The Death of Outrage

So there I was sitting in a traffic jam the other week when one of my kids says: “Jesus, this traffic is f*****g bad”. There was a pause. Then I screamed: “Jesus,I’ve told you not to use the F-word.” I was shocked. He wasn’t. Indeed he proceeded to ask me to remind him about the C-word. At this point his brother joined in and said, “Is it church dad?” I swear I am going to sell them both on eBay.

I blame Gordon Ramsay. His language lingers in the mouth like rancid milk.
But what’s really shocking about Gordon is how ordinary his attics now seem. A few years ago he would have been hauled up for using language like his. Now he just gets a second TV show. The media is pretty much to blame for this although we are fairly complicit. If someone lurid or something shocking goes down on primetime TV the ratings do up. Size is all that matters because large audiences attract big advertisers.

On TV there are shows about human dissections, surgery and people dying. On the Internet there is all this plus there are user-generated sites like Youporn where people that should know better pretend to be porn stars. Some of this has been going on for years. The difference now is accessibility. Once upon a time you had to be a medical student to see a live dissection. Now all you need is plasma TV to see some real human blood. Equally, instead of reaching for the top shelf in the newsagent to get a glimpse of something shocking all you have to do now is get an internet connection (what, you thought kids with internet enabled mobile phones were just sending clips of Big Brother to each other in the playground?). It’s just entertainment in the age of Youtube and mobile phone bullying.

What’s shocking here is that we are no longer shocked. This lack of distress and disbelief could be because everything is now blurred and ambiguous or it could be that we no longer react because we live in a twilight world where the real has become a form of fiction or fable. Beautiful Princess dies in car crash (true). Refugees throw kids overboard (fiction). Meanwhile, in the art world (another strange land marooned between fiction and reality), you can witness blow-up dolls engaging in sex acts, rotting flesh being eaten by maggots and vases showing scenes of child abuse. And that was just the Turner Prize Exhibition entries back in 2003. Art is supposed to be a mirror. These days it’s just another indiscriminate cluster bomb.

What is truly scandalous about all this is how outrage has been quietly killed off in the name of entertainment. Fictionalised images have become so real and ubiquitous that their authentic counterparts rarely register. When fact does occasionally penetrate the fog (usually something suitably cinematic like starvation in Africa, 9/11 or the Tsunami of December 2006) we are beside ourselves with collective grief.

What I suspect is going on here is that as a society we are anxious and unsure. We therefore cocoon ourselves in inner worlds of fantasy and escape so that we do not have to confront what is happening outside. Struth. That was all a bit heavy.

The Economy

A few observations from London and New York…

1. Nobody really knows what’s going on
2. Current reality hasn’t quite hit home yet
3. An invisible issue is commercial credit
4. Volatility hasn’t gone away
5. January & February could be quite nasty
6. People are looking for permanency, certainty and control
7. Economic scenarios are reasonably well thought out by some but the ideological consequences aren’t
8. Companies are using the economy as an excuse to get rid of people
9. Some individuals would like a hard recession because then they could devolve all responsibility
10. Asking people to spend to solve a problem primarily caused by debt seems somewhat ironic and very short-term

Travel Trends (New York Edition)

I’m not convinced about the value of blogs. As Groucho Marx once said, I don’t want to be a member of any club that would have me as a member. Nevertheless, one thing about blogs that I do like is that they give me something to do when I’m wide awake at 4am in a hotel room in New York.

I don’t know if anyone has seen the movie Groundhog Day but I’m having a bit of a Ground Hog moment myself. A few years ago I stayed in a hotel in Miami where you needed a postgrad degree to operate the lights. I also had a spot of bother accessing my email because my wonderful ISP had upgraded things “for my added security and convenience.” But the problem was that they had emailed me a new password and I couldn’t access it remotely because I didn’t have the new password to access the email containing the new password. Brilliant.

Well not only have they done it again but I’m staying at another hotel where you need a degree in theoretical physics to work out how light travels from the control panel to the lights on the other side of the room. Furthermore, I can’t work the phone. When I checked in they kindly told me to “dial 0 if you have any problems…and have a nice day.” I would, but obviously the phone isn’t working so I can’t call them to ask how it works. And then there’s the hotel mini-bar.

A mini-bar used to be just a small fridge. Not much could go wrong. If you were feeling thirsty you opened it, had a look around, and maybe drank something. Not anymore. Now the mini-bar is a momument to high technology and high stupidity. The fridge is fully wired and so security conscious that I’m afraid to open it. If you think I’m kidding I have apparently already been charged for something I haven’t done. There is a (very small) sign on the fridge that says: ” Please note that any items removed from the mini-bar and snack tray for longer than 20-seconds will automatically post to you room account…thank you and have a nice stay!”

I’m a bit speachless about this to be honest. What the fridge seemed to be saying to me was: “We don’t trust you so we’ve used technology to ensure that you don’t walk off with anything without paying for it you scumbag…thank you and have a nice stay!” Doesn’t exactly enhance the user experience does it? I opened the fridge, grabbed a diet coke, had second thoughts and went for the juice, changed my mind again, went for the nuts and…you probably get the picture.

I have one other jet-lag induced thought to share with you. Why do airlines weigh bags but not people? I’m in the land of the 24-hour donut shop where some people just rip open the mini-bar and snack tray regardless. So why do airlines weigh your bags and impose strict limits and excess weight for bags but allow people of all weights to pay the same? Given that oil will eventually hit $200+ a barrel, why Can’t I pay for a plane ticket based on the combined weight of myself and my luggage?

Like I say, I’m jet lagged and have nothing much else to think about…