Lex
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Mon Jun-13-05 04:24 PM
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People have *always* been interested in court cases! Not a new phenom! |
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Leopold and Loeb
Sacco and Vanzetti
Lizzie Borden
Fatty Arbuckle
Scopes Monkey Trial
Hell, trials in Roman times were a big deal for public consumption. The talk of the forum--hell, riots ensued in some circumstances.
These cases, and many, many more caused intense public interest. It's not a new thing.
Now is no different--just more media, but people will *always* interested.
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seabeyond
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Mon Jun-13-05 04:27 PM
Response to Original message |
1. after oj, i have refused to watch all others n/t |
Lex
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Mon Jun-13-05 04:29 PM
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feel the same way.
However, many people are acting like intense public and media interest in trials is some sort of new phenomena.
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downwitbush
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Mon Jun-13-05 04:31 PM
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but that doesn't change the fact that thats why we get so much useless coverage of these court cases.
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Lex
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Mon Jun-13-05 04:34 PM
Response to Reply #3 |
4. I'm not saying it's good or bad, but it is the same as it ever was. |
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Particularly with celebrity trials.
But not even with celebrity trials--other trials through history had extraordinary press (for their time), people fainted, people listened at the windows of the courtroom, etc. etc.
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crispini
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Mon Jun-13-05 04:41 PM
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It never ceases to amaze me how people will come on DU and scold, scold, scold people for ... well, for behaving like PEOPLE. There are an awful lot of folks on here who have this vision of the ideal which they'd like to see everyone conform to, instead of, well, just realizing that people are people.
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Bluebear
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Mon Jun-13-05 05:02 PM
Response to Reply #5 |
zeemike
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Mon Jun-13-05 04:54 PM
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6. Why is it "always" necessary |
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To point out that people are always interested in salacious gossipy news? Does it make you feel better about yourself to know that the people in the past have done it too? It is just an excuse to fill the air waves with such crap that no one can ever find out what in the world is going on that is really important.
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Lex
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Mon Jun-13-05 05:01 PM
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7. Does it "make me feel better about myself" |
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for pointing out that the public throughout all of history has been interested in court cases?
Umm, no.
I was providing some historical perspective on the intense public and media interest in the case. But thank you ever so much for your armchair analysis.
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zeemike
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Mon Jun-13-05 05:47 PM
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But I was pointing out that the media uses things like these to avoid the controversial things that they could cover if they had the balls.
The story that 1700 are dead and 10,000 more of our troops are dead and wounded gets not a fraction of the media attention as did MJ. And there excuse is that this is what you the public want. Well is it?
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Lex
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Mon Jun-13-05 06:06 PM
Response to Reply #11 |
12. I don't disagree that the media focuses on trivial stuff right now |
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but I don't think it should be an "either" "or" proposition.
If the media was doing its job, it would be able to report on many topics at once from the most important ones (Iraq) to the sensational court ones (Michael Jackson).
I think unfortunately the public has bought the into the media's laziness thinking that it (the media) is only capable of focusing on one story at a time.
The public wants both the Iraq news and the Jackson trial news and a whole host of other news and there's no reason (other than a lazy press) that we can't have that.
The fact the media ignores the Iraq War is the media's laziness and even their complicity, but has nothing to do with the fact that people want info on big name trials, particularly on verdict day.
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crispini
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Mon Jun-13-05 05:01 PM
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8. Why is it "always" necessary |
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for a bazillion people to come on DU and post and whine and bitch about WHATEVER is topping the news at the moment if it's not political? The holier-than-thou Posting Police, all for Purity of Thought and Expression on DU.
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Orsino
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Mon Jun-13-05 05:07 PM
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10. In the latest Trial of the Century of the Week... |
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...we can hope to see what sort of justice we might receive.
Money has so clogged up the works, though, that the resemblance is faint. None of us can afford a Johnny Cochran. We can't buy as much reasonable doubt as MJ.
I am heartened, however, to see that jurors still get a very different picture from what is visible to the public.
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Thu Apr 25th 2024, 05:48 PM
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