That sweet bird of youth - the twenty-something
know-nothing columnist - has recently reached the pinnacle of
periodical punditry. With little experience and even less to say,
these young women (as they overwhelmingly are) perch haughtily
atop their soapbox each week, squawking about their expensive
shoes, their disaster dates, their petty jealousies, and their
many, many troubled friends. It doesn’t matter which paper you
read, for every paper has one: a sorority sister scribbler. Josey
Vogels of the
Montreal Gazette (“Dating Girl”), Angele
Yanor of the
Vancouver Sun (“Lucky Strike” is her tag,
whatever the hell that means) and that terrible twosome, Rebecca
Eckler of the
National Post and her bosom buddy, Leah McLaren
of the
Globe and Mail: this is the brave new face of newspaper
journalism.
The reason for this “innovation” in newspapers is an aging
readership. Almost nobody under the age of forty reads newspapers;
almost every advertiser geared to the boomer and blue-rinse
crowd (mutual funds, life insurance, big safe cars) has been
tapped. Twenty-somethings have more disposable income and are
traditionally harder for advertisers to reach, and newspapers
- if they want incremental advertising revenue - need to deliver
editorial content that speaks to this demographic. This truism
became vitally important with the 1998 launch of the National
Post, as it meant yet another newspaper chasing after Lexus,
Bell Mobility and London Life for ad money. It is at this time,
then, that Eckler, McLaren et al arrived on the scene to speak
to “us”: the footloose and fancy free twenty-somethings.
There was a time (or so I’m told) when the column-writing
gig was offered up to a seasoned veteran, someone who could
write with authority and insight; columnists such as Robert
Fulford, William Safire, Michelle Landsberg and Molly Ivins
had accomplished careers, inside and outside of journalism,
before being given the chance to opine on a regular basis. Yet
now the process is reversed: meritocracy has been replaced by
juvenocracy. Leah McLaren, shortly after finishing her internship
at the Globe and Mail in 1999, was handed a weekly column
on a silver platter; a couple years on, and the august journal
of national record rewarded McLaren with the plum role of London-based
arts reporter. Her first arts column from London centred on
her sneering observation that “Englishwomen don’t really groom”,
and while this may be the sort of “arts” reporting that is attractive
to advertisers, it isn’t exactly Molly Ivins. And perhaps that
isn’t McLaren’s fault: she doesn’t know how else to write. After
all, it was insipid chronicling of her social cohort - and not
any track record of critical thinking - that fueled her rapid
rise to fame. Harper’s Magazine editor Lewis Lapham,
in the introduction to his book “Lapham’s Rules of Influence”,
describes how his own encounters with young media types has
found serious thinkers in short supply:
“Impatient with metaphors and bored by sentiment, eager to
advance the token of their lives around the Monopoly board of
the standard American success, they present themselves as candidates
for a life of privilege and ease. Instead of wondering how to
catch a falling star or who cleft the devil’s foot, they ask
for introductions to Woody Allen and the doorman at Balthazar,
about the hope of meeting Peter Jennings and the name of the
restaurant where the editors of the Condé Nast magazines go
expensively to lunch.”
While someone like Lapham laments the fact that “philosophical
questions have gone missing in action” amongst young journalists,
others see something more insidious with the rise of the sorority
sister scribbler. University of Victoria journalism professor
Lynne Van Luven, in the March issue of Thunderbird magazine,
said this: “I can’t help but think that these women are pawns
in the game of aging editors and their somewhat mainstream publications
to look hip.” Van Luven views the Ecklers, McLarens and Yanors
of the newsroom as representing a step backwards for women who
had fought hard to escape the “society column” ghetto in the
1960s and 1970s: “Who wants to be the newsroom’s disco girl?
It’s demeaning.”
Besides being demeaning, this journalistic development has
lead to content being “dumbed-down” to please the deity of demography.
It has long been assumed by editors that twenty-somethings don’t
read newspapers because we don’t like serious news. We don’t
read about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict because we don’t
care, but give us Rebecca Eckler - who can tell us “how to wear
shoes that really hurt” - and we’ll read: she, after all, speaks
of matters within our sphere of concern. This light and trite
editorial content appeals to advertisers, as it is much easier
to hawk L’Oreal cosmetics opposite the “Dating Girl” column
than it is beside the “Notes from the Rwandan Slaughter” column.
And such an editorial bent isn’t limited to the private sector
either: the CBC will soon preside over the death of “This Morning”
and other Radio One staples, to be replaced with jazzed-up,
“youth-friendly” programming. Sadly, with the CBC one cannot
claim that these changes are being done at the behest of eager
advertisers; the public broadcaster, with no commercial pressures,
is simply misreading the needs and wants of its loyal youth
listeners.
What is forgotten in these corporate maneuvers is that twenty-somethings
are more than mere social animals; our interests stretch beyond
the horizon of our next date. In cynical efforts at manufacturing
puerile pap, many newspaper editors mistakenly believe that
they are delivering what their younger readers want. These editors,
however, are confusing youth with callowness, readers with consumers,
and insightful commentary with idle chatter. Newspapers are
about more than creating “an editorial environment for advertisers”;
they can delve far beyond the shallow depths of consumerist
claptrap; and they should offer much more to the next generation
of readers than a Peter Pan paradigm of “youth” issues. We are
not all idealists, to be sure, but neither are we all averse
to confronting the difficult political, economic and social
issues which influence our lives.
Undoubtedly, there are those who look to writers like McLaren
for guidance on how to best “access the system”, with eager
advertisers lighting their way. But there are others who continue
to seek out those obscure characters of wisdom and experience:
columnists who shine a bright light of informed insight on our
starkest realities, and who offer an occasional glimpse at how
one might go about changing that system.
Matt O'Grady is
a cowboy baby. Good guy.