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Tuesday, February 13, 2007
Anna Nicole Smith, take 2: Brixton Doyle
Three I-Report cartoonists tackled the Anna Nicole Smith story this week. Brixton Doyle came up with this:
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Great Cartoon! I find it amazing that anyone outside of the Playboy world and her family & friends even knows her name? Why are we, as a society so caught up in the lives of celebrities and almost-celebrities? Why do shows like Entertainment Tonight and Access Hollywood have an audience? Come on people, live your own lives.
Perfect! The fact that the media has devoted so much time to this woman's death is not surprising given how much attention was paid to her life.
As a celebrity, her claim to fame was taking off her clothes and marrying (very) rich. Our own voyeurism is what drove her fame, and ultimately contributed to her death. No one of us actually pushed her over the cliff but we all watched in rapt attention as we crowded her to the edge and sent her giggling over the precipice. What a triumph for American culture!
I don't know which is more disturbing: our fascination with this woman's life, problems and sudden death, or the fact that on a day when bombs went off in Lebanon and Iraq, and more American soldiers died, this was the lead story.
Thanks, Mr. Doyle, for capturing my confusion and disappointment over our collective celebrity dementia.
Great
Good one. From the over-the-top converage, one would have thought she was Princess Di!
I love the flagg as a centerfold
this one doesn't make sense.
Done in good taste.
Where did the media get this idea that "America is mourning"?! The women was a twit and a whore. No loss whatsoever - good riddance.
Despite what anyone thought of her life, good or bad, she was a human being who deserved so much better in life and in death.
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