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Susan Linn

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Why I'm (Pre)Occupied with Miley Cyrus: Does Hannah Montana Still Matter?

Posted: 12/06/11 08:03 PM ET

I don't know how you feel about the Occupy Movement or about Miley Cyrus. As for me, having spent the past decade speaking out against the corporate takeover of childhood, I tend to be sympathetic to the 99% message and beyond unsympathetic to the contribution Cyrus-as-Disney-star-Hannah-Montana has made to the commercialized sexualization of very young girls.

So how am I supposed to feel now that she produced a rather moving music video in support of Occupy protests all over the world? It does a great job of using its genre to celebrate the democratic right to protest and bear witness to its (sometimes brutal) repression. If Cyrus is still popular among young people, it probably has a shot at awakening interest in organized dissent. For a certain (young) age group it might make civic activism cool.

I emailed my Occupy/Miley dilemma to some of my wiser colleagues. Actually, my email read, "Does this mean we have to start liking her or stop liking the Occupy Movement?" One immediate response was, "I never disliked her. Blame the handlers, not the kid." Here's another, "It's great she did this video. It will draw in a lot of young people, I hope. Miley is used and exploited too."

And of course they're right. We can expect that the suits at Disney knew exactly what they were doing to little girls by marketing Miley Cyrus as Hannah Montana. We might expect that the other adults in her life knew, too. But we can't expect a girl in her early teens to know.

Cyrus was only 12 when she auditioned for Hannah Montana -- and 13 when it became one of Disney's biggest hits, with the attendant toys, clothing, accessories, video games, jewelry, and so on. She was just 15 when she posed apparently covered only by a sheet for Annie Leibowitz. My colleagues would say that she was objectified by adults who profited obscenely from her objectification. And because celebrity culture carries so much weight, even with the very young, the glorification and amplification of her image has vast consequences. We only have to search as far as YouTube to see girls as young as 2 playing at being Miley Cyrus playing at being a teenage rock star playing at being an adult playing at being a certain kind of sexy.

But does making a video that promotes civic action transform Cyrus into a positive role model for girls? Well... maybe, depending on age. I can just about imagine having a nuanced conversation with my 9-year-old granddaughter about the pros and cons. But I doubt that her 5-year-old sister could old grasp the nuance of someone being a great role model in some ways but not in others.

So where does this leave me, Miley, and Occupy Wall Street? For the first time, ever, I find myself wondering about her. I wonder what she thinks, or will think in the future, of how Hannah Montana was marketed to children. I wonder why she made this video. I wonder what her managers/agents/handlers think about it. I wonder if they weighed the cost/benefit to her career before it was posted. I wonder if she even tries to reconcile her ties to Disney, one of the biggest entertainment conglomerates in the world, in light of the Occupy Movement's spotlight on greed and the abuse of corporate power.

The Yiddish word "farkakte" means simultaneously "crazy, screwed up, and gone bad"; sometimes it's the only word that will do. It's a farkakte world where 1% of the population gets richer at the expense of everyone else; where corporations purposely sell four year olds on fake sexuality; where thousands of unknown viewers can watch repeatedly the parent-posted videos of tiny daughters as Hannah Montana imitators shaking whatever booty they have; where kids are indoctrinated to celebrity culture before they even enter preschool; and where a 19-year-old's celebrity means that her political opinions matter.

But I have to say -- I like the video. I'm glad she made it. Thanks for this one, Miley Cyrus.

 

Follow Susan Linn on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@commercialfree

 
 
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05:48 PM on 12/07/2011
by the way when you do get to talk to her ask about some of the charities she helps -very quietly(as it should be)---in fact ask her about alex's lemonade -just for one--you will find her passionate and caring--a genuinely good person.
05:41 PM on 12/07/2011
just a suggestion--give her a call----she has alot more class then you give her credit for---and has handled her celebrity better than most others. Remember she is still young as we all once were, but she has a loving family and good friends--give her a break--you may even like her.
01:50 PM on 12/07/2011
Susan Linn can only "wonder" about Miley Cyrus' attitudes toward her former corporate overlords at Disney Corp. because she's obviously not done the research to find out, yet it's clear with just a bit of research that Cyrus has been openly rebelling against the Disney suits for several years now. For anyone who's taken the time to look, her support for the Occupy Movement should come as no surprise. And her attitude toward Disney becomes clear as day when you take a look at the song she wrote and recorded two years ago, at the same time she wrote and recorded "Liberty Walk," called "Robot." To show you what I mean I'm going to quote part of the lyrics from that song:

"Robot"
You mistake the game for being smart,
Stand here, sell this and hit your mark.
But the sound of the steel and the crush and the grind
It all screams to remind who decides my life
I would scream
But I'm just this hollow shell
Waiting here, begging please,
Set me free so I can feel

Stop trying to live my life for me
I need to breathe
I'm not your robot
Stop telling me I'm part of the big machine
I'm breaking free
Can't you see,
I can love, I can speak
Without somebody else operating me
You gave me eyes so now I see
I'm not your robot, I'm just me
12:00 PM on 12/07/2011
i hate to break it to you but miley cyrus was relevant to little girls years ago. i realize your job involves constant monitoring of media but i think you don't see real kids anymore because the real girls i know (from elementary school age to high school) don't model their lives on t.v. characters. the kids that my children go to school with are intelligent, focused, and compassionate. like adults, they follow fashion which means they try to dress like whoever happens to be trendy at the moment. it's up to the adults in their lives to draw the line at what's appropriate to wear and how to behave appropriately. unfortunately, there are a lot of adults who still think they're teenagers and try to act and dress the part-if the adults can't draw the line for themselves, how are the kids supposed to know. my girls (10 & 15) watched hannah montana and tired of it quickly when they realized it was completely unrealistic just like most of the programs aimed at their age group. most kids are intelligent enough to analyze these shows critically if you take the time and interact with them. that goes for social media, print media, and life in general. it's not that i dislike miley cyrus personally, she's a packaged product and this is an (unimpressive) attempt to kick-start her "grown-up" career just like britney spears tried to do a decade ago.
09:35 AM on 12/07/2011
Miley's an adult now. She's over 18 and any actions she makes are actions she is responsable for. Being paraded around at a young age was the responsibility of her "handlers," and should not reflect on her. The Miley of Hannah Montana and the Miley who produced this video are two different people. You can like that she supports Occupy Wall Street and still dislike her immature sexualization--the two are not mutually exclusive.
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ray christl
HEMP can save us from ourselves.
07:54 AM on 12/07/2011
I live in Cambodia & my adopted daughter grew up on Disney in English with Hanna Montana. Her father is a hemp activist & MMJ person,so when she turned 16 & found a 19 yo Miley Cyrus hits the bong & loves Bob Marley like her 58 yo father...well she's coming of age in a very conservative country that hides all reality from its people. I think the system just likes to create criminals for the jailing business & Hanna is above the paradigm of harvesting people for the CIA-Mafia machinations.
Billk29
Justified Ancient of Mu
11:14 PM on 12/06/2011
She made the video because she's in a major 'revitalization' phase for her popularity in America. Numerous stories have been coming out about her just lately as she and her handlers try to sell her to the public.
Last yr she started touring overseas as she said 'she wasn't appreciated in America anymore'.
Well now i assume she's back and will use any device to sell again.
I don't think she 'feels' for any cause she makes video for,it's all just product to sell herself.
If you asked her about the Occupy thing right now i doubt she'd have a clue what it's about other than her spending a few days in a studio making the video.
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Susan Linn
06:38 AM on 12/07/2011
Well, maybe. The Occupy movement is doing pretty well for a protest movement, but there are lots of other ways she could get a lot more attention. One thing that struck me about the video is that she's not in it at all. . .
09:51 AM on 12/07/2011
sorry, but I disagree. Ms. Susan Linn is right. The fact that Miley is not in video means that she's not doing this for publicity. And also, Miley wrote that song and I'm sure it really means to her. And the lyrics is so good... It talks about freedom. I hope people can see the positive message that Miley is trying to send. Let's not judge her, the media has been to harsh on her. She's just growing up, and I think she's doing fine. Haven't you see all her charities, the campaigns that she supports and the Haiti mission as well? She may have had mistakes, but she has a good heart. =)