Nobody in search of a truly rotten culture needs look much further than Hollywood. It is a town which embeds, perpetuates and thrives on an effort to make double-standards institutional.
Its publicity campaigns invariably feature already impossibly beautiful men or women, their bodies and features further airbrushed so as to take away any imperfections or evidence of age. The viewing public will often recognise these people not just from the posters and the films they are in, but from endless public information campaigns and media interviews in which the same people call upon us, the public, not to feel body-shame, but to love ourselves for who we are.
Often the people in the posters will be carrying guns. Not in a way that suggests the endless, bloodied misery that they help cause around the world, but in a sexy way: people sliding down roofs with a hot piece tucked down their trousers – that sort of thing. Hollywood shows hot people made hotter by guns, as in the movie ‘Mr and Mrs Smith’ (2005) in which Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt star as a hot couple constantly trying to shoot everything in sight (including each other, they are spies, don’t ask) and going to bed in their spare moments. Again the public can generally watch these same people, outside of the world of film, imploring governments to stop gun-violence.
‘Well Hollywood is only Hollywood’, is an obvious response. ‘Who listens to them?’ One answer is that Hollywood probably has a broader reach – for good and ill – than any other cultural milieu in the world. It knows this, and it uses it. Not only in movies, but in the political pronouncements which actors and others in the movie business issue as some excuse for careers that must come to seem odd for grown-ups.
For instance, nearly every award ceremony since Donald Trump was elected President has included condemnations of him, including attacks on his treatment of women based on the recording of a vile private conversation in 2005.1.
At January’s Golden Globes Meryl Streep warned about the new President:
“When the powerful use their position to bully others we all lose.”
Which is true. Except that in 2003 when Roman Polanski won an Academy Award for best director for The Pianist, Streep was among those who led a standing ovation for the director.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
Subscribe