Looking at recent headlines, 2019 is shaping up as another “Year of Outrage” for publishers, some of which have had to apologize for their editorial and ad content.
Four years ago,
former Slate editor Julia Turner described 2014 as a “Year of Outrage” in a package of stories that seem
positively tame compared with the Trump era. She also bemoaned the harmful effects of “outrage culture,” such as deadening people’s senses to important problems.
January
already has brought all kinds of outrage for publishers.
For starters, an anti-LGBTQ group this week condemned Parents magazine for featuring a same-sex couple on the cover of its
February issue. One Million Moms, which is part of the conservative American Family Association, proudly brandished its homophobia with the criticism that “Parents is using its magazine
as a platform to promote the pro-homosexual lifestyle.”
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An
in-flight airline magazine this week had to apologize after being accused of publishing an image of a pork dish in its January issue. Malaysia Airlines said it didn’t mean to offend anyone with
a magazine ad for a restaurant that served pork, which Islamic law forbids. The national carrier of the Islamic country also pointed out that the pictured meat in question actually was beef.
Conservative opinion magazine the National Review on Tuesday apologized to readers after helping to fan the flames of outrage in a column that was later removed from its website. Columnist Nicholas
Frankovich had describe a group of Catholic high school students as evildoers “who might as well have
just spit on the cross” in response to a video clip that went viral on Twitter.
The video purported to show a standoff between the students and an elderly Native American man at a
protest march in Washington. As it turned out, the incident was much more complicated, as lengthier videos showed more context.
Rick Lowry, the editor of the National Review, sent out
a link to its apology in a tweet that said, “NR’s editorial on Covington, including an apology for our f*** up.”
GQ’s Nathaniel Friedman apologized
for his tweet that said, “Doxx ‘em all” in reference to the high-school kids. He said the tweet was “irresponsible” and occurred “in the heat of the moment because I was upset.”
A freelancer for
Vulture, New York Media’s pop-culture site, was fired from his day job as a post-production supervisor at INE Entertainment. Erik Abriss said on Twitter that he wanted the group of
teens and their parents to die.
Thankfully, no one got killed amid the outrage, death threats and calls to punish the students.
Generally, it’s heartening to see publishers stir
up outrage when it leads to healthy discussion and a higher understanding. But perhaps I’m too optimistic in a way that Slate’s Turner wasn’t four years ago.
“The same cycle occurs regardless of the gravity of the offense, which can make each outrage feel forgettable, replaceable,” Turner wrote.
Slate’s year-end review
came 15 years after former Secretary of Education William J. Bennett published “The Death of Outrage.” The book pondered why there was so little public outrage amid evidence of corruption
in the Clinton administration, specifically during the Monica Lewinsky scandal.
Bennett needn’t worry about outrage culture now. It’s practically ingrained in the news cycle.