Quantcast

Currently: Thunderstorm Light Rain Fog/Mist and 72° F

OPINION & EDITORIAL

Media martyrdom plagues shootings

Adam Lichtenheld

Looking for a print version?
Simply choose ‘Print’ on your computer and a printer-friendly document will be generated.

Also by Adam Lichtenheld:
Related Stories:
by Adam Lichtenheld
Wednesday, November 14, 2007

I can now pinpoint the precise moment when I lost faith in mankind. It was last Wednesday, when an 18-year-old opened fire at a high school in southern Finland, killing eight people before turning the gun on himself.  

It wasn't the event itself, but its location that was so shocking. Nothing bad ever happens in Finland! 

Or so we thought.

The rampage in the Nordic land comes on the heels of a recent surge in school shootings here in the United States. These tragedies have resurrected post-Columbine debates digging at the same basic question: How do these things happen? Once again, the finger is pointed in all different directions. Gun control is to blame. Or our violent pop culture. Or a lack of admirable role models. Or our poor societal values. 

The actions of Pekka-Eric Auvinen, the Finnish gunman, may have given some of these debates perspective. The shooting took place in a society renowned for being overwhelmingly nonviolent. It was only the second school shooting in the history of a country that boasts the highest rate of gun ownership and the laxest gun laws in Europe. 

But the most disturbing element of last week's massacre was not the ease with which the shooter obtained a firearm or the demonic lyrics of the bands he listened to. The day before the tragedy, Mr. Auvinen posted graphic warnings of the impending bloodbath on the popular video-sharing site YouTube. Although the clips were removed shortly after the shooting, media outlets around the globe jumped on their content, quickly transcribing the details of Mr. Auvinen's chilling manifesto for the public.  

This reflected a common characteristic of these incidents: The killers seek some sort of posthumous notoriety, and the media is more than willing to give it to them. Bloodlust and vengeance are not the only motivating factors behind a shooting; perpetrators often aspire to be martyred for their perceived causes and perish in a glorious blaze of gunfire. If nothing else, it promises that their pictures will adorn the front pages of national newspapers the following day. With the press corps driven by their traditional motto "if it bleeds, it leads," prophecy tends to become reality. 

"Martyr by media" reached a new low last April, when in between massacring 32 people at Virginia Tech, Seung-Hui Cho sent a multimedia package of photographs and videos to NBC News teeming with unmet grievances against those he claimed had wronged him. And NBC — no doubt lured by potential ratings — gave the mass murderer his dying wish and broadcast his delusional ramblings to the world.

Of course, NBC was not the only culprit. National newspapers and cable networks across the country overflowed with coverage. But few stories focused on victims and heroes, opting instead to analyze and reanalyze every detail of the killer's life. I wasn't even in the country at the time, and I still couldn't log on to a U.S. news site without confronting Mr. Cho's sneering picture.

Don't get me wrong — school shootings demand investigations into the perpetrator's background and attempts to answer the "why did he do it?" question. But that doesn't mean that such cold-blooded killers deserve the blanket media coverage they are so willingly afforded. After shooting up Columbine High School in 1999, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold made it abundantly clear that gunning down classmates can propel someone to instant fame. Even today, their names get more Google hits than many members of Congress. 

It's no wonder, then, that in certain cases excessive media coverage of these massacres has helped inspire others to pursue similar goals through similar means. In his long-winded manifesto, Mr. Cho referenced the Columbine killers, praising "martyrs like Eric and Dylan." Just last Friday, two teenagers were arrested in Sweden for plotting to shoot their school's headmaster — claiming to be motivated by Mr. Auvinen's rampage in Finland just days earlier. 

When school shootings occur, the first questions people ask relate to the responsibility of parents, school administrators, teachers and policymakers. But what about the media? Don't we have an obligation to society and to our youth?  Why do publishers save front-page space for fame-seekingmurderers who aren't worth the ink their mug shots are printed with?  

Of course, most news outlets argue that they are just doing their job, providing citizens with valuable and relevant information. They claim to disseminate information on school shootings just as they would for other notable events. Yet a man like Charles Roberts, the murderer of five Amish schoolgirls in Pennsylvania, makes the cover of People magazine, while Nobel Prize winners do not. If people want to use these shootings as evidence that something is wrong with our society, they can start by looking at how they're covered.

Adam Lichtenheld (alichtenheld@badgerherald.com) is a senior majoring in political science and African studies.


Anonymous (November 14, 2007 @ 8:54am):

Nothing about his desire to "protect the planet" by killing off the nasty human infection? Nothing about his wingnut greenie mom?

All society's fault, eh?

Anonymous (November 14, 2007 @ 12:46pm):

And yet you, a member of the media, write another tiring article about the killers (and fail to mention the victims). Don't be hypocritical.

Anonymous (December 7, 2007 @ 10:08pm):

i noticed how this happened with the mall shooting...the killer left a note saying he would now be famous, and look the media went and granted that for him.

Add a comment

We welcome your thoughts, but please keep your feedback thoughtful, on-topic and respectful. Offensive language, personal attacks, or irrelevant comments may be deleted.

Login...



   Remember me


Not registered? Sign up now.

It's quick, free, and the email address you provide will not be sold or solicited.

...or Post Your Comment Anonymously

Anonymous

Find bars and restaurants! Place a shout-out!
Top Classified Ads (view all)

Place your classified ad online and have it show up here. Your ad will hit thousands of viewers a day!

DON'T READ ME! Too late. If you're reading this, guess how many other people are reading it. See... advertising in The Badger Herald does work!

Place a classified ad

Advertising