Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts

Friday, June 26, 2009

Media Circus

Southbound on Mission Road

The self proclaimed King of Pop is dead and his body lays at the Los Angeles County Coroner's office, which I drive past daily on my way to work.  Talk about a media frenzy surrounding this location at the intersection of Marengo Street and Mission Road. I was ready to call in to work and tell them that I was going to be late.

As we traveled southbound on Mission Road from Valley Boulevard I could see traffic backed up and what looked like a motorcade of white trucks off to the side. As we neared Mission and Zonal I could distinguish the white trucks as media vehicles equipped with huge satellite dishes.

Media at L.A. Coroner

They lined both sides of Mission Road reducing traffic to one lane each side, which explained why we were jammed like sardines. Everywhere I looked I saw Digital SLRs with behemoth lenses and flanks of video cameras pointed at the gates leading to the Coroner's office, each group prepared to capture a glimpse of anything.

This media circus was a perfect reflection of Jackson's real life. He reveled in the spotlight and courted the attention and adulation of thousands, now they waited around the world for final word of what caused his untimely death.

The throngs of reporters, photographers and fans was simply too much. I wanted my carpool friend to get us the hell out of there. It was stifling to see so many people in one place jockeying for position and for a very brief moment I felt I could understand what celebrities experience daily. It's paralyzing and crushing and something I hope to never experience again.

Monday, October 16, 2006

Talking to a co-worker about the messages today's youth receive from the
media. Her daughter is 13 going on 16 and is slightly chubby. The daughter
gets a lot of grief from her peers about not being thin, not looking the
part, not dressing the way they do, etc. My friend said it's hard trying to
reach her daughter and make her understand that being unique is a gift and
that, while the other girls may be thin - they're also ugly. Her daughter
can always lose weight, but their correction will require surgery!

Which is right in line with the models in this poster. At least one of them has an eating disorder. Another has had some type of plastic surgery. Another has had lipo or botex injections. These are the examples our teens see everyday and these gals are the ones setting the standard for my co-worker's daughter. She is striving to emulate these women, who are not naturally beautiful the way their images are depicted. We need to stress to our girls that these models are chiseled and made to look this well.

Talking to a co-worker about the messages today's youth receive from the
media. Her daughter is 13 going on 16 and is slightly chubby. The daughter
gets a lot of grief from her peers about not being thin, not looking the
part, not dressing the way they do, etc. My friend said it's hard trying to
reach her daughter and make her understand that being unique is a gift and
that, while the other girls may be thin - they're also ugly. Her daughter
can always lose weight, but their correction will require surgery!

Which is right in line with the models in this poster. At least one of them has an eating disorder. Another has had some type of plastic surgery. Another has had lipo or botex injections. These are the examples our teens see everyday and these gals are the ones setting the standard for my co-worker's daughter. She is striving to emulate these women, who are not naturally beautiful the way their images are depicted. We need to stress to our girls that these models are chiseled and made to look this well.