On October 3, 1992, the Irish singer-songwriter Sinéad O'Connor appeared as the musical guest on the American live television sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live (SNL). While performing a rendition of Bob Marley's 1976 song "War", she staged a protest against the Catholic Church. O'Connor held a photograph of Pope John Paul II in front of the camera, ripped it up, said "fight the real enemy", and threw the pieces of the photograph onto the floor.
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“Let’s Make Music Great Again, Don”!
ReplyDeleteAnyone else experiencing difficulty accessing the Archives T-C site? I just get the spinning adapter no matter what device or browser I'm using. The app itself still streams music.
ReplyDeleteNevermind. It's back. A glitch in the matrix.
ReplyDeleteSinead perhaps demonstrated how context is everything. The concert was a celebration which does not happily fit with protest, at least not so abruptly. Maybe she needed a prelude of sorts but she cannot create this by herself. Of course what she did is a matter of free speech, I don't see how anyone denies this. What is painful and wrong is the way she was treated after the failed protest.
ReplyDeleteWhat kind of struck me as being awkward somehow is that in 1992 and later on the Polish pope had become a darling of the world-wide public. Well, his adamant opposition against socialist rule and his frequent travelling might be two of the reasons why. The funny thing is that many of the greatest papal admirers (not only in Germany) have a protestant background. When visiting in Munich John Paul II. was greeted by more than 300 000 people, a third of them being Lutheran. I understand that New York City does have somewhat of a Catholic identity (descendants of the Irish, Italian, and Polish and Hispanic immigrant waves) but still only 33% identify as Catholics. If the MSG audience in 1992 resembled a respresentative cross section then a large percentage of non-Catholics were part of the mindlessness.
ReplyDeleteWhile my godfather played a key-role in preparing for the papal visit in Augsburg in 1987, my dad had a few tense debates with a cardinal who later became known as Benedict XVI. So I am partial to all this papal affairs.
Happy Father’s Day to all, enjoy your day! 😎
ReplyDeleteI could never bring myself to take the christian story seriously and I tried hard for many years. The idea that some one person is a conduit to God is the definition of fanaticism (Kant). The evils that we see have no boundaries, no religion, creed. What seems correct to me is that the United States does not take child welfare seriously. Instead of helping poor kids in this state, they cut their benefits and free lunch programs.
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ReplyDeleteTell people there is an invisible man in the sky who created the universe and the vast majority will believe you.
ReplyDeleteTell them the paint is wet and they have to touch it to be sure.
- George Carlin
Have you ever seen a bobcat just sitting by the trail . It's usually the face of her ripping the photo . I don't like you do not approach.
ReplyDeleteCouldn’t agree more strongly. I would add however the Bobcat belongs on the trail. We, humans, are encroaching on the Bobcat’s space.
DeleteSinead had no business being on that stage, staging her protest. Again it’s how one chooses to spend those 15 minutes. I also believe the Catholic population in and around NYC in 1992 was higher than previous statements would lead one to believe. City of immigrants. St. Patricks cathedral right down the street. Also, for those that do not live within the 5 boroughs (especially @ that time) NYC schools weren’t the greatest and ALOT of families chose to send kiddos to Catholic schools. I was raised Lutheran, but have drifted afar from organized religion. Believe what you like. Carry it with you. Treat all life with respect & dignity. /rant
Free speech only when you deem it appropriate then?
DeleteI read it differently: at a celebration a protest message is inappropriate. But then it was the MSG audience who sent the first of these messages to the celebration stage. O'Connor's recitation of Bob Marley's "War" was a reaction to the crowd, not something that O'Connor had planned to stage. So O'Connor and Herbsworld might not be that far apart, if the situation at the MSG is addressed. The SNL incident is a different story.
DeleteFree speech is rarely free. There is a cost associated with everything. Not for me to decide. As adults, choices lead to consequences.
DeleteI agree with your first 2 sentences.
DeleteBut that's not what you said is it?
"Sinead had no business being on that stage, staging her protest."
Again. My initial comment was not intended to imply free speech. More so “Situational Awareness” & reading the room. Personally, I didn’t care for her. And THATS what I meant by she shouldn’t have even been on the stage. An opinion. Mine. That most of the crowd @ MSG held that night, post SNL.
DeleteHow about we quit beatin’ this crazy dead horse.
Did George Carlin say anything about the beauty of the color of this wet paint? Rationalism and empiricism do not have all the answers. They do not explain why there are bobcats in the first place and not something else...
ReplyDeleteA curious child would be enough to render these all too simplistic world explanations meaningless.
ReplyDeleteI am a child. Thankfully also still curious. Two aspects of a life lived that fade with the dimming light. For most.
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ReplyDeleteI like George Carlin and his ridicule of religion but it is only a short laugh. The real religions are deep, dark, and difficult.
ReplyDelete