Filed under: Entertainment
From JM’s blog:
Read this morning at Los Angeles City Hall…
———————————————I am one of the most media-friendly celebrities around, and my being here this morning is not in contrast with that; rather, it’s in keeping with it. There is no doubt that the new frontier of entertainment is taking place informally on the street. Sound bites that used to be given on red carpets and in arranged interviews now take place beside a restaurant’s valet stand, and there’s no changing that. I don’t want to beg the city of Los Angeles to give me 1987 back. I love being a famous musician in 2008. I embrace technology, but I also believe in thoughtfully adapting it to fit within a societal framework. And in the specific areas of both tracking and close-quarter engagement by the paparazzi, there are changes that must be made.
I’d like to define the scope of my argument by first defining what lies outside of it. I’m not here this morning to talk to you about the media at large, blogs, tabloid magazines, or entertainment news shows. I’m not even here to talk to you about photography itself. You don’t have to ultimately be photographed to have been dangerously pursued in the attempt of getting a shot. The danger exists in methods and tactics having absolutely nothing to do with picture taking. In fact, removing the camera from the equation is a very effective way of looking at this situation candidly.
A scenario:
It’s two o’clock in the morning and you’re driving home from a friend’s house. You notice there is a vehicle behind you that has no license plate and that has been following you for the last 15 minutes. The driver is so brazen that he or she has even taken to ignoring red lights just to stay behind you. As you begin to turn onto a small neighborhood street just blocks from where you live, you now realize this person has definite intentions of engaging you at your house.
The question I ask you is: Are you in danger?The answer is YES. Not “depends if you’re on TV.”
It doesn’t matter what you do for a living, and it doesn’t matter that there might turn out to be a digital camera on the passenger seat. You are IN danger. Danger is defined as the possibility of suffering harm or injury.ᅠ And without knowing who is following you, you do not know why you are being followed, which brings about a very real possibility for suffering harm or injury.
So what about that camera on the passenger seat? Recently, it’s come to serve as all but an official license to encroach on someone’s right to protect themselves from threats of danger, along with every traffic law ever devised. It’s also the most socially acceptable way to come within inches from someone who you do not know and who does not know you.ᅠ Sadly, if I were someone who wanted to do harm to a celebrity – of which there are many – my best bet in succeeding today would be to hold a camera.Here’s a true story.
Last month at Los Angeles International Airport, forty men, holding no tickets to fly and with nobody to pick up, swarmed an arriving female passenger inside the terminal, shouting at her, disorienting her and denying her a safe exit. Does that sound like something that should be allowed? Should the fact that the forty men were holding cameras change that answer?
Sadly, the very real and present risk associated with being pursued as a celebrity pales in comparison to the daily, imminent danger to the public at large.ᅠ If you’ve ever raised an eyebrow at an especially bullish driver declaring him or herself the third in a line of cars making a left turn on a light that had just turned red, I ask you to imagine what your reaction would be to watching eight cars do it.ᅠ And it happens not just daily, but turn-for-turn. I don’t need to look in my rear view mirror to know it’s happening behind me. All I have to do is listen; listen to the dissonant array of car horns as unsuspecting drivers are taken by surprise while a pack of reckless paparazzi muscle through an aging red light.
The person being followed knows there is wanton carelessness behind them. The pedestrian crossing the street, or the car expecting to have the right of way does not. A severe accident occurring from this kind of vehicular pursuit is not a theoretical possibility, but a situational certainty.
What does any of this have to do with photography? Or with celebrity?
The answer is simply, nothing.
This is about safety. Defined as “being protected from danger, risk, or injury.”
I don’t sit before you today to ask that you ban the paparazzi. I’m asking you to regulate it. Officialize it. Tax it. Legitimize it. A big white P on a yellow license plate says the driver works for an accredited photo agency. Press credentials worn in plain sight do the same. A law governing an acceptable filming distance from an unwilling subject keeps everybody safe and misbehavior becomes accountable. Regulating the paparazzi won’t bring an end to modern day media coverage, just as the newly enforced hands-free law hasn’t stopped people from talking on cell phones while they drive.ᅠ It’s only an adaptive measure put in place to respond to some of the ways that living in a technological free-market can compromise personal safety.
Filed under: Politics
Elections are decided by low information voters, that is, voters who tune in sparingly and pick up a few snippets of information and then make a judgement based on that info. Low information voters also tend to blindly go with whatever candidate agrees with their previous conclusions on a few issues of greatest importance to them. I know that is a broad brush with which to paint the electorate, but I think it is largely the case. SO DON’T BE A LOW INFORMATION VOTER! PLEASE! Whether you are liberal or conservative or find yourself in the middle, engage in the process. Follow the story-lines and go deeper than the headlines.
All news media has an inherent bias. From the individual person reporting the “news”, to the producer making the decisions about what to report (a place where bias shows up most often), all the way up the board of directors and parent companies of a news outlet. As a result, get your news from multiple sources and distinguish between punditry and the reporting of facts. If you’re still reading this, thank you. And please, don’t watch FOX News or listen to Rush Limbaugh or anyone else on conservative talk radio, it’s not good for you or anybody!
These guys are the worst, they play fast and loose with the facts of every story and give true conservatives a bad name.
Filed under: Me
I should really start a category for these kind of blogs, you know, the first-post-after-several-months kind. I have a conflicted relationship with blogging which I think contributes to why I am not at all consistent. Part of the deal is that I don’t know where I fit in the blogosphere, that is, I’m not sure what kind of blogger I am.
Trust me, there are different kinds of bloggers. There are the “I like to write/ramble on about whatever funny stuff happened this week” kind of bloggers. Then there’s the “my family lives a million miles away and this is how I update them” bloggers. There are the “look at my baby, isn’t he/she big and cute” bloggers. Then, there are the pastor bloggers who use blogs as a means of community formation and sermon-prep, with a little bit of self-promotion on the side
. There are the “link” bloggers who just post links to funny stuff on YouTube and other people’s blogs. There are the “heavy” bloggers who only post at midnight and focus on the most intense crap you’ve ever read (might I suggest re-reading your thoughts the next morning before posting them?). Next come the “picture” bloggers who seem to have cameras for eyes and constantly post pictures of the food they made, the corner of the house they decorated, the clothes they just bought, their hair that day, their latest art/craft project, pictures of the sky and close-ups of trees and leaves and whatever else they saw on their morning stroll around the neighborhood. Then there’s the “rant” bloggers, these people are pissed. Pissed about politics, about…well, usually politics. Did I leave any out?
Anyway, my point is, what am I? I like whit for sure. I get a kick out of blogging. I’m all for shameless self-promotion. I definitely like to post YouTube videos. I’m big on issues regarding politics and faith, and then there’s music. Love music. I’m a TV guy, I like to talk about my shows for sure. Idol, 30 Rock, Lost, you know, the essentials. So what I’m thinking is that I want my blog to be an on-line world wide web extension of me. Nothing contrived, just a webspace as random as I am. So, here goes.

