Several years ago I learned an important lesson: don't write
anything about a person online that you wouldn't feel comfortable saying
to his or her face. I was typing up a review of Dancing with the
Stars for a newspaper and criticized the show's co-host, Samantha
Harris, whom I considered inept. I wanted to compare her to another TV
host who people seemed to loathe yet embrace at the same time.
Originally, I went with Ryan Seacrest, but my editor said, "People seem
to like Ryan Seacrest. How about somebody else?" I can't remember if she
suggested Seacrest's replacement or if I came up with his name, but I
subbed in the name of another good-looking TV host, one who is related
to a former President or two.
Imagine my surprise when this host saw my piece and dropped me an email
on it, calling me out on my snark. I was shocked: I couldn't believe
that anybody famous read what I wrote, nor could I believe they'd care
what I think. But moreover, I was embarrassed, because I didn't really
mean what I had written. It would have been different had I made an
accurate criticism of this person that I could back up, but I couldn't
really defend myself. I'm a critic, and I'm not afraid to criticize
people even if it means getting some blowback (you should check out the
comments here
when I suggested that it's possible that Lady Gaga was over-the-top
this one time). But ever since that incident, I try my hardest not to
say things on the record that I don't believe are fair or that I
couldn't defend.
Being a person who writes online I've had a fair share of rude things
said about or to me from anonymous sources, usually based on really
important topics like what I thought about the last episode of Saturday
Night Live or something like that. So I've been on the receiving
end of blowback from anonymous people who are bored and just want to be
mean and probably don't give a second thought about what they say. This
is an interesting topic, anonymous drive-by rudeness, and so there's a
nugget of valid interest in the new upcoming show H8R,
wherein celebrities confront the people who've said mean things about
them online and try to convince them that they're all right.
However, the show seems like it goes about this phenomenon all wrong. I
chose to write online and having to deal with the occasional mean
comment is part of the territory. I don't love it, but I've learned to
deal with it and ignore it or get over it when I have to. People like
Kim Kardashian and Snooki have chosen their h8er-intensive careers in a
much more dramatic fashion: their jobs are contingent on people watching
and talking about them. Their job, basically, is to be talked about. If
people didn't have strong opinions on them, they'd be out of a career.
If, as a piddling freelance online writer, I'm willing to take a certain
amount of guff from the peanut gallery, surely a person who makes
hundreds of thousands of dollars for appearing on-camera to do nothing
but be herself has to have made some peace with the fact that not
everybody loves her--and you know what they say about good and bad
press, anyway. It seems like the pinnacle of egotism to be rich for
being infamous and then also demand that everyone love you as well.
The bigger issue with me is that H8er says that it's an anti-bullying,
anti-hate kind of show, and that's why I hope it crashes and burns (I'm
h8ing on H8er before I've even seen it, so I guess I'll
probably end up on the show). The reason why bullying and anti-bigotry
has become such a more high-profile topic lately is because of stories
about kids who were emotionally and physically traumatized, kids who
were drawn to suicide or murder or who were attacked and filmed on cell
phone cameras. These are the victims of bullying that anti-bullying laws
and the Its Gets Better Project have in mind. Not rich girls with
extensions who are mad that some middle-class single mom in the midwest
wrote a rude comment about her on Perez Hilton's website.
I am all for encouraging people to think before they type (and that
includes myself.) But for any celebrity involved with H8er to
say that he or she has been "bullied" is a slap in the face to anyone
who has actually been victimized and moreover was helpless to do
anything. You're famous for being on a reality TV show or a sex tape and
you're angry that people say rude things about you on some blog? Turn
off your computer. Go on vacation. Start a new project. It is not the
same thing as being forced to face your attackers every day and not
being able to do anything about it. To suggest so actually makes you
legitimately h8able.