celebrities look almost God-like in their admiration of them and the press is the worst at this creating an almost feeding frenzy of sharks at the way celebrities are treated. I have heard many times an actor or sports star being called a hero, these people are not hero's none of these sports celebrities have ever risked their lives to save the life of another person their lives were never in jeopardy unless of course you include running from the paparazzi. I just wish the American people would treat these so-called celebrities as regular normal people and stop idolizing them. We especially here in America need to grow up and stop acting like we are in the Peter Pan dreamworld when it comes to our entertainers. Remember folks entertainers are only people.

Obsessed??? Who's Obessessed???

I am perfectly willing to wait 2 or 3 months for the cause of Michael Jackson's death to be known. If fact I really won't pay attention until much of this is sorted out.

Its the news media that was wasting my time broadcasting over and over again the same speculation about what caused his death.

Michael Jackson is an American success story and an American tradegy.

He is proof that a poor black kid can achieve anything with hard work, dedication, and passion to succeed.

He is also proof that one should associate with others who will look out for you when your back is turned.

One of the Consequences of a Nanny State is people don't see a need to look out for each other. They are conditioned into believing the welfare of their fellow man is the responsibility of Government.

Maintaining healthy relationships with family, friends, church, and community organization become less a necessity.

Liberals support the Nanny State.

Mike
May I ask what is "so-called" about these celebrities? They are celebrities whether you like it or not. You could argue that we shouldn't pay such heed or devote so much interest in celebrities, but you can't claim they are not celebrities.

"undue" attention paid to celebrities
Once someone is a celebrity, he/she should expect to be noticed and gossiped about, considering the megabucks or elected power they are happily receiving from the populace. Not only that, we as a people have much to learn from seeing the character and foibles of the rich, beautiful, and powerful exposed. We need to learn about personality types and predictable behavior or we will be collectively and individually forever naive and easily led astray.

Media devolution
Very good article. Media, media followers, leave these people alone and mind your own business.

vre says "I'm avoiding the Jackson Stree
I think that is very clear thinking!! I'm not here to *Bad-Mouth* any of the *Celebrities who passed this week or any other point in time..I simply DO NOT CARE enough to pass judgement one way or the other.
After a quarter Century in the Military I retired to a job that necessarily entailed a lot of Night work..I still managed to stay in touch with my kids, wife etc but I'm afraid the *Celebs* lost out..When the talk was all about "Who Shot JR" I truly didn't know who/what they were talking about and I still Don't Really Care!! I'll Pass on whether or not Michale was *a Musical Genius* but I do think Ms Fawcett was a FINE Lookin Lady..I reckon I'm just out of touch.. HEAVEN FORBID!! CHEERS
Sign Up to Post Your CommentsSign Up to Post Your Comments
If you are already registered, click here to login. Otherwise, please take a few seconds to register with Townhall.com. Once you sign up, you’ll be able to post your comments immediately, use the action center, get podcasts, and more!
Note: Fields marked with a red asterisk (*) are required.
Salutation:
First Name:
*
Last Name:
*
Email:
*
Nickname:
*
Note: Nick name will be shown when you post comments.
Address 1:
*
Address 2:
City:
*
State:
*
Zip:
*
Phone:
      
Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
(Bi-Weekly) We highlight the best opportunities from our partners for surveys, action items and more.