Friday, February 23, 2007

YouTube breakup: Not cool

Alisha: So, Deirdre ... I'm curious to know your thoughts on the infamous YouTube break-up, since it now seems our society has progressed (or digressed?) into breaking up with your partner in front of a crowd, and then airing it on the world wide web.
Deirdre: First, let me just say that if that had been MY man, I woulda stomped him into a grease spot and happily gone to jail for it. If what he did was for real (and there's some question about that), it was simply unconscionable.
Deirdre: Second, I blame Jerry Springer for this.
Alisha: From watching several online videos of "the breakup", I didn't see a fight break out, a shaved-head bodyguard or a 400-pound man in women's panties. So, why is Jerry Springer to blame?
Deirdre: People want their 15 minutes of fame and Jerry was really the first to provide a platform for relationship exhibitionists. All they have to do is humiliate themselves and the one they claim to "love." And now, thanks to the Internet and YouTube, people can take that yearning one huge step further, without having to fly to Chicago for his show.
Alisha: Eh ... With all of these new media outlets now accessible to any average joe who has a USB port -- audio, MP3s, camera phones, etc. -- I just don't think Mr. Ex-Mayor of Cincinnati should take the fault for this one. Seems to me the UNC student showed off his stupidity and his lack of respect. My thing, the girl, Mindy Moorman, seemed to handle her business. She didn't go off running and screaming. I applaud her.
Deirdre: Me too! She held her own, considering she was supposedly caught off-guard. But what really bugs me is the immaturity of it all. The guy goes off half-cocked because of what a friend told him, and didn't even bother to discuss the situation (she allegedly cheated on him) with the chick. The whole thing coulda been a lie.
Deirdre: But even if it wasn't a lie, you don't do such a thing in public. I'm a decade older than you, and 10 years ago, the dude would have confronted her in private, or just stopped calling her. There would have been none of this public humiliation business. Really, what does it say about HIM that he felt the need to do this?
Alisha: You mean none of this public humiliation business spread over the entire world. I'm sure the hippies and the beatniks and my grandparents' generation had alternate ways to humiliate. ... But you're right - that relationship screamed for some communication. At least now the girl knows what kind of a jerk she was hooking up with. Everything happens for a reason.
Deirdre: Yeah. If it was a true breakup, she's probably thinking she dodged a bullet. And if it wasn't, shame on them for trying to trick the YouTube universe. Don't they have, like, classes to flunk? Get back to studying!
Alisha: I'm thinking we're going to see a wave of copycats pop up. I will pray for all you single people, and hope I don't see you on the next Internet breakup video. Maybe the biggest dealbreaker of 2007 will be: "If the guy or girl has a YouTube account."

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

IT'S FAKE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Wow, you guys are easily fooled.

Anonymous said...

If it was real, then imagine how awful those hateful spectators would feel if the girl committed suicide afterwards. People are sick and spiteful.

Anonymous said...

It was probably a fake. It seems to be set up too well to be real. As for feeling bad because someone commits suicide. I'd only feel bad for their family and friends. Suicide is a selfish cowardly act and those that commit or attempt suicide do not deserve sympathy. They need counseling, and possibly a swift kick in the pants to jar their head loose. No one makes someone else commit suicide.

Anonymous said...

As someone who was privy to public breakups (a former high school teacher), the only thing new about this situation is that the guy is doing the humiliating of the girl. Women have aired their dirty laundry in public break-ups for as long as I can remember. So real or not, the shoe is on the other foot.

Anonymous said...

You know, it's tough to condemn the act, and talk about how society has degraded, if you go to the trouble of encouraging it by tuning in.

Anonymous said...

Talk about the pot calling the kettle black...

Look in the mirror, Observer people. You're just jealous you don't have instant access to publish these stupid things. It's a sad commentary on our world, but one fueled by the attention people get in the media -- like on YouTube, in a feature story in the Observer or even in this blog.

duh.