This post doesn't quite have a cohesive theme; it's about a variety of things. One thing is the various tv shows/movies that are upcoming and, to me, in some way or another, noteworthy. In later September, Jake Gyllenhaal's new movie where he plays a guy whose legs get blown off in a terrorist attack will be released. I know I've certainly thought about that movie a decent amount, but I'm not sure that that'll translate into me actually going to see the movie. We'll just have to wait and see. Then, in other Gyllenhaal news, Jake's sister/Peter Sarsgaard's wife, Maggie, is in a new HBO series that seems sort of interesting but since I don't subscribe to HBO it's not conveniently available to me. It's about prostitutes in 70s NYC. The other HBO series I'd like to see sometime are Oz and the Wire. Peter, husband of Maggie and brother in law of Jake is also in an upcoming Netflix series about the CIA's MK Ultra experiments, which should be fun. That's released in mid December, which seems like a long time off and I really wish it were going to be released sooner! Plus, Grey's Anatomy should be back on soon-ish and we can see where things will go from where they left off last season. Then, there's some other Hulu series (also related to the CIA, but more recently) that Peter is in but I still haven't become aware of any release date on that.
That aside, I watched some media analysis videos earlier that compelled me to comment on them. One was about how coverage of terrorism in the media affects people's perception of how frequent/likely terrorism is. The conclusion from that is basically that it's not so good for the media to cover terrorism in the way that they do, which is, when it happens, quite thoroughly. The video mentioned how it's very hard to stop watching coverage of terrorism on television, which I can agree with. However, it also said that such actions cause people to become more paranoid of terrorist attacks and have a generally overall negative impact. Me personally, I don't feel that watching tv coverage of terrorist attacks has negatively impacted me. In fact, I find it quite interesting in a morbidly fascinating way. Not that I'm saying I wish terrorist attacks would occur so that the news is interesting.
The second video criticized the way that the media has covered Donald Trump, saying that the media has made him and his abnormal actions seem too normal. Basically, the takeaway from that is that Anderson and Co. should eschew calmness and at least the pretense of objectivity, and instead take after Keith Olbermann's semi-screamed rants when covering the administration. (Not that I necessarily disagree with the things Keith Olbermann says in his videos, I just think he's pretty shouty and to some, probably comes across as fairly radical) This video happened to mention how Anderson garnered praise for his "emotional" (look it up) coverage of hurricane Katrina 12 years ago, implying that similar emotion should be exhibited by news anchors now when covering all the latest political events, which I thought was sort of interesting. I would say/hope that any person with a brain (a full brain, not just half a brain) would be able to realize that even through the veneer of calm voiced news anchors, the things that Donald Trump does are outrageous and not normal. So there's my analysis of some media analysis for the day. I guess this counts as critical thinking? As do the things I think about Peter Sarsgaard and Stephen Glass, among others?
Now, here are some things related to Stephen Glass/the movie Shattered Glass that I haven't talked about yet here on this blog. The never-ending saga continues! It's the gift that keeps on giving, I tell you. Get back to me in a year and see if I'm still blogging about Stephen Glass. I wouldn't be surprised if I were.
I'll start with this one, (edit: I apparently forgot to add the link here earlier!) which is partly about Jonah Lehrer, an author who did some self-plagiarism and made up (the fancy term would be "fabricated") Bob Dylan quotes in some (non-fiction) books he wrote. It also mentions Stephen in tandem with Jonah Lehrer. The title of this article is an amusing one to me: "Go away, Jonah Lehrer: Stephen Glass, James Frey and the white guy literary forgiveness project" The subtitle is "These days, deceitful writers can turn a profit off their sins almost right away. It's a gross lesson" since all of these people wrote books. I actually, years ago, did end up buying the book by the last guy, which (since I haven't read it) as far as I'm aware, is supposed to be about his journey from being a drug addict. However, it turned out that he made some things up/embellished things in the book but passed it off as things that had actually happened to him. At the time I was fairly young and in retrospect, might have been a bit young for reading books with the subject matter of a person's struggle with drug addiction.. I did some googling and it says the paperback edition was published in 2005, so I guess sometime after that is when I bought the book. It was from Costco, I remember that. Back to the article in question, which ponders if "the punishment for betraying readers’ trust [has] gotten lighter since 1998, when Glass’ fabrications came to light?" I couldn't really say.
Some of the other highlights: "For Rosin’s [the former colleague of Glass and author of the 2014 article about him in the New Republic] generation of journalists, the Stephen Glass saga was probably the one that has most shaped and disillusioned them, but for writers my age, Frey’s story is the one that changed us forever. Probably for younger writers and readers, Lehrer’s story has similar significance. For me, at least, Frey’s re-acceptance into the literary mainstream was the moment when I learned the important but heartbreaking lesson that morally sound guys often finish last. Frey taught me that, at least if you’re a white man with charisma and talent, there’s almost nothing that can, long-term, keep you from making a living in the business of words." [emphasis mine]
This is actually the paragraph right after the previously quoted one, but I wanted to break them up for ease of reading: "Well, what are disgraced writers supposed to do, slink off into the shadows forever? Though it’s the only solution that would fully satisfy the people who, like me, have trouble forgiving, it’s not realistic. They still have to live, after all, and often writing and publishing are their only potential career paths. But I found it telling and ultimately cheering that the intervening years have finally led Stephen Glass to eschew writing and to pursue another career path; forsaking his gifts in that realm seems to me like an appropriate punishment for misusing them so egregiously." [emphasis mine, again]
The last sentence of this paragraph ^ I thought was particularly interesting because I do wonder what it would have been like if Stephen Glass had not eschewed a career in writing (either factual journalism or fiction) after his professional unraveling. The author of this article mentions that she has trouble forgiving these various writers who lied/misled their audiences, but I (as is perhaps evident) don't really have that issue. I mostly can only speak regarding Glass since he's the one I've really read up so, so much about, but I don't harbor any strong negative feelings towards the other authors mentioned who lied and misled people. (Maybe I would if I were more familiar with their misdeeds?) After this, she mentions how it's harder to forgive Frey and impossible to forgive Lehrer because they both continued to write books (and profit from their writing) after their prior misdeeds regarding plagiarism/fabrication/etc. Me personally, I find it sort of... regretful??, in a way, that Glass ruined his journalism/writing career (disregarding the comments from some that I've read that claim he wasn't actually a good writer and needed lots of editing/rewriting) and never really went back to doing anything in the realm of writing/journalism after writing the book that was a lightly fictionalized account of his fall from grace. I think it would've been interesting to read more things (factual or fictional, as long as he's not trying to pass one off as the other) that he might have gone onto write. As far as considering the fact that Glass didn't return to writing to be a "punishment", I thought that was an interesting take on it. I can't really say to what degree said "punishment" was self-imposed; again, that's something only Glass would really know and it goes back to one of the things I'd want to ask him if I could: does he wish he could return to journalism? I guess, some speculation here, if he really wanted to, then maybe he would have tried, and since he hasn't, we can assume that he's happy working at a law firm albeit not being a lawyer. Just speculation, though. It also reminded me a bit of some other article I read and have linked in the past about how journalists who commit journalistic sins shouldn't be exiled from the profession and should instead be rehabilitated. I think this was also the same article that mentioned that even if he didn't (theoretically return and) do really serious journalism, he could still do lighter stuff like reviewing television shows and such and that would be interesting to read.
Honestly, if that lady can write an article about such topics of disgraced writers/journalists and have it published on some website (Salon, in this case), then why can't I?? I mean, just look at all the various stuff I've written on this blog. Surely at least some of it (perhaps with some polishing/revision) could be right at home on some website or other. I look at the stuff that gets published on websites and think, I could write stuff like that.. In fact, in the case of the aforementioned article, I do write stuff like that.
I looked up the word counts on some of my previous posts because I was curious, since that can be sort of relevant in writing articles in journalism. The one about the documentary review was just about 500 words, and the most recent one about Stephen Glass was about 1500 words, I think. And that was only those two blog posts. So I'm definitely pumping out a lot of text here, it seems. And these blog posts are just my various random thoughts! I guess I have a lot of thoughts. Maybe I have more thoughts than the average person?? I have no idea. Or at least I guess I feel more compelled to write down/type out those thoughts and send them out into the ether that is the internet. Maybe I should do a story about that: "What/how many thoughts do you have in a day??" and "Look at my thoughts, here on my blog. What do you think of them? Do you think they're abnormal or there is an abnormal amount of them??" Maybe the better question is, why do I (and not necessarily everyone else out there) feel compelled to transfer my thoughts out from existing only inside my brain to a blog?? I also happened to think about capitalism and education today, among other things. And I finally cut my nails part way through typing up this post because it was getting annoying to type with how long they had been previously.