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Whitney Houston and the Media Celebrity Death Watch

Posted: 02/22/2012 8:54 am

Every few months, the death of a celebrity sparks a new media maelstrom about drugs. But more concerned with spectacle than substance, much of the press ignores the real issues behind America's deadliest epidemic, as well as its last famous victims.

Just minutes after Whitney Houston was found dead in a bathtub at the Beverly Hilton last Saturday at the age of 48, a caravan of network trucks began slowly encircling the plush hotel, morbidly eager to document her untimely demise. Since then, it's been nearly impossible to turn on the TV or log on to the Web without witnessing a tribute to the singer, often including depressing video footage of her long, painful decline. Her memorial on Saturday had the pomp and pageantry of a state event -- complete with dignitaries, crying onlookers and flags at half-mast.

But while speakers talked movingly about her battles, mention of the word 'addiction' was curiously scrubbed from the event.

It's no surprise that the singer's death has struck such a chord in the country. Incredibly talented, beautiful and ambitious, Whitney Houston was a rare kind of legend who changed the face of American pop music. In her later life she also became an addict whose cruel struggle with the disease unfolded in full public view. That she lay dying for hours in a luxe bathroom suite while her bodyguards cooled their heels outside is a sad commentary on the state of modern celebrity. That it took less than 10 minutes for the press to begin broadcasting her death is an even more searing indictment of contemporary media culture.

Houston, of course, is not the only celebrity whose problems have received rapt press attention. Last month it was Demi Moore. The week before that it was Disney's Demi Lavato. Meanwhile, the weekly travails of Charlie Sheen and Lindsay Lohan have been breathless fodder for fleets of paparazzi. And for over a year before her death last year, fans of Amy Winehouse received daily updates of her ups and downs. One British tabloid even went so far as to embed a pack of paparazzi at her favorite pubs.

As someone who has suffered through my own experiences with through alcoholism, I've found myself growing increasingly frustrated by the failure of my colleagues to get beyond the superficial details of addiction. Indeed, much of the mainstream media has been lazy -- even downright derelict -- when it comes to covering what has become the nation's most deadly health crisis.

As a longtime editor at several magazines over the past two decades, I've admittedly been an active participant in this game -- keenly aware that for ordinary readers grappling with the mundanities of daily life, stars offer a few rare moments of transcendence. But their intoxicating effect on the American public also gives them outsized power to shape public perception. In the 1980s, Rock Hudson and Magic Johnson forced the media to finally pay attention to AIDS only after it had already killed an army of Americans. Michael J. Fox's battle with Parkinson's helped bring invaluable attention and funding to the disease, while prompting a debate on stem cell research that promises to have profound effects on the treatment of other illnesses.

But substantive stories about alcoholism and drug addiction remain largely outside the media purview -- focused on the tribulations of A and C-list celebrities, they're often ghettoized in gossip sites and channels like VH1. For all the daily hand wringing about celebrity overdoses and DUIs, there is precious little real reporting on the growing scientific understanding of the disease, the tragic lack of access to treatment or insurance coverage, or even the growing number of promising drugs that have begun to make real progress against this condition.

For a long time, I regarded this kind of journalism as business as usual. But my own perspective began to change as I was forced to confront the fact of my own addiction. For most of my early thirties I fancied myself a young version of the late Christopher Hitchens, a literary legend rarely spotted without a drink who once bragged that he couldn't write without a hangover. Alas, I soon learned that I possessed neither his talent nor his hardy constitution. As a result, I spent two years in a series of rehabs and sober living facilities, witnessing firsthand the ravenous toll taken by addiction and the abject failure of our medical and political system.

My first roommate was a 23-year-old violinist from Iowa who had cycled through five detoxes and five rehabs in just 11 months. At the same rehab, I befriended an ad executive whose proclivity for Absolut eventually landed her in a homeless shelter. I met an investment banker whose weekend crystal meth binges led to a lifelong HIV infection. At one sober living facility I played poker with a rum-loving Catholic priest who led one of the largest congregations in Nigeria. I met countless others who maintain publicly productive lives while suffering though their own private hell. You can be certain that none of them will ever show up on CNN. But neither will the pernicious behavior of the insurance companies and Big Pharma, who have often illegally profited off the scourge while accumulating blockbuster profits.

As someone whose seen the effects of alcoholism close-up, I've grown increasingly frustrated by the failure of my colleagues to get beyond the superficial details of addiction, or to empathize with the lives of people who aren't regulars on Perez or Page Six. Much of the mainstream media has been lazy -- even downright derelict -- when it comes to addressing the nation's most pressing health crisis.

When I ask my journalist friends about their failure to take on the larger issues behind these stories, they usually reply that reporting on struggling stars is a teachable moment for many Americans. But that's not much of an answer. It's not really breaking news that drugs can be harmful and sometimes deadly. The real questions are: What can we do about it? And how exactly did we get here?

Ultimately, the torrent of coverage of the Whitneys and Winehouses of the world is little more than a distraction, a game of mirrors that deflects attention from millions of farmers, bankers and college kids who are also suffering and dying of drug-related causes at a record rate. It's easier not to have to confront the reality of our drug-slammed towns, or jails full of untreated addicts, or high-school kids who swallow up to 50 Oxys a day. Entire regions of middle America have been decimated by poverty and crystal meth. America's seemingly ravenous appetite for drugs raises questions that demand deeper explanations.

The fact is, while most major causes of preventable death in the U.S. are in decline, drugs -- especially pharmaceutical drugs -- remain a dramatic exception. A 2010 national survey by the Department of Health and Human Services found that over 22 million Americans suffer from alcohol or drug dependency. Drug overdose rates have more than tripled since 1999, claiming a life every 14 minutes. In fact, it's hard to imagine a single person in the whole country who hasn't been directly or indirectly affected. Rehabs and sober livings around the country have become a vast $20 billion business, many of them operating under woefully inadequate oversight. Many Americans under the age of 30 have become hooked on opiate painkillers like OxyContin and Vicodin, buying them on the street for prices as high as $80 a pill. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the abuse of these painkillers was responsible for close to half a million emergency room visits in 2009, a number that has nearly doubled in just the past five years.

Our nation's seemingly ravenous appetite for drugs also raises problematic questions about the larger culture the media has helped create. Why is it that a nation that enjoys one of the highest standards of living in the world also suffers one of the highest rates of drug abuse? Why are so many of us driven to substances to obliterate reality? What does this continuing scourge say about the values and morals that underlie our society?

Given the expensive impact of drugs and alcohol on our medical and prison system and addiction's massive impact on workplace productivity, the continued lack of serious discourse on the issue remains surprising. Certainly it's not just reporters who are to blame. Though the Obama administration recently doled out extra funding for drug prevention programs, it still spends several billion more on a drug war than seems as unwinnable as Vietnam. To its credit, starting in 2014, Obama's historic new health plan will mandate insurers for the first time ever to treat addicts the way they treat victims of other diseases, putting an end to decades in which desperately ill addicts were denied life-and-death treatment.

For their part, however, the Republicans have been uncharacteristically more restrained on the subject. Not long ago they could dismiss the drug epidemic as symptoms of urban permissiveness and decaying inner-city neighborhoods. But as drugs intrude deeper and deeper into the leafy middle class suburbs and the wide-open ranges of America's heartland, the law and order types at the GOP have become tongue-tied. During the season's endless series of GOP debates, not a single candidate was quizzed about their policies on drugs or treatment. While Ron Paul has been an articulate advocate of drug legalization, Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum's websites devote not a word to their drug policies, even though Bain Capital, once run by Mitt Romney, is one of the leading owners of the nation's 20,000 rehabs and sober living facilities. Newt Gingrich, a one-time pot smoker who has lately taken to extolling the virtues of AA's Big Book, has maintained a hardline anti-drug stance, even though he's backed down on his former pledge to put drug dealers to death. Last year, in Florida, newly-elected Tea Party Gov. Rick Scott mounted a crazy and ultimately doomed campaign against an effort to regulate the state's pill mills, which produce the vast majority of the country's illegal prescription painkillers. Not to be outdone, the Tallahassee Republicans recently voted for a bill that would dramatically slash funding for drug prevention in a state that has one of the highest percentages of drug abusers in the country.

In short, there's no lack of important, compelling stories out there that could benefit from a little media attention. And while some enterprising reporters and bloggers have risen to the challenge, they're the exception rather than the rule. What's responsible for their continued reluctance? The continuing stigma around addiction undoubtedly has something to do with it. Even though decades of research proves addiction is a condition with complicated genetic and chemical roots, far too many journalists continue to see it as a sort of moral weakness. Their failure to actively report on the issue represents both a lack of initiative and funding. After all, covering Whitney's last moments is a lot easier (and less expensive) than going up against the wrath of formidable lawyers and lobbyists employed by corrupt pharmaceutical behemoths. It's also a lot more comfortable than venturing into the ravaged small towns of Iowa and Montana to witness first-hand the devastation wrought by poverty and crystal meth.

The senseless death of one of America's most outsized talents is undoubtedly a cause for mourning. But tragic as her death may be, Houston is just another person lost to an epidemic that has also killed thousands more in just the path month. It would be a fitting coda to her impressive legacy if her death ended up provide a genuine 'teaching moment' for America: one that would encourage the media and public to look beyond the scandals and personalities to the complicated causes and consequences of this miserable disease. But that's probably wishful thinking. More likely, in a couple of weeks the hysterical pundits and satellite trucks will roll on to the scene of the next tragedy. As Truman Capote famously noted, "The dogs bark and the caravan moves on." Meanwhile the 22 million people affected by this disease will stay exactly where they are.

Originally featured on The Fix.

 
 
 
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05:50 PM on 03/06/2012
We need to understand that the "war on drugs" does not exist. There has never been a war on drugs. If we look at our history, we can only see an ongoing conflict amongst various drug users – and producers. In ancient Mexico the consumption of alcohol was punishable by death, while the ritualistic use of the psychedelic drug mescaline was highly worshipped. In Russia, tobacco smokers were threatened with mutilation or decapitation, while alcohol was legal. In Prussia, coffee drinking was prohibited in the second half of the 18th century (except for by higher state officials and noblemen) and was punished with a jail sentence of up to four years or birching, while other drugs like alcohol were legal at the time.
See http://sebastianmarincolo.wordpress.com/2011/11/26/nightmare-marijuana-prohibition/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GingersCorner
11:05 PM on 02/23/2012
Could it be because so many children are being diagnosed with ADHD in our educational system and prescribed Ritalin in elementary school?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GingersCorner
09:19 PM on 02/23/2012
Geez, could it be because it has become de rigueur in educational system to diagnose so many of our children as suffering from ADHD and filling them with Ritalin beginning in grade school? Ritalin "works" on children in the same way that related stimulants like Cocaine work on adults--sharpening the short-term attention span when the drug kicks in and producing equally predictable valleys ("coming down," in street parlance, "rebounding" in Ritalinese) when the effect wears off. It is often referred to as "Kiddie Cocaine." (www.adhd,org/ritalin.htm)
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07:20 PM on 02/23/2012
You know what? I have had a bad back most of my life, but I HAVE NEVER taken a pain pill. I do have a muscle relaxent I take 2 times a day and have for many years, but I most certainly have never upped my doseage. I also take zoloft,I started on 50 mgs. and i've never gone further then that.That is I believe the enough to help me cope with things,I never never had to take anything until I was 50 for heaven sakes. BUT because of all this stuff of people taking more then they should,it is nearly impossible to even get that! Thank God I have a doctor(one only) that understands this.It is because of Whiteny and millions of others ,that makes it difficult to get our medcines. Personally I take the least amount least amount I can take the better I feel,i've never ever taken more then I should and I have always stayed with one doctor and that is not easy with medicare,i've had to change doctor's many times. You couldn't get ot to take xananx if you tried.
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06:58 PM on 02/23/2012
I loved Whitney's music, but you have to go back many years like the late 80's to get a grip on her talent . She lost her talent many years ago due to herself, . she made a choice period! Sadly though the choice her and Bobby Brown affected their only child.I've seen that Cissy doesn't think Krissy has A problem. How very sad. They want the money for Krissy do they not realize what MONEY did too Whitney ?
I think they are behind the fact that so much of whitney's things are being sold,A poor relative might have sold her picture to the tab?(that doesn't bother me as long as she looks more beautiful then she did in life). I will still buy the paper I do every single week. NO I won't buy Bobby Brown's book,I think enough tradedy has come out of her life. I don't Feel he started her on drugs, I think she was well into drugs when she met him, I mean that was probably what drew them together. Did he got her in further? She was not at peace, she was a tortured soul , she'd have kept a better eye on Krissy rather then hiding her head in the sand because she was doing the same thing.
I don't respect governor Christie for flying the flag at half staff for sure! that To me the flag is for our true hero's fighting for our freedom.
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Henry Spencer
"In Heaven, everything is fine!"
06:44 PM on 02/22/2012
Big Pharma doesn't care who dies, they just want profits.

Instead of going after peaceful pot smokers (who, by the way, can't die from an overdose of marijuana) we should focus on the pill peddlers from Big Pharma to the KickBack Kids who prescribe them.
boycottrightwingthings
FightingFascism1dayatime
04:08 PM on 02/22/2012
I want to copy this and paste it EVERYWHERE! In honor of my grammar schoolmate, Whitney, and all of the other people who have lost their lives to this dreadful disease of addiction. Thank you so much for that, it was/is brilliant and should be requred reading everywhere.
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charleyvldm9
He thinks outside the box.
04:02 PM on 02/22/2012
I've observed a peculiar pattern with 95% of drug abusers,they dont have a College Education and their IQs are very low. They need that extra 4 years in school in order to cope with the real world. Hey folks prove me wrong.
ThePeacemakers
Concerned Citizen
10:21 PM on 02/22/2012
Prove you've observed 95% of all drug abusers.
01:40 PM on 02/22/2012
Your commentary is just as eloquently written as anything that ChrisH wrote. Don't cut yourself cheap. Excellent, informative, academic and stimulating piece Sir. It will only be when America places addicition centers in City Halls bc of their public accessibility, will society and addition meet. Be mindful too, of this current InfoAge and its influence to increased addiction in society
11:56 AM on 02/22/2012
Some good observations here, but one glaring problem - is drug addiction a "disease"? And if it is, well maybe there's a pill for that. Or is maybe, just maybe, drug addiction more of a weakness of character, a path of least resistance, a refusal to face one's fears, anxieties, insecurities, etc. and deal with them. I think many journalists and pundits run from that angle because its not far from that to the R word - religion, or better stated, faith in a power higher than oneself.
10:32 AM on 02/22/2012
My God, what a wonderful piece. Thank you.