Wednesday 25 March 2015

Jeremy Clarkson, Zayn Malik and the art of the modern over-reaction

Is Twitter ok? Someone really ought to check. At one point this afternoon I was a little worried.

First came Jeremy Clarkson or, at least, the news that his contract won't be renewed (he's not actually technically been sacked despite punching someone) - then, before Twitter had chance to catch it's misplaced angry breath, bang, Zayn Malik left One Direction.

If Twitter had a blood pressure it would've been sky high as thousands rushed to vent their 140-character fury at perceived injustices to their lives.

I'm not someone who really cares for One Direction - I don't buy or listen to their music - and I wouldn't contemplate watching Top Gear since I can't really get excited by cars. I know that others do like them both though and who am I to judge? I don't want to be someone who rails against things just because they aren't to my tastes.

Yet today, again, happens to be one of those social media days where you are dragged into issues you wouldn't normally be associated with through the sheer volume of reaction.

It's hard not to laugh at some of the more overblown fan comments to the demise of Zayn Malik. I'm strangely fascinated by the things people write at times like this. Maybe I'm odd but I can't imagine being so in thrall to someone I have never met that I'd burst into tears and declare my life ruined when they simply leave a job.

The reaction to Clarkson's demise worries me a little more. The people upset at his departure won't necessarily see it this way but they are just screaming fans struggling to gain a sense of perspective just like the 'Directioners'.

Their fan adulation for Clarkson knows no bounds. It doesn't matter to them that he punched someone because he didn't get the food he wanted - that's just 'how he is'. It makes this case a little more sinister - people allow their like of Clarkson as a TV show host to blind them to the fact that anyone in any office in the country would surely be sacked for attacking a colleague. What, exactly, was the BBC supposed to do? Clarkson brings in money, yes, but that can't make him untouchable can it?

Yet, if some comments are to be believed, the Clarkson story is yet another example of the 'liberal elite' holding too much power. Some even go as far as to say Oisin Tymon, the victim, should 'man up' and put the blame on him for bringing the curtain down on their favourite Top Gear presenter's career by having the temerity to be attacked. An awful lot of people thought the whole thing was a 'disgrace'.

Jeremy Clarkson has been a success as host of Top Gear, that is in no doubt. It's an international hit for the BBC and, in an era of funding cuts, it needs the cash it gets in from such hits. I'm no fan of his though. I can't bear someone who thinks it's funny to poke fun at another person because they are blind in one eye as he did with his vile barb at Gordon Brown. Clarkson is a school playground bully flanked by two hangers on who think it's cool to associate themselves with him. Many think Clarkson is a maverick because he's not afraid to say racist and sexist things yet he rides horses with Rebekah Brooks and hobnobs with the Prime Minister - hardly the voice of the common man. I try to avoid him at all costs - getting angry just fuels the whole circus - yet I do dislike him.

Yet, in this case, he has to be judged solely on the act in question. This isn't the 'liberal elite silencing Clarkson' - it's about an assault at work, punished by the employer. What is the BBC supposed to do? How would anyone else react to being punched at work? Would they seriously say 'Oh but that's Fred in IT and he's great at his job'?

I wonder if the people commenting on these stories ever look back on what they've said. Are they proud to have sounded off in public in the way they have? Being a fan, it seems, stops you from seeing a matter with perspective. It's something that's common with some sections of football fandom. There are people who will back a player to the hilt if he's in their team, no matter what, yet will jump to very different judgments on their rivals' stars. You'd like to think that, in the cold light of day, people might realise that the fact that neither Zayn Malik or Jeremy Clarkson are still employed in the same jobs does not matter too much in the long run.

Still, Twitter doesn't really do perspective. It's instant and it's in instants like these two that the medium gives us a strangely fascinating insight into the things some people think in the heat of the moment. It's a funny old world eh? And a scary one.

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