Healey’s Dictum is one of the more enduring pieces of
advice, not merely for politicians, but for anyone in the public eye. It holds,
more or less, that when you find yourself in a hole, then you are best advised
to stop digging. Sadly, even decades after it was first codified, there are
still those who cannot, or will not, admit its inevitable wisdom. The latest of
those is career motormouth Katie Hopkins.
Earplugs at the ready
Ms Hopkins, who is, rather deliberately, carving out a niche
for herself as a wilfully opinionated contrarian unwilling to compromise or
admit any other point of view than her own, has, as I observed the other day, been a regular occupant
of the sofa on ITV’s This Morning.
This may test
the temperaments of Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby, but undoubtedly
brings ratings in its wake.
And here she met
rather more than her match in Peaches Geldof, in what was intended to be a
discussion on Attachment Parenting, but which – sadly and predictably –
involved Ms Hopkins doing stuff all research and resorting to abuse. This was
not a winning strategy. But admitting defeat is clearly not part of the Hopkins
Modus Operandi, so some creative reinvention was in order.
Here Ms Hopkins has an advantage: she has been given a
regular column in the Super Soaraway Currant Bun, as Rupe’s downmarket troops
are also keen on whatever drives up ratings. And, despite putting the content
behind a paywall, we know what
was in the latest Hopkins missive as the Mail then lifted it and gave it to their own readers for free (see
the problem there?).
Not waving but drowning
Ms Geldof was “Mother
Nature with a gob attached ... Born into the Geldof dynasty, Peaches has never
worked a hard shift in her life ... Some people felt Peaches got an easy ride.
She did. Peaches is used to having things her way and we would hate to change
the habit of a spoiled child’s lifetime”. And there had been “conditions” attached (like Ms G getting
a word in edgeways, perhaps?).
This may make Ms Hopkins feel better about her appearance on
This Morning. It may also help the Sun’s sales. But it is, ultimately, just
another expression of a selfish refusal to face the real world, and the diversity
of opinions and beliefs within it. Other people find that something works
for them? Get over it. It doesn’t mean they have to be targets for abuse and
others’ self-promotion.
Only in the mind department
“I think I look older
than 38” muses Ms Hopkins, and she is partly right: a lot older, but only
on the inside. Wilful, uncaring and intolerant, and akin to an anally retentive
1950s schoolmistress, maybe she would get it if someone forced her to listen to
Frank Zappa’s What’s
The Ugliest Part Of Your Body? on a tape loop. Right now, she is on the
road to ever diminishing returns.
Katie Hopkins’ 15 minutes may be about to end. So catch the act while you can.
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