Celebrate, dammit!
Aug. 25th, 2004 09:24 amI was standing in line at my local Tim's for my coffee this morning when the morning papers caught my eye. All four of the main papers - two national, two city-based - had variations on the same picture taking up well over half of the above-the-fold front page. This being an olympic year, it's not surprising that it was Olympics-related.
Was it Lori-Ann Muenzer winning Canada's first women's cycling sprint gold? Nope.
Was it Alexandre Despartie winning Canada's first male diving medal, a silver? Nope.
Two had pictures of Perdita Felicien, the favorite in the 100m hurdles, tangled in a hurdle, and two had pictures of her walking off the track in tears. Now, she's a local, so it's not really surprising that the two local papers focused on her performance. Maybe the Globe and the Post had other pictures in other parts of the country, but here they were also focused on the one who lost, rather than on those who won.
When did we become a "doom-and-gloom" country? I feel badly for Muenzer and Despartie, who've made these fabulous achievements, and are being virtually ignored by the print media back home. It just seems wrong that the national papers for their scrapbooks will have their achievements as a footnote rather than as front page excitement.
Was it Lori-Ann Muenzer winning Canada's first women's cycling sprint gold? Nope.
Was it Alexandre Despartie winning Canada's first male diving medal, a silver? Nope.
Two had pictures of Perdita Felicien, the favorite in the 100m hurdles, tangled in a hurdle, and two had pictures of her walking off the track in tears. Now, she's a local, so it's not really surprising that the two local papers focused on her performance. Maybe the Globe and the Post had other pictures in other parts of the country, but here they were also focused on the one who lost, rather than on those who won.
When did we become a "doom-and-gloom" country? I feel badly for Muenzer and Despartie, who've made these fabulous achievements, and are being virtually ignored by the print media back home. It just seems wrong that the national papers for their scrapbooks will have their achievements as a footnote rather than as front page excitement.
no subject
Date: 2004-08-27 09:43 am (UTC)