Today's subject is Tim Robbins. Now normally, one of my main life axioms is, "Don't put too much stock on anything actors or musicians say about subjects other than acting and music." So goes with Mr. Robbins, who is a bit extreme for my tastes. However, even a blind squirrel finds the occasional nut, and our nut Tim actually makes a pretty good point about television, quoted here at length with commentary from article writer Kevin Sites:
As the keynote speaker at the recent National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) conference in Las Vegas, the actor and activist decried today's news and entertainment content as driven by a "pornographic obsession with celebrity culture."Why, indeed?
"We love distraction," he said, reading from a speech the organizers reportedly tried to talk him out of giving. "I don't know about you, but show me a starlet without panties getting out of a car, and suddenly the world seems like a better place. Show me 'Knight Rider' drunk on the floor eating a hamburger, and I won't ask why my kid has no health insurance. Let's stop burdening people with facts."
A few people walked out, but Robbins finished to a standing ovation. And regardless of opinions, he did succeed in raising a powerful question, made more poignant by the acres of gadgets on the exhibit floor: Why, in an era of mind blowing media technological advances, does good content sometimes seem to lag so far behind?
1 comment:
I think he must have read the Curmudgeon's book Truth Decay. Anyway, I hope he takes this moment of clarity to wonder around a bit.
Post a Comment