There’s an
old black joke in the NGO world that goes like this: Never hold your famine or
natural disaster in summer. North Americans are on vacation and aren’t paying
attention.
It’s a harsh
statement, but there’s a measure of truth in it. It’s hard to think about
hungry people or refugees when we’re off to the beach.
Same goes for
when a child falls into a gorilla enclosure at the zoo—especially if there is
good video.
A lot has
been said lately about how the drowning deaths of hundreds of people last week
got almost no attention, but the gorilla and child dominated the media.
This is an
old and hard truth about the media, and about the interests of North Americans—about
us.
Fact is, a
story like the one at the Cincinnati zoo will always trump a tragedy like the
drowning of refugees, for several reasons.
One is that
the war in Syria is now in its sixth year. It’s hard to keep anyone’s attention
for that long.
Second is one person in danger versus thousands. It isn’t easy to wrap our minds around large numbers. We can much more easily relate to one child in danger closer to home.
Familiarity and
proximity is a third reason. We all go to zoos like the one in Cincinnati, and
the same thing could happen to us. (Although we hope not.)
But a main
reason is that the media knows we care more about people who are closer to us
and more like us.
It’s a normal
human reaction—and it’s something the media has known this for a long time. (Even
before the Web allowed them to know exactly what people clicked on and read.)
In
the 1960s, reporters at a major U.S. network put it more cynically with what
they called the “Racial Equivalence Scale.”
The
scale showed the minimum number of people who had to die in plane crashes in
different countries before the crash equalled the death of one person closer to
home.
According
to the scale, “one hundred Czechs was equal to 43 Frenchmen, and the
Paraguayans were at the bottom.”
(BBC
journalists had a similar scale, in which “one thousand wogs, 50 frogs and one
Briton” were equivalent.)
In
other words, the media is only giving us what they know we want to pay
attention to—something they know because we tell them every day by what we
click on when we visit their websites.
And
when it’s a contest between dead refugees, a dead rock star, or a dead gorilla,
you know who is going to win.
None
of this diminishes the tragic deaths of the refugees who drowned trying to get
to Europe. But it does put it in perspective.
And
it reminds us, in the words of the wise sage Pogo, that when it comes to what
we see in the media, “we have met the enemy, and he is us.”
For more on this topic, see Why So Much News Coverage of Paris, but not Beirut? Maybe it's Time to Look in the Mirror and Why Your Brain Wants To Help One Person, But Not Millions, both on this blog.
2 comments:
Great piece as usual John. I re tweeted it.
Interesting that the same media who made the gorilla story big are the same folks who make moral reflections on why we care about a gorilla when compared to children. in the end, it's about selling news.
Post a Comment