ABM
Happily Married In Music City, USA!
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http://www.blazersedge.com/2010/7/29/1595925/drama-and-the-media
One of the things I've been asked about this week is my perception of the Dramagate following Oregonian beat writer Jason Quick's recent radio announcements about drama surrounding the Portland Trail Blazers and the subsequent, anti-climactic newspaper piece "revealing" well-known (and well-trodden) trade scenarios surrounding Rudy Fernandez...a process for which Quick took a considerable amount of flak. I'm not as keen on addressing the specifics of this case as I am talking about drama, sports, and the media in general, of which this situation is a prime example.
Drama has taken over our cultural landscape. That's a nearly inarguable fact. Turn on the TV and you will see a multitude of once-normal acts--cooking, dating, living in a house, sewing clothes, going to parties--infused and impregnated with dramatic storylines and overtones and presented as "reality". While most people are able to make distinctions between this fare and actual daily life the message is clear: if it's not dramatic it's not interesting, not fit for consumption, and perhaps not "real". I get to observe this phenomenon daily among teenagers dating, people conducting marriages, parents raising children, folks trying to advocate a political stance or effect change in the world, even folks overheard chatting at the grocery store or on the bus. More and more drama takes the place of substance, making us feel alive and our actions feel important.
With society and its members trending this way, it's no surprise that the media has followed. Dramatic stories lead. Non-dramatic stories that must be reported nonetheless are mined for their most dramatic angles. The weather today? HOT HOT HOT! Also the Florida Keys are bracing for a HURRICANE and we have the live footage right after the break! Look at this reporter blowing sideways! Look at this microphone stuck in the face of this guy who just lost his home! Story on A3! Follow up tomorrow! Don't miss a moment!!! It's even less surprising that the fantasy/entertainment-based world of sports has been caught up in this dramatic whirlwind. We don't observe outcomes and give credit and analysis anymore. We root for the story. We assign blame. We make snap judgments about who is the best and what went wrong and what might have happened in alternate universes where the real reality didn't transpire.
Personally I find sports plenty dramatic enough without the extras................................
