By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 10.19.06 @ 12:07AM
Prime Time was made for the likes of America's leading would-be child killer.
WASHINGTON -- I see that John Mark Karr has gotten back into the
act. The act, of course, is being a personage on national
television, in "the tabs," in the gossip columns of major
newspapers, possibly even being a referent in the nationally
syndicated column of Maureen Dowd. She is a pop culture
Grotius.
It is being part of the media whirl of fools and rogues,
perverts and defenseless public figures (some distinguished) who
are all gasped over by our talking heads, or purred over or
otherwise pronounced upon sagely. Increasingly the vernacular
employed by the sagacious talking heads is that of the pompous high
school know-it-all. Anderson Cooper is given to the construction,
"that is sooo uncool or un..." whatever the negative might be. And
the other day Miles O'Brien greeted his own news story about the
American population passing the 300 million mark with some variant
of "Why am I not impressed?" I suppose they learn this lingo from
their teenaged children. Or maybe they have never quite left high
school. Will Anderson and Miles have a smirk for John Mark Karr
soon? JMK is not admired by the networks, but he is avidly sought
after.
JMK is that odd, misshapen little fellow who turned up in
Thailand and found himself accused of the murder of a JonBenet
Ramsey. He quickly admitted to the foul deed, and chose his words
with the proper hints of mystery, romance, and perversion that
suggested to those of us who follow the vulgarity of the media
whirl that JMK was going to make it to Prime Time, if only he could
somehow avoid the slammer. He did when no evidence whatsoever
linked him to the murder and he was shipped off to Los Angeles on
an old child pornography charge. Admittedly, JMK is a revolting
specimen, but that is just what Prime Time is in need of these days
and so soon we read reports of ABC's Good Morning
AmericaToday Show too.
Good Morning America got the leap on its competitors
when the day after JMK's October 5 release from a Los Angeles
hoosegow, ABC producers lured him into a limousine and drove him by
a San Francisco school where he had been a teacher's aide. I guess
they thought this would make a dramatic staging area for whatever
they planned to coax out of him, somewhat like bringing former
Congressman Mark Foley to a Gold's Gym or Osama bin Laden to a pig
farm. Apparently JMK got out of the car, ventured toward the
playground, and did some disturbing things: things that "gave us
serious pause and ABC decided not to proceed with the interview."
Thus spoke Jeffrey Schneider, an ABC spokesman with high standards.
Nonetheless his colleagues let JMK back into their limousine and
off they went.
Then Today made its approach. The show has a
credentialed self-help author and "therapist" of the magnitude of
"Dr. Phil" (whoever he might be) by the name of Keith Ablow, or is
it Elbow, who is launching his own morning show; and he interviewed
JMK for an hour or so, the first installment appearing on
Today's Friday morning segment. Apparently that caused
controversy. Elbow insists that he is "on the side of the angels,"
claiming that the interview serves a high public purpose. "It's a
rare chance to see what's inside the mind of someone who has
expressed a desire to have sexual contact with little girls," Elbow
told the Associated Press. "I am baffled," he went on, "as to why
anybody would consider this anything other than a public health or
communications victory for the American people and parents
everywhere."
So Elbow is a serious fellow. His staff flew JMK to New York and
paid for his lodgings, but nothing more, just standard talk show
procedure, according to Laura Mandel, a program official. Still,
questions remain. The New York Post reported that JMK was
plied with strong drink before appearing with Elbow, who disputes
the charge, insisting he was "stone cold sober." Well, perhaps they
both were, but Karr had asked for white wine and even Elbow's staff
admits they gave him white grape juice instead. Now did NBC
staffers deceive their guest? Have journalistic ethics been
breached here? What damage might this do to Elbow's journalistic
reputation?
Next JMK appeared on Fox's On the Record with Greta Van
Susteren and on CNN's Larry King Live. What did these
networks promise this immediate Prime Time phenomenon? How about a
life-size Teddy Bear? A life-size anatomically correct Teddy Bear?
As I suspected when first we saw the petulant John Mark Karr in
handcuffs in Thailand, this guy was made for Prime Time, the media
swirl, and more. Suggestive of the future already carved out for
him was a dramatic question posed by King the other night: "Anybody
proposed a movie about you"? "Not yet, not yet," was the cryptic
reply, "Would you be interested," probed the Edward R. Murrow of
our time. "Yes," a pregnant "yes" from Karr. This guy is not going
to disappear anytime soon. I wonder if he is planning to adopt an
African orphan.
topics:
Television, NATO, Africa