The Hilton Effect: How the Media is Trying to Turn a Good Miley Cyrus Bad

By Chadd De Las Casas, published Jan 30, 2008
Published Content: 260  Total Views: 127,928  Favorited By: 30 CPs
Rating: 4.7 of 5
It sucks being a teenager today - when you're exploding with hormones and are caught somewhere between that time when you were a naive child where everything you could do just months prior can no longer be explained away as innocence, and you're developing into your own, independent person, things can seem dominating, confusing. Now slap onto this inherent adolescent confusion that every book on parenting calls one of the hardest times in a person's life with a collective media obsession with transforming you from the pure image your entire career and future is based on, into the drunken, raunchy, drug-induced, mania that plagues American headlines.

It's truly an amazing thing to watch, as the collective behavior of both parents and children, media and consumers, turns malignant the very moment an opportunity presents itself in a picturesque metaphor for vultures just waiting for that one mistake that kills the creature they hover over. It's ironic of course, as this photo centrist obsession almost calls for Kevin Carter's return to capture this moment of scavengers and their desire to see the tiniest slip so that Miley Cyrus, an otherwise typical, relatively innocent, young girl can have that pedestal knocked out from under her, tossing her in with the likes of Britney Spears, Lindsay Lohan, and Paris Hilton.

For anyone with internet access, it is impossible to avoid the bombardment of recent media. It seemed to start with the accusation that the teenage daughter of Billy-Ray Cyrus, immortalized in bar rooms everywhere with his overplayed Achy Breaky Heart, was carrying a child. Perhaps fueling the fires, as though issuing a challenge to tabloids and media magazines the country over, Miley Cyrus dismissed the rumors and explained that she did not believe in sex before marriage.

Since then, everything has seemed like a chance to trample her image, or force her to set down a path that she doesn't seem to have elected for herself. Racy was the word used to describe photos of a slumber party, where the least innocuous image was her posing, sharing a piece of candy with a friend in a photo.

The Hilton Effect: How the Media is Trying to Turn a Good Miley Cyrus Bad
Location:
 USA

Miley Cyrus.

Credit: wikicommons

Copyright: wikicommons

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I can't believe this Chadd--we actually agree on something. It's like the vultures can't wait for her to go bad, and if she won't do it herself, they will conjure it somehow.

Posted on 02/04/2008 at 5:02:37 PM

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