Posted on 02/15/2012 4:02:32 AM PST by Kaslin
The media have no bleepin' clue how to cover the death of Whitney Houston. That's because she was slowly dying for years and many in the press simply averted their eyes.
It was ultra-disturbing that a beautiful woman blessed with an extraordinary singing voice chose a self-destructive path in full view of the world. I mean, here is a person who signed a $100 million recording contract, actually sold 170 million albums and commanded high six figures to deliver a 90-minute concert. Houston was a genuine international star, and yet she often was seen in public disheveled and confused, her substance addiction apparent. The media simply did not know what to say.
We live in a time in which addiction is categorized as a disease, and to do what Nancy Reagan once did and urge people to reject narcotics is considered uncool. How many young performers do we see doing public service announcements warning children to avoid intoxication? Right now, I can't think of one.
The national media pride themselves on being non-judgmental unless you are against abortion. Then you are dismissed as "anti-woman" or as a religious zealot. But in the arena of personal behavior, there's an excuse for just about every nonviolent activity and bad decision.
There is no question that some of us have a history of addiction in our families. There are folks who can use drugs casually and avoid dependence, but they are the exception. Once a person decides to dabble in cocaine, or opiates such as heroin and OxyContin, they are putting themselves at grave risk. And they know it. There are legions of famous people who wound up dead just like Houston. From Elvis Presley to Michael Jackson, the signposts are impossible to miss. No matter how rich and powerful you are, drugs can and will destroy you.
The current medical marijuana ruse is a great example of a society walking away from a responsible position. Ask any drug rehab counselor, and he or she will tell you that pot often leads a person to harder drug use and is mentally addictive itself. Yes, most people can function while stoned. But the more you alter your mind the more your perspective on life changes. Believe me, I know people who get stoned or drunk every day. They become incredibly desensitized to those around them.
On the kid front, the situation is dire. Once a child enters the world of intoxication, their childhood is gone. Presto, they are jaded. That's how dangerous drugs and alcohol are to immature minds. Society has an obligation to protect its children, not to tacitly accept or embrace mind-altering agents such as marijuana.
Houston, however, was an adult who made a decision to embrace the drug life. Reports say she tried to rehabilitate herself a few times, but you know how that goes. Once a person enters the hell of addiction, there is no easy way out.
And that's how the Whitney Houston story should be covered. As a cautionary tale. Another life vanquished by substance abuse.
She was hooked on cocaine before she ever met Bobby Brown. Brown is a dirt bag, but she was already down that path of destruction long before he entered her life.
“That is why I think there may be something genetic that predisposes them to be substance abusers.”
That is widely known in science. And was written about in 1939, in “Alcoholics Anonymous” aka the Big Book.
What is known by SOME in recovery is once the genetic switch is thrown, it can’t be turned back.
And what Whitney apparently missed in her several stints in “rehab” is that a cocaine user can’t successfully use Zanax or booze, either.
Excellent point
Excellent point
So truth is now mocking?
Houston sold “it” so well because she new the Anthem was taped and dubbed.
What would happen to the moral if the audio skipped, a la Ashlee Simpson?
“If it turns out.....” is not speculating. I guess I could have added “for example” at the end to make it ummistakeably clear.
The Star Spangled Banner Whitney Houston Song
-- snip --
Lip-sync controversy
During this controversy, Ms. Houston's personal publicist, Regins Brown said that "Our understanding is Whitney sang live into a live microphone." Brown added that the song was recorded in a studio several days before the Super Bowl, which has always been the National Football League (NFL) policy, stating "NFL policy is that when they have a performer singing the national anthem for live TV, they request the performer record what they call a protection copy, just in case the singer has laryngitis, the day of the Super Bowl."[68] Dan Klores, a spokesman for Houston, explained "This is not a Milli Vanilli thing. she sang live, but the microphone was turned off. It was a technical decision, partially based on the noise factor. This is standard procedure at these events."[72] According to Jet magazine, similarly, several music industry officials including Estrin emphasized that "this issue is not a case of Milli Vanilli, because the bottom line is―it was Ms. Houston's voice and she was singing."[68]
It actually make sense to me and people need to stop bashing her for "lip syncing" the song
That aside:
1) As a solo performance for, let us say, close of the broadcast on a radio station ... I don't like it. I don't care for the "personal touches"; the odd trills and unpredictable phrasing. Neither Whitney, nor Jose, nor any other performer "owns" OUR National Anthem. Get over yourselves.
2) As a "crowd" performance for, let us say, the opening of a sporting event ... I consider it abominable. The personal touches and attempt to "own" the song explicitly shut we the people out of singing OUR National Anthem. That's grossly inappropriate and arrogant.
3) Back in the early 1990s, I attended a Pavarotti concert in DC. It was opened with OUR National Anthem ... I'm not sure if President George HW Bush's presence had anything to to with that. LP specifically invited us to join in singing it, and we did. The house ROCKED. That, FRiends, is how OUR National Anthem should be sung in public. Jose, and Whitney, and all their imitators miss the point. Luciano Pavarotti (a foreigner) got it.
And that's pretty much all I have to say about that. I don't expect most folks to agree with me.
Sixth link down on the right side is Roseanne Barr.
Appropriate.
At least Leslie Nielsen had an excuse, being Canadian and all that. ;)
She screamed to damn much.
Brown may have at best 10% of the blame. It has been said the drug use started before Bobby Brown, but even if that’s not true, he was gone well before her death, so what was her excuse? And if the marriage was that bad, why didn’t she chuck him out long before she did? She certainly didn’t need him around. She had a very successful career so it wasn’t like she needed him to support her. I guess I just don’t get anyone, male or female, ssticking it out in a harmful relationship.
Obama killed Whitney.
Maybe next time I will just leave the name of the author off and perhaps then you comment on the article and not the author.
I don't know what your problem is, SMARTY. That's pure poetry, which you'd recognize if you were wrecked, wasted, and smashed like the rest of us.
Exuuuuuse me! I was under the impression that “hot piece” goes back to the Jimmy Cagney era.
May have sounded a little coarse but I was referring to her once-glorious beauty.
Try not to assume too much.
Better to be an eagle for a day than a snail for a life time.
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