ONTD

11:01 pm - 02/15/2013

Reeva Steenkamp: our media invites you to ogle a dead woman

reeva1


There's been a lot of chatter on Twitter (isn't there always?) about the media's use of photos of Reeva Steenkamp, who was shot dead yesterday at the home of her boyfriend, the athlete Oscar Pistorius.

Some newspapers and websites have been "paying tribute" and "celebrating her career" by running multiple photos of her in swimwear, or posing sexily.

Here is The Sun inviting you to admire the hotness of the recently deceased:
reeva2


And here is the Mail inviting you to reflect on the tragedy of a young woman who died younger than she needed to:
reeva3


So I made what I thought was a fairly uncontroversial statement:

reeva4


Cue four billion (that is my go-to made-up number today) people telling me one of a couple of things. Let's deal with them in turn.

She was a swimwear model.

So she was. She also modelled cosmetics for Avon. She had a law degree. She campaigned against violence against women. And yet - I'm not hearing a lot about that. And it is not just reported that she is a lingerie model, but visually demonstrated.

What do two pictures of her in a bikini tell you that one doesn't?

That Sun front page is particularly jarring - they've given Steenkamp the same treatment they'd give any sexy bikini-posing model. These pictures are intended to titillate, to arouse . . . and they're alongside a thumping great headline about her violent death.

Those were the only pictures available of her.

Bzzt! Wrong. I looked on the Getty newswire - which all British newspapers have access to. (The NS only has a basic subscription, so every picture desk on a national will have access to far more of its pictures, plus those from specialist agencies.) Here's what they had:
reeva5


You will have seen those pictures a lot yesterday, I imagine. But if your interest is in illustrating a news story, there are a couple of shapes and crops available where she has clothes on.

They'd print just the same of a male model or swimmer who was killed!

In response to me saying "try to imagine a man dying and the media running four billion pictures of them in swimwear", many people came back with "Tom Daley" or "David Beckham". It's an argument that looks superficially attractive, but lacks sophistication. Yes, there might well be photos of Daley in trunks . . . winning medals. (Maybe even presenting Splash). Being portrayed as the successful athlete he is.

Similarly, there might be a single shot of Becks in his tighty whiteys among a retrospective of his life and career, but if you think that any British newspaper would run that on their front page, rather than a photo of him, say, at the World Cup, you are deluded. The backlash would be incredible.

reeva6


If either of these men were portrayed in a way that was solely about their looks, we would seeing the oddness of it instantly.

***

It's not that I have a problem with how Reeva Steenkamp made her living. And I don't disapprove of the mere concept of women in underwear, or bikinis. If you're at the beach, swimwear is a totally reasonable thing to wear, although obviously I prefer a Victorian-style pair of bloomers, because I'm a feminist.

What's problematic here is the knee-jerk response to the death of a woman being to print exactly the kind of pictures you'd invite readers to perv over if she were alive. The subtext is so icky I don't even want to type it out.

Roll up to ogle the recently deceased!

Look at the tits on this dead woman!

Buy our newspaper - we have 50 per cent more sexy pictures of a potential murder victim!




By Helen Lewis for NewStatesman
endingonfire 16th-Feb-2013 05:55 am (UTC)
that....that can't be real. Someone tell me that's not real.
wauwy 16th-Feb-2013 06:02 am (UTC)
The New York Post and The New York Daily News are the only American tabloids that can go toe-to-toe with the trashiest British ones.
totegay 16th-Feb-2013 02:04 pm (UTC)
keep in mind, this is coming from the completely tasteless people who brought us this cover:

flor_verde 16th-Feb-2013 02:41 pm (UTC)
please tell me that isn't real

ughhhh
totegay 16th-Feb-2013 02:41 pm (UTC)
wish i could. it's terrible.
agatharuncible 16th-Feb-2013 04:02 pm (UTC)
omg, did he end up dying? I want to believe that he escaped at the last minute D:
arlen_mci 16th-Feb-2013 05:39 pm (UTC)
no he ended up dead and his family had to live their lives with this last photo of their father and husband plastered across the city... both the NY Post and the photographer caught a lot of shit for this but not nearly as much as they should have.
agatharuncible 16th-Feb-2013 08:27 pm (UTC)
that's horrifying, wtf. I have no words. :|
totegay 16th-Feb-2013 07:12 pm (UTC)
unfortunately. :\ i think what's even worse than the cover is that the photographer stood there to take the picture rather than try to help.
agatharuncible 16th-Feb-2013 08:24 pm (UTC)
D: that's horrible. and yes, that was one of my first thoughts when I saw it -- like, why would you just stand there and take pictures? I don't know if they could have just pulled him out because of the electrical current, but at least calling for help or something would have been more normal than reaching for the camera. :|
This page was loaded May 24th 2013, 6:50 am GMT.