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AP: We ignored Paris Hilton (interesting media experiment)

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theaudacity Donating Member (137 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 10:04 AM
Original message
AP: We ignored Paris Hilton (interesting media experiment)
NEW YORK (AP) -- So you may have heard: Paris Hilton was ticketed the other day for driving with a suspended license.

Not huge news, even by celebrity-gossip standards. Here at The Associated Press, we put out an initial item of some 300 words. But it actually meant more to us than that.

It meant the end of our experimental blackout on news about Paris Hilton.

It was only meant to be a weeklong ban -- not the boldest of journalistic initiatives, and one, we realized, that might seem hypocritical once it ended. And it wasn't based on a view of what the public should be focusing on -- the war in Iraq, for example, or the upcoming election of the next leader of the free world, as opposed to the doings of a partygoing celebrity heiress/reality TV star most famous for a grainy sex video.

No, editors just wanted to see what would happen if we didn't cover this media phenomenon, this creature of the Internet gossip age, for a full week. After that, we'd take it day by day. Would anyone care? Would anyone notice? And would that tell us something interesting? (Marquee blog: What do you think?)

It turned out that people noticed plenty -- but not in the way that might have been expected. None of the thousands of media outlets that depend on AP called in asking for a Paris Hilton story. No one felt a newsworthy event had been ignored. (To be fair, nothing too out-of-the-ordinary happened in the Hilton universe.)

The reaction was to the idea of the ban, not the effects of it. There was some internal hand-wringing. Some felt we were tinkering dangerously with the news. Whom, they asked, would we ban next? Others loved the idea. "I vote we do the same for North Korea," one AP writer said facetiously.

The experiment began on February 19. A few days before, the AP had written from Austria about Hilton's appearance at the Vienna Opera ball, just ahead of her 26th birthday. We didn't cover her weekend birthday bash in Las Vegas.

During "blackout week," the AP didn't mention Hilton's second birthday party at a Beverly Hills restaurant, at which a drunken friend reportedly was ejected by security after insulting Paula Abdul and Courtney Love. And editors asked our Puerto Rico bureau not to write about her visit there to hawk her fragrance. However, her name did slip into copy unintentionally three times, as background: in stories about Britney Spears, Nicole Richie, and even in the lead of a story about Democrats in Las Vegas.

Then Hilton was arrested on February 27 for driving with a suspended license -- an offense that could conceivably lead to jail time because she may have violated conditions of a previous sentence. By that time, our blackout was over anyway, so reporting the development was an easy call. (On the flip side, we never got to see what repercussions there would have been if we hadn't.)

Also by then, an internal AP memo about the ban had found its way to the outside world. The New York Observer quoted it on Wednesday, and the Gawker.com gossip site linked to it. Howard Stern was heard mentioning the ban on his radio show, and calls came in from various news outlets asking us about it. On Editor and Publisher magazine's Web site, a reader wrote: "This is INCREDIBLE, finally a news organization that can see through this evil woman." And another: "You guys are my heroes!"

We felt a little sheepish that the ban was over, and braced ourselves for the comments that would come when people realized it wasn't permanent.

We also learned that Lloyd Grove, former columnist for the New York Daily News, had attempted a much longer Paris Hilton blackout. He began it a year into his "Lowdown" column and stuck to it, he says, for two years until the column was discontinued last October -- except for a blind item (no names) about Hilton crashing a pre-Oscar party.

So was Grove attempting to raise the level of discourse in our society by focusing on truly newsworthy subjects?

Well, not really. "The blackout was a really heartfelt attempt on my part," he says, "to get publicity for myself."

A trait that Hilton, it must be said, has turned into an art. Grove thinks the so-called "celebutante" achieved her unique brand of fame because she boasts an irresistible set of traits: wealth, a big name, beauty with a "downmarket" appeal, and a tendency to seem ... oversexed. "This is what mainstream society celebrates," he says. "She is, in the worst sense, the best expression of the maxim that no bad deed goes unrewarded in our pop culture."

One measure of Hilton's fame: She was No. 5 last year on the Yahoo Buzz Index, a list of overall top searches on the Web site (her ever-so-brief buddy Spears is a perennial No. 1).

Another is that US Weekly has at least a mention or a photo in just about every issue. "People now come to expect to see pictures of her," says Caroline Schaefer, deputy editor of the celebrity magazine. "They're intrigued by her unshakable self-esteem. People are fascinated by that."

Jeff Jarvis, who teaches journalism at the City University of New York, decries the "one-size-fits-all disease" afflicting media outlets, who feel that "everybody's covering it, so we must, too." Even The New York Times, he noted, had substantial coverage of a hearing concerning where Anna Nicole Smith -- perhaps the one person who rivaled Hilton in terms of fame for fame's sake -- would be buried.

"That disease leads to the Paris Hilton virus spreading through the news industry," says Jarvis, who puts out the BuzzMachine blog.

So what have we learned from the ban? "It's hard to tell what this really changes, since we didn't have to make any hard decisions," says Jesse Washington, AP's entertainment editor. "So we'll continue to use our news judgment on each item, individually."

Which means that for the immediate future, if not always, we'll still have Paris.

http://www.cnn.com/2007/SHOWBIZ/TV/03/02/ignoring.parishilton.ap/index.html
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electron_blue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 10:22 AM
Response to Original message
1. how odd. Try it for another month, pls.
I wish they'd look more closely at why they feel the need to cover her in the first place.
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twiceshy Donating Member (259 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 10:27 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. I think it's a splendid idea that should be expanded to include....
Edited on Fri Mar-02-07 10:34 AM by twiceshy
All of Hollywood. Sports figures off-the-field antics. Attention whores of all types. Really, we are NOT a serious people anymore. When was the last major piece of public infrastructure built? Could we produce a Hoover Dam today (ecological factors not included)? We seem to run around the world creating havoc and ignoring the very real and solvable problems at home. The thing about Eden is that it is within our grasp, but we have excommunicated ourselves.
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Frank Cannon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 11:19 AM
Response to Reply #2
6. "The thing about Eden is that it is within our grasp...
...but we have excommunicated ourselves."

Wow. You are so right about that.

Welcome to DU, by the way. :hi:
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kegler14 Donating Member (541 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 10:46 AM
Response to Original message
3. What we really need is
all Anna Nichole, all the time. We haven't had enough.
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JNelson6563 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 11:11 AM
Response to Original message
4. You may want to clip that
I think you're only suppose to include up to 4 paragraphs when providing a blurb from an article. Copyright stuff.

Julie
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mainer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 11:15 AM
Response to Original message
5. So now the hot news is about the ban on Paris Hilton?
Does anyone get the idea that this was actually a brilliant move by Paris to get the media talking about her ... by insisting they WEREN'T talking about her?
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idgiehkt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 04:50 PM
Response to Reply #5
9. I wondered about that myself
this is in essence, yet another story about Paris Hilton, lol.
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Jack Rabbit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 11:23 AM
Response to Original message
7. I move that they extend the ban for a whole year
. . . and broaden it to cover Britney Spears.
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Lilith Velkor Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 04:44 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. And throw in Donald Fucking Trump
...while they're at it.
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RedStateShame Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-02-07 04:57 PM
Response to Original message
10. Wow. Now if the AP would just admit to ignoring every serious story...
...about Dubya since, say, the 2000 presidential election.
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