I hate it how, whenever we have a national tragedy, journos just eat it up. The TV stations make logos for it, and slogans like “Massacre at Virginia Tech” that become ominous jingles as the anchors and announcers repeat them as a story unfolds.
We’re watching Dateline NBC now (for the first time ever), and the exploitation of the V Tech tragedy is enraging. Matt Lauer is just getting too much mileage out of it.
They take every aspect of the story and make it into an entertainment event. They interview grief counselors and find out how that works. They pull out footage of previous shootings. They interview paramedics and enlighten us about their work. It’s all for entertainment and to create viewership for the network.
The other people who infuriate me when we have a tragedy is the “expert” morons who get on the tube saying how this could have easily been prevented. Their hindsight is perfect, and they get to promote themselves as experts every time an unpreventable tragedy happens. There’s a guy on Dateline now talking about how they should have sent in a massive anti-terrorism response team after the first two people were shot. Come on. We’re going to send in the ATF or the army or whomever every time there’s a shooting? Ten thousand people are shot to death each year in this country. We can’t treat each incident like an act of terrorism as this guy is suggesting.
The other thing I hate about the “if only” experts is that they implicitly blame everyone involved. If only the campus police had done something different. If only the email had gone out sooner warning people to stay in lockdown. None of this was foreseeable - who could have known a campus shooting (like the one that happened in Seattle a few weeks ago) would turn into a massacre?
I say, mourn with those who mourn, and stop exploiting them for publicity and our need to know.
If that weren’t enough, they’re now doing a story about a guy who survived the Columbine massacre but lost his sister, Rachel Scott. Emotional aftermath and all that. Ugh. “Soon, even prayer was no match for the terror…”


Terrible…still it’s not as bad as me saying “nappy headed hos” and I’m so very sorry for that.
I blogged about something similar today…you can check out my thoughts…but we were on the same mind track. Plus this hit home for me since this is another ACC school and one of our main peer institutions. Many that go here know students at VT. NCSU would have dealt with the situation in the same way…and rightfully so. And everyone needs to leave VT’s Chancellor/President and their Cheif of Police alone.
[...] anything about the VT incident, but then I read what Justin at Radical Congruency wrote about the media’s exploitation of the “Massacre of Virginia [...]
tragic news of Virginia Tech shootings…
[update 4/17 8:17am] The media feeding frenzy is all over this story, rehashing the same sad drama. I’ll refer you to these others for the latest:
1st-hand accounts via blog roundup by WashingtonPost.com
AngryAsianMan reflects on the racial impl…
I remember when I first began to loathe the news.
If you remember one young African-American boy was killed in the Columbine shootings. Katie Couric interviewed his dad and his best friend (a small dennis the menace looking boy) the following morning. The sun hadn’t ever come up in CO. It was dark and a light snow was falling. There was Katie pressing and prodding these two greiving people for the scoop.
“How does it feel to lose you best friend in this way?”
“Do you miss your son?”
To this day I cannot watch Couric without my stomach turning.
great post. right on with your thoughts.
[...] has begun, and it just makes me tired. I’m with Justin at Radical Congruency who says “mourn with those who mourn, and stop exploiting them for publicity and our need to [...]
So why did you jump on the bandwagon and post yet another ‘journo’ about it?
justin: tough call. we need the media but like many things, they just don’t know when to quit which is why the onus is back to us to have the discipline to turn off the TV. it sure has been hard. turning the TV isn’t hard - it’s also the power/influence of the net. peace to you.
Justin, totally agree. Watching Larry King last night just made me so gutted. The families just wanted to pay tribute and yet the programme seemed to just want them to say certain things that would make good TV. The only answer is to stop watching.
I totaly agree with this article. I think that the media exploites certain events in order to gain publicity and increase viewers. Thank you for posting it. It really helped me with my essay.