See the very intelligent blog post at: http://www.withleather.com/post.phtml?pk=2994
I would feel very very differently if it had been about something that would actually harm her, or if she had been a victim of a crime. If she does compete for Berkeley next year, the publicity will be unavoidable. DGG / David Goodman
On 6/3/07, Tony Sidaway tonysidaway@gmail.com wrote:
On 6/3/07, Andrew Gray shimgray@gmail.com wrote:
Herewith is a short parable demonstrating the innate moral ambiguities of the media...
Let us imagine you wake up to find innumerable people mocking you publicly around the world. A newspaper comes to you and says "would you like to put your side of the story forward"?
You can either a) hide and hope they decide to stop; or b) make the most of a bad thing, and try to divert the shittiness. Which would you do?
Taking the interview is b); it requires some guts and is a bit of a gamble, but if you can stay cool and handle yourself well in the glare then the entire thing will burn out pretty fast and you can go back to normality again. If you choose a), well, maybe it'll burn out. Maybe it won't. Maybe you'll just keep being hounded until you take b), and by then maybe you'll be in a worse position to fend off the wolves...
(Compare, eg, the occasional publicity blip of someone accused of having an affair with a major politician - they shoot to fame on the terms of a muckraker journalist, they take the interviews and explain patiently it's all nonsense, everyone loses interest and they return to private life)
And then some buffoon accuses you of courting publicity. We're had a similar display of imbecility from people defending the production of a purported "biography" of QZ.
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