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Barton, Michael Winner, and the modern paradox of mavericks and manufactured outrage

Discussion in 'Queens Park Rangers' started by kiwiqpr, Feb 8, 2013.

  1. kiwiqpr

    kiwiqpr Barnsie Mod

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    Joey Barton, Michael Winner, and the modern paradox of mavericks and manufactured outrage



    Just like the late restaurant critic, the tweeting philosopher-footballer generates strong, viral reaction - but satisfies a huge and growing appetite for radical views




    Several years ago, while sat in leader conference at The Independent (which is where we decide the paper’s editorial line), I had an argument with the then Deputy Editor.



    The well-paid footballer Joey Barton had spent one of his evenings in 2007 punching a man in Liverpool 20 times before an attack which left a teenage boy with broken teeth. Unfortunately for him, the incident was captured on CCTV. In the office, I said Barton deserved a tough sentence. My senior colleague said he was a good guy – he “just had anger issues”.

    Modern phenomenons

    Earlier this week, when England were playing Brazil, Barton tweeted at Piers Morgan in a conversation about the footballer Neymar. “I’ll introduce myself to him if he ever decides to leave the sanctuary of the Amazon jungle league”. Cue Twitter storm and Barton apology.

    I don’t actually think this particularly offensive. But his tweet, and what followed, illuminated two modern phenomenons.

    The first is manufactured outrage. In the digital age, information can go viral – that is, spread extremely fast to reach huge numbers of people in a very short space of time. Outrage, being a strong emotion, spreads faster still; and as a result a quite imponderably large amount of nonsense is spouted very quickly.

    In these circumstances, it’s best to do what Frank Partnoy suggests in the title of his fascinating book, Wait. Statements made publicly at a moment of high passion and emotional intensity often look silly in calmer times. A lot of the abuse directed at Barton for that particular tweet was unwarranted.

    The second phenomenon is the role of the lovable but rude rogue. This may not be totally new. Michael Winner, who died recently, was feted as a great raconteur partly because he was so rude. In fact, he was often an unpleasant brute. Granted an OBE, he rejected it on the grounds that “an OBE is what you get if you clean the toilets at King’s Cross station”.

    A curiosity

    We seem to have an enduring tolerance for his successors, people like Barton (who is physically rather than verbally violent) and Jeremy Clarkson and Adrian Gill. That’s partly because in a politically correct age, when mainstream parties occupy a crowded centre ground, and a stifling consensus dominates public debate, rude people are considered mavericks, and therefore attractive.

    Owen Jones, a columnist for this paper who endures horrible and stupid abuse online (he has over 84,000 followers on Twitter) found that when he went on Question Time, the audience hated the panel’s cosy consensus and responded well when he smashed it.

    This is a modern curiosity. The demand for maverick opinion is huge and growing. But so too is the viral outrage at anything which pricks our sterile culture. Joey Barton personifies that paradox.
     
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  2. Loveitupthebush

    Loveitupthebush Well-Known Member

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    That's 2 minutes of my life I won't get back.
     
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  3. ESPANACOL

    ESPANACOL Member

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    Winner lovable? I have never met such a rude and obnoxious person. I had to go to his house to collect money off his builder who was working there. Winner started shouting and swearing at his staff. Even the most useless of people should not have to endure that tirade. After witnessing that I never read any of his articles or watched him on television. He was just a bully and yes 'an unpleasant brute'.
     
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  4. Swords Hoopster.

    Swords Hoopster. Well-Known Member

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    Now there's a blast from the past. Wotcha Colin, how you doing son?

    Ain't heard from you in a long time.
     
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  5. ESPANACOL

    ESPANACOL Member

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    I am fine Swords. Am on here every day seeing what you are up to and then you're gone for a week or a month. Haven't seen you come out with anything really bad so perhaps you have had one of your hissy fits on other boards.

    You are always worth a read. (except your AF and Tarbs fixation.)

    It is a shame I can not get the black stuff here so have a few for me. Thats enough for now, off to the bar for a few glasses of Cruzcampo @ 1 euro a go.
     
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  6. kiwiqpr

    kiwiqpr Barnsie Mod

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    cruzcampo
    that brings back some memories of two weeks in ibiza
     
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  7. YappyR

    YappyR Well-Known Member

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    Only in Britain! <laugh>
     
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