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Reproductive Justice and Gender

Amid Heath Ledger Fallout, Has Media Ignored Young Male Stars in Crisis?

By Eric Deggans, Huffington Post. Posted January 26, 2008.


The hysteria over Ledger's death and the imbalance of coverage for women highlights a need for better journalism about troubled celebrities.
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Who knew the next blond starlet in crisis would be a man?

As I write this, actor Heath Ledger's death hasn't been attributed to Hollywood excess -- though police have said his room was filled with sleeping pills and anti-anxiety medication.

But when I heard the 28-year-old actor had been found dead just months after splitting from his fiancee and the mother of his 2-year-old daughter, I wondered: Why hadn't we heard much about his problems before now?

At a time when we're drowning in dispatches about the various debilitations of Britney, Lindsay, Amy and Paris, news about the death of Oscar-nominated actor Ledger seemed to hit us from a pop culture blind spot.

Let's be clear about an important point: Because Ledger's death hasn't been explained, we don't yet know if he died from deteriorating personal circumstances. Friends and colleagues have said one reason his death is so shocking is because he wasn't the kind of party animal targeted by tabloid headlines.

But if addiction or suicide played a role, Ledger wouldn't be the only underreported male celebrity in crisis. Actor Brad Renfro, who nailed roles in the films Apt Pupil and The Client, struggled with substance abuse for years before his death Jan. 15. Wedding Crashers co-star Owen Wilson offered a clown's smile to the world before his suicide attempt in August.

And I've already written about how 24 star Kiefer Sutherland hasn't received one-tenth the media attention of Paris Hilton for his 48-day stay in the slammer over drunken driving charges in December. Hollywood lore says episodes of Fox's action adventure show may have been rewritten to cover Sutherland's injuries from drinking escapades, yet he escapes the caustic press attention lavished on young women self-destructing in Hollywood.

Even '80s TV icon Michael J. Fox sounded a sympathetic note in Esquire magazine: "I have such empathy for all these young women. I was there, and I did all that crap. We'd rip it up, y'know? And we never got busted on any of that stuff."

"I do think the celebrity news industry pays considerably more attention to the bad girls of the business," said Mark Jurkowitz of the Project for Excellence in Journalism, which found coverage of Anna Nicole Smith's death and Hilton's incarceration were the only tabloid celebrity stories to draw huge amounts of coverage in mainstream media.

"Let's look at obvious factors: three including Lohan extremely attractive blond women with sex and sexuality as part of their larger story," said Jurkowitz. "There's a level of voyeurism which has to do with basic sex and sex appeal which makes these women ripe for more press coverage."

The deluge of spotty reporting in the wake of Ledger's surprise demise -- even the New York Police Department spokesman was passing along spurious tales of the actor dying in an apartment owned by Mary-Kate Olsen, which was later dismissed -- highlights the dangers from the immediate demand for salacious details in the 24-hour news cycle.

There are legitimate journalistic reasons to find Ledger's death compelling: He was an Oscar-nominated actor who died the day this year's nominations were announced. He was a talented young actor some felt was a breakout role away from Brad Pitt-level fame.

He plays the Joker in this summer's new Batman movie -- a role that was a turning point even for film icon Jack Nicholson nearly 20 years ago. He was an intensely private actor who seemed the last person poised for Death by Hollywood Excess.

And he made the mistake of passing away in the world's media capital, literally around the corner from many of the media outlets which rushed to cover his death.

"Kiefer Sutherland ran really hard for a long time . . . (but) Heath Ledger was as close to a normal guy as you could get in show business," said Courtney Hazlett, author of the celebrity and pop culture column Scoop! for MSNBC.com. "It was impossible to be a New Yorker, hang out in certain neighborhoods, and not have an experience running into him."

Hazlett also noted the difference in coverage that male celebrities in crisis receive, noting that famous fathers rarely have their parenting abilities questioned in the way moms such as Spears and Smith endured.

The paper which employs me had a compelling story Tuesday cobbling together a possible obit for modern starlets from the details of past deaths, but it focused on females. And when the Associated Press admitted preparing an advance obituary on Britney Spears -- an honor usually reserved for much older celebrities -- the wire service's managing editor for entertainment news cited the death of troubled B-movie actor Smith as inspiration.

(My fave quote from that story came from a section on how it's tough to predict which stars will die when: "Who in the '60s would have thought Keith Richards would outlast John Denver?")

The hysteria over Ledger's death and the imbalance of coverage for women highlights an important need -- not for less journalism about troubled celebrities, but better journalism.

The memory of someone as talented as Heath Ledger deserves no less.

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See more stories tagged with: gender, celebrity, masculinity, heath ledger

Eric Deggans is the first-ever full time Media Critic employed by the St. Petersburg Times. Now serving as president of the Tampa Bay area chapter of the National Association of Black Journalists, he has also served on the board of directors for the national Television Critics Association and on the board of the Mid-Florida Society of Professional Journalists.

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The double standard
Posted by: Afban on Jan 26, 2008 9:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think what's at work here isn't so much that the media don't care about the antics of the men, it's that we hold women to a higher standard. The good old "boys will be boys" school of thought still holds sway when Kiefer Sutherland or Charlie Sheen or Robert Downey, Jr. get into trouble. Isn't that what men are supposed to do when they get rich and famous? Party & use their wealth and fame to sleep with as many pretty young things as possible? But women who are rich and famous are still supposed to be virtuous and stable.

Remember back when skater Nancy Kerrigan was the reigning "America's Sweetheart"? All that sympathy she had from people over the Tonya Harding/Whacked in the Knee with a Crowbar thing? Everybody just loved sweet, pretty Nancy? All it took for Kerrigan to fall from grace was to be overheard making a mild complaint about having to be in a parade at DisneyWorld as part of a sponsorship deal and all of the sudden she was a spoiled prima donna. You'd have thought she'd been caught strangling a litter of kittens, the way some of the media reacted.

Okay, now I've had my say, I'm just gonna sit back and wait for all the angry white guys to call me a man-hating lesbian feminazi.

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» RE: The double standard Posted by: Gungneir
» RE: The double standard Posted by: Afban
» RE: The double standard Posted by: Gungneir
Boo Hoo...
Posted by: shawneewulf on Jan 27, 2008 5:07 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can barely type due to the tears streaming down my cheeks!!
On the day Heath Ledger KILLED HIMSELF, a monthly total of 28 American service men were killed fighting the illegal Iraq war. Where is all the media covering the lives of those brave soldiers?
I have no pity for those whose lives are gilded in gold and fame. It would have been too easy for Heath to seek professional help - something most Americans can no longer afford - for the 'stress' of making a film: The Black Knight.
IMO, Heath is not worth crying over - our soldiers are. Heath had wealth and fame - our soldiers have death and ridicule.
Heath committed one of the greatest sins of all - he committed suicide, his eternal soul is lost forever. So it is written...

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» Wow Posted by: aerdrie
ALL DUE RESPECT
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Jan 27, 2008 8:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What are we supposed to be doing? ANNA

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who said it was suicide?
Posted by: undrgrndgirl on Jan 27, 2008 7:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
last i checked...and i admit it was at least a day or more ago...his death was considered an ACCIDENT - there was some speculation he had mixed two prescription drugs which i am going to assume he took as prescribed.
jumping to the conclusion that mr. ledger was a "troubled" person and committed suicide without the benefit of the FINAL autopsy results is irresponsible, doesn't help anyone who is in "trouble" and is an insult to his family and his memory.
shame on you!

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Priorities
Posted by: yellow on Jan 28, 2008 11:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I too felt sad at the death of this great young actor. But seriously. We have the Iraq War, a looming depression, the brutal siege of Gaza and the prospect of another bloody Arab/Israeli conflict, warrentless wiretaps and the loss of constitutional freedoms, torture abroad and the violation of the Geneva Conventions by the US Army, the threat of War with Iran, growing social and economic inequality and poverty in the US and the growing menace of global warming...naa Heath Ledger is the real issue. Well maybe if yer a teenage girl!!

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