My colleague Kate Dailey, who writes our Human Condition blog, has an interesting post examining who precisely is outraged by Michelle Obama's decision to wear shorts during a recent sightseeing trip to the Grand Canyon. Kate can't find anyone who's geniunely perturbed by the shorts. She writes:
I searched The National Review and Googled "Ann Coulter Obama
Shorts". I've polled co-workers. No one knows, or has read, or can
think of any concrete proof that Americans are upset by Obama in
shorts. Still, "Michelle Obama shorts" is a leading topic on Google, and
there are dozens of other examples of blogs and news organizations
citing "some critics" who are upset with the sartorial decision. It's
entirely possible that "some in the media" were a little shocked to
see Obama wearing shorts and wanted to report on it. August is a slow
news month, and covering people who are actually shocked and outraged about health care can only fill so many minutes in the Twitterfied news cycle. But
why hide behind an anonymous attacker? Why not just come out and say,
"Michelle Obama wore shorts, which most first ladies haven't done
before," (Is this even true? Five dollars says there's a photo of
Eleanor Roosevelt in short pants somewhere in the national archive). Because
if there's not controversy, it's just the American public gawking at a
woman's form. This is something that happens all the time, but needs to
be cloaked in social relevance when the woman is not a traditional
target for public consumption. Models, actresses, even athletes can be
the subject of objectification, but to ogle the first lady on national
TV requires a bit of news-related window dressing.
Click here to read Kate's entire post.