Coverage Of Hollande Displays Media's Misplaced Priorities
By: Rachel Marsden
The most disappointing thing about the news that French President Francois 
Hollande allegedly has been rendezvousing with an actress in the privacy of her 
apartment is that it's a testament to how pathetic and petty some segments of 
French society are allowing public discourse to become in a country historically 
renowned for grand ideas and debate.
You might ask: So the nation that produced scientists such as Pierre and Marie 
Curie, Louis Pasteur and Jacques Cousteau; artists such as Claude Monet, Charles 
Baudelaire and Moliere; thinkers such as Voltaire and Bastiat; and leaders such 
as Charles de Gaulle and Napoleon is now fussing over tabloid photos allegedly 
showing the President of the Republic arriving on a scooter to meet with a woman 
friend at a flat near the Elysee Palace?
No. Wrong. Thankfully, much of the French public still doesn't care. The media 
and rival politicians do, and the foreign media does, but a large percentage of 
the French population has been critical of the media for making this personal 
matter an item for public discussion.
In the run-up to the president's traditional January press conference this week, 
the French media speculated about how Hollande would address the alleged affair 
with French actress Julie Gayet. Really? Far be it from me as a conservative to 
defend a Socialist president, but the man is busy running military operations in 
Africa, grappling with post-crisis economic growth and dodging the usual long 
knives of French politics. Meanwhile, the media spend days breathlessly 
speculating about how he might handle, in a press conference, the subject of a 
consensual private relationship between himself and an adult woman? It would 
have been nice to see Hollande respond with nothing more than a big smile and a 
thumbs-up. Instead, he said that he would clarify his marital status before his 
February 11 meeting in Washington with U.S. President Barack Obama. (As if the 
pettiness could be any better juxtaposed.)
The mainstream French media have been reduced to competing with tabloids and 
social media for eyeballs. In the "old media" days, newspapers had limited real 
estate, which meant that when faced with editorial decisions between items 
related to, say, the French economy and a politician's extramarital affairs, the 
prurient voyeurism didn't make the cut as actual news. Nowadays, the migration 
of traditional media to the Internet affords ample space for all sorts of 
nonsense that doesn't belong outside of coffee klatches. And with the 
competition for online audience share, one might imagine the kind of iron will 
required to maintain higher editorial selection standards than the "anything 
goes" social media cesspool.
Previously, French privacy laws prohibiting the publication of details related 
to anyone's personal life served as a red line. But in the past few years, 
simple business math has rendered this deterrent moot. French publications have 
come to realize that they can set aside some cash for the inevitable legal 
action -- which Hollande has already threatened in this case -- and still make a 
profit if enough buzz exists to drive sales.
Opposition politicians are suggesting that Hollande is a hypocrite because he 
had promised during his campaign to be "irreproachable." Yeah, so? One would 
hope that even "irreproachable" people have consensual sex. If you're a 
politician using this as your hammer to bash your rival, then you're the laziest 
cat in a political jungle that's never short of ripe, low-hanging fruit, and you 
should relinquish your place at the public trough to someone who can better fake 
basic competency.
Opposition leader Jean-Francois Cope of the center-right UMP party -- a 
politician whose ideas and initiatives I've generally supported -- said in a 
French TV appearance that the situation was "disastrous for the image of the 
presidential function," and that it's what the international media is talking 
about in relation to France.
Someone please hand dear Jean-Francois an empty paper bag and tell him to 
breathe deeply. If the international media is talking about this, and only this, 
in relation to France, it's because sex and relationship stories touch on an 
aspect of the universal human experience to which everyone can relate. Someone 
in Ohio, for example, might not understand why the French president is standing 
on a tarmac in Bangui unless the Ohio resident has taken a course on 
Franco-African history, but it won't take much for the same person to understand 
a series of photos showing two adults going into an apartment and re-emerging 
the next day. What's absurd is when the media regard the sex and relationship 
stories as more important than stories about the economy, foreign affairs, 
corruption and other topics of far greater significance.
It's not as though the international media would be talking about other things 
related to France if they weren't currently talking about Hollande's private 
life. I'd be interested to know which French story Cope feels the global media 
would otherwise be addressing. Maybe he can use his next TV appearance to tell 
us what that issue that would be, rather than complain about how a rival's 
affair is hijacking the national agenda.
I hope that all the self-appointed gatekeepers stop with the finger-wagging 
before they somehow manage to make me feel truly sorry for a Socialist.
COPYRIGHT 2014 RACHEL MARSDEN