July
26
  6:35:22 PM

What happened to mystery?

In the New York Times last week, Ben Brantley wrote an article entitled Among Celebrities, Mystery’s Not Fashionable; his premise was that celebrities aren’t allowed to live private lives thanks to professional and amateur paparazzi as well as their need to promote themselves as a brand. How true! And unfortunately it’s not only celebrities that lack mystery. It’s everyone these days.

The instantaneousness of knowledge thanks to social media has lulled us into believing that every aspect of our lives needs to be chronicled, written about, photographed and dissected. Readers of fashion blogs want to know what shampoo the blogger uses, and where they were when they took the picture, and where they went for lunch with friends. And for celebrities, we google their names and are instantly gratified with every tidbit about them thanks to wikipedia and imdb.

While, I’ll admit, I’m not totally opposed to the sharing of some of this information. If you have a hair routine that works well, or bought an amazing belt at a local thrift shop why shouldn’t you share that with the world? But I see two serious problems with the overarching lack of mystery today.

One: we no longer appreciate mystery in the world around us. The sunset, for example, is meant to be photographed and blogged about, but not awed at. We snap a picture of it on our iPhone and set it as our backdrop. But looking at it doesn’t draw the human person to think of deeper topics or higher ideals.

Two: we think we have a right to all knowledge about a person. We hear a song on the radio and our curiosity has us looking up the singers past on wikipedia and delving into every detail about their childhood, relationships, etc… Super market tabloids fly off the shelf because we want to know the details, we think we have the right to know who broke up with who and what the fight was about. But really, who are we to pry in the lives of others?

 



 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to Tiger Print newsletter
rss Subscribe to Tiger Print RSS feed

 Recent Posts
The norm of cohabitation
22 May 2012
TV and the manipulation of emotions
19 May 2012
Are electronic games making us stupid?
17 May 2012
The politics of clothing choices
16 May 2012
Thinspo inspiration is anything but
8 May 2012

 MercatorNet blogs
Population issues: Demography is Destiny
Family social policy: Family Edge
US political scene: Sheila Liaugminas
News about bioethics: BioEdge
From the editors: Conniptions

 Archive
May 2012 | Apr 2012 | Mar 2012 | more >>

  From MercatorNet's home page

Sensing the sacred
25 May 2012
Is there a sense of the sacred that even the non-religious can share?

Could geoengineering save the planet?
25 May 2012
And who is thinking about the ethics of a technological quick fix?

A thought experiment about marriage
24 May 2012
A world in which sexual intimacy could not produce children would never have come up with the idea of marriage.

Australia’s lifeline: its precarious sea lanes
23 May 2012
Large, isolated and rich, Australia needs to cultivate a friendship with the US to survive in an dangerous world.

It’s only natural
22 May 2012
The bitterest debates today in the public square often turn on what is "natural". The Chinese sages had a lot…


 Tags
truth, technology, website, employment, new years, language, London, capital punishment, shoes, wiki, face, pop culture, shopping, advertising, pregnancy, ebook, uniforms, work, loans, Tiger Print, blogging, Twilight, talent show, social networking, news, sports, books, movies, time, reading, funding, google+, marathon, debt, social experiment, student loan, song, 911 Memorial, phones, cleaning, coral, college, sex, Social Media, tan, censorship, silence, designer, Digital communications, sexual reproduction, Girl Scouts, pro-life, magazine, commitment, talent shows, attire, fashion week, friendship, hijab, aging population, space management, resolutions, abstinence, fall, awards, drugs, Japan, financial crisis, how-to, Authors, weight loss, social network, bikini, gifts, fads, teachers, new year, America, United States, volkswagen, emotions, feminism, trailer, daughters, religion, youth, euthanasia, tips, summer, hollywood, TV shows, New York Fashion Week, confidence, homosexuality, publishing, love, video, statistics, Tebow ad, designers,