The drive downmarket in the tabloid press was exemplified
this morning by the Super Soaraway Currant Bun’s bizarre and creepy use of a
four-year-old boy – his face not pixellated – to promote a supposedly light-hearted
tale of the minor occult. Readers were regaled by the headline “Satan symbol on chest ... BOY, 4 HAS MARK OF
DEVIL”. This, it seems, trumped real world events.
Moreover, the story is tagged “Exclusive”, but is anything but: this flimsy confection, it seems,
had already been posted on Facebook by the child’s parents. The family was
identified, so that those with a pathological hatred of anything occult-related
could find out how to get in touch and disrupt a family’s life. And what kicks
off when the poor child starts school – goodness only knows.
Rupe’s downmarket troops will
not say whether they paid actual money for this hokum, only that “We are conscious of the code and guidance
around paying parents”. So did they pay for it, knowing that they would
then splash an easily identifiable four-year-old all over a paper that sells
around two million copies a day? Paying money in order to knowingly exploit a
minor?
And if the idea of paying money for something that is no
more than a lift from social media seems unappealing, the thought then
enters that the supposedly diabolical body mark has a very straightforward
explanation. The Sun excuses itself
by asserting “An unusual mark appears,
the mother gets it checked out by a doctor who confirms there is no medical
reason why it should be there, and discharges her”.
However, and in this case there is a significantly sized
however, one look at the supposedly satanic mark shows that it exhibits signs
of being a mild burn mark. And there is one household electrical item well
capable of inflicting such a mark if misused, that being the humble hairdryer
(that’s the one you need to plug in, not a former football manager).
A hot hairdryer barrel could easily burn sensitive skin, and
the most likely part of the barrel end to produce the burn would be the centre
(the outside circle would be cooler and usually has a protruding lip). There
would be only one problem with this explanation: it wouldn’t have any value
when it came to anyone trying to flog the story to the press. But an unexpected
devil mark certainly would.
So that’s another instance of where the Murdoch faithful
have failed to engage brain before publishing, and another example of why they
deserve every last drop of that tsunami of condemnation that, right now, is
washing all over them. It’s inexcusable exploitation for nothing more than
quick commercial gain, and the story has a straightforward explanation. So it
shouldn’t have seen the light of day.
Which means it’s ideal material for the Sun. No change there, then.
3 comments:
Burns, hairdryer heat, light of day, The Sun, Satan.
There must be a joke there somewhere but can't think of one.
Something to do with hot air, global warming and Murdoch perhaps?
I can see Social Services turning up shortly.
The more this newspaper discredits itself the better for all decent people in this country. Let it hang itself.
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