Matt - I was taking the train downtown and picked up the Chicago
Tribune with its front-page column by Bob Greene. He wrote about companies
trying to get their employees to come in for New Year's Eve just in case
Y2K damage control is needed. The companies are claiming that their midnight
office parties will be the "in place" to usher in the new millennium. Greene
compares all the whoopla about Y2K to what he calls "the cigar craze of
a few years back:" "You know in your heart there was no cigar craze, that only your Uncle
Izzy back in 1956 seemed to get a sensual jolt out of chomping cigars,
but the cigar craze mantra was chanted so many times in the popular press
that it began to seem almost true." (Oct. 31, Sec. A, pg. 2)
Glynka - I think the media's agenda setting works all too well
on children (at least it did on me). Except it wasn't news I was watching;
it was the Saturday morning line-up. After all, as a child I had a very
high need for orientation. For some inexplicable reason, anything that
the t.v. displayed from 6am to noon on Saturday had high relevance to
me (including the color bars from 6-7). And as a child, anything dealing
with growing up, being an adult or understanding the world around me touched
a point of high uncertainty within my semi-hardened scull. As a result,
Saturday morning t.v. had the power to tell me what to think about. I
spent my play time acting out the characters from my favorite shows. I
pleaded with my parents to provide me with whatever the commercials were
peddling--sugar cereal, dolls with combable hair, sports cars. I wasn't
picky. I dreamt Smurfs. I breathed Wonder Woman. I made wedding plans
revolving around George of the Jungle. I thought about what the powers
behind the television, based on their agenda, wanted me to think about.
And, to be perfectly honest, I'm still a huge fan of Wonder Woman and
dolls with combable hair.
|