Society & Culture0 min ago
Top of the mourning
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This may sound harsh, even out of order, but I'm getting tired of Boyzone banging on about how much they miss Stephen Gately. For some reason I cannot abide the way they - especially Ronan Keating - refer to him as Steo. I know it was sad and unexpected, etc, but thousands of people die every day, many at much younger ages, and Gately had a far better life than most in his 33 years. I don't know if it's an Irish thing, this overkill, but I felt the same when Gloria Hunniford droned on and on and on and on about the loss of her daughter Caron. Tonight's ITV (1 then 2) Gately mournfest annoyed me a couple of times especially. First, when the narrator said (something like) 'Boyzone took a long time to decide what to do following Stephen's death...' A long time? He only died late last year and since then they've been endlessly flogging this angle to...death. Then there was Gately's 'husband' breaking down on camera, and I couldn't help thinking 'But when your beloved Stephen was breathing his last you were busy having sex with another man in the next room...' I am not Jan Moir (Daily Mail journalist who incurred the wrath of Boyzone fans for writing candidly about Gately's demise on the day of his funeral), but is she the only one with even vaguely similar thoughts to mine?
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Our celebrity culture encourages us to believe that we actually know famous people personally, hence the latest ludicrous trend in nicknaming 'celebrities' - even David Cameron;s wife has become 'SamCam' with the Mail trying to make her out as a model. She has skinny legs, an averagely attractive face, and she's married to a politician ... and ... excatly - and what?
People parading their grief on television is undignified and ghoulish - Gloria Hunniford milked the tragedy of her daughter for years when she was, at best, an average TV presenter who died leaving children. Let's not assume that the tragedy is greater in proportion to the person's fame - that's really not acceptable.
People parading their grief on television is undignified and ghoulish - Gloria Hunniford milked the tragedy of her daughter for years when she was, at best, an average TV presenter who died leaving children. Let's not assume that the tragedy is greater in proportion to the person's fame - that's really not acceptable.