Suicide is news too

  • Posted by
  • Filed in City
  • September 7, 2005

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So, according to my sister's boyfriend, who witnessed it, there was a nude jumper this morning on the DVP. He jumped off one of the overpasses near the BMW facility (either Queen St or Eastern Ave). Of course, they didn't bother to tell us that on the evening news. Instead, Global gave us a report of increased cycle-cops around schools to intimidate the 16 year old out on bail (whose face was graciously blurred).

Now, I understand that there's something like at least one suicide a week on the TTC, but they don't want to make the actual numbers public. It would seem they prefer the accuracy of innuendo and rumour. The same is true for people like this morning's fellow, who (if successful) chose to leave the earth as buck naked as when he arrived. I'll credit him with some performance art originality.

But why the silence? Why do news editors everywhere think we should care about the car wrecks and murders? I haven't been murdered lately, I don't plan to be anytime soon. But what business is it of yours if I am? The same goes for the car accident. If anything, that'll be between the insurance companies. I'll concede it's everyone's business inasmuch as it ties up traffic, but beyond that I don't want or need to know.

Isn't it true that murders are rarely random, but usually are the culmination of some dispute?

We may live in a time when Dr. Phil thinks the whole of the United States and Canada needs to witness the tawdry details of some family's anguish (today's episode on incest for christ's sakes) which completely disregards the reasons for confidentially in the first place.

Let's be clear here: there are some things of which it is none of our business. I don't want to know the problems of some abused family, unless I'm in the position of needing to help. But I'm not a priest, a counselor, a psychiatric worker, a bail officer, etc. And if I was, I'd be under strict gag laws. Confidentiality exists as much for the benefit of society as it does for the relevant parties. I for one felt I didn't need to know the details of Dr. Phil's incestuous family, and quickly changed the channel in disgust. (For those of you who advertise during his time slot, why not start sending that money to the Red Cross?)

The arrest of the local pedophile, the murder of an abused wife, or the coke habit of the local hoodlum, the grow-op of our neighbors ... all this is brought out to be part of the public record. This news is supposed to do what? If anything, it makes us feel less safe, but Toronto remains one of the safest cities in the world, and what crime exists just seems part of life. And given that seems a large portion of this crime is all drug related, it makes me think the only reason we keep our stupid drug laws in place is to ensure the police job security.

Anyway, I for one want to know how many people think Toronto is too awful to live in. I would like to have some understanding of the suicide rate. Because all the regular crime gets reported, I'm able to sit here and think it's relatively low, compared with other places. I get to formulate what understanding I bring to the issue, and feel rather safe in the metropolis. But I can't say the same for the depressed, the scared, the anguished, the people who need help but haven't gotten it, for those for whom society has failed.

I'm reminded of Charles Taylor's thoughts now. Taylor, a philosopher originally from McGill (and doing the scholar circuit the last few years - he was at U of T a year ago) argues that while the Modernist philosophical tradition begins with Descartes' introspection, our reality is really one comprised of dialogue. You might think that you are, but Decartes began the line of telling the rest of us. You cannot exist alone. Our lives are comprised of conversations, and even this writing is part of a conversation frozen into our alphabet's symbols. The comments section below are there for your side, your contribution.

It is because we are social creatures that the news exists - all these reporters on the street talking to some box on someone's shoulder would be absurd if they didn't see themselves are part of a larger stream involving the unanimous and anonymous audience. They talk and therefore they are.

And as social creatures, we want to understand our place in society, so we have a tendency to gossip. So the news thinks we might be interested in the painful stories of people who can't get along, and instead of being useful and warning us that there's some psycho out there, instead we only get the news after they've been arrested (and hence, this is why I don't really care about this type of news, it always comes after the crimes have been committed in the first place).

But suicides are a death built around the Cartesian model of introspection. I think I'm depressed and therefore I am. I think I can't go on and therefore I can't. They represent failures of our society to reach out the necessary hand, to bring someone into a relationship, to involve someone in a dialogue. Murders are crimes of passion, they involve at least two people, one of which is cruel. A suicide is an act of loneliness, involving only one person, whom people in general don't care enough about. We extend our hard heartedness to not even mentioning their deaths on the news.

Is it because it's shameful to kill oneself? Is it a left-over from Christianity, when suicides wouldn't even be given a funeral? Is the TTC's reluctance to talk about the people who kill themselves on its tracks because they think it's morbid? The same must be said for the Go Trains, who regularly have 'accidents' involving pedestrians. With such a rate of 'accidents' that they show, it's a wonder they haven't been shut down has a safety hazard.

Morbidity doesn't usually stop the news - how much more morbid is it to show us pictures of blown up buses in Israel? I clipped a few over the past couple of years, fascinated in that morbid way by the scenes of bodies frozen in death.

And even over the past week, with the catastrophe in New Orleans, the news is showing us anonymous rotting black bodies, which bring a grunt of awfulness from me, but also help me understand just how bad things are down there.

My point here is that the news has no problem feeding morbid curiosity. So why not go that step further and tell us about suicides?

Regarding the argument of selfishness and shame - when Kurt Cobain killed himself, all the fans were like, 'what an asshole' and bitched about his selfishness. That always seemed stupid to me. Are you saying then, that your selfishness is such that you'd prefer he stuck around suffering just so that you can go on buying Nirvana CDs? That was my argument at the time.

It's not shameful to kill oneself. It's an act of desperation, or if you're a terrorist, of idiocy. If you're so past caring about this world to want to live in it, what do you care about shame? And why should we as a society, continue to take their actions personally?

If you're of the school that it's a condemnation of our company, then I suppose I can see where you're coming from, but I'd like to think we're bigger than denying them identity out of a petty sense of insult. I mean, our world is pretty screwed up, and those that leave it voluntarily are probably saving themselves a lot of grief. But at the same time, I'd like to understand their motivations, their criticisms, in order to help improve the situation.

The news wants us to believe we live in a cruel world, full of crime and the winners of sports where one person or group defeats another in glorious competition. By denying us the reports of the losers, who validate its cruelty, they aren't allowing us the chance to think about what's wrong with the picture, and how it could change.

To the naked jumper: rest in peace wherever you are.

image: from Wikipedia

Reader Reviews and Comments

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While a suicide may be news, it may not necessarily be news worthy. If this nude jumper, indeed only had his birthday suit when he met his intended demise, chances are, he had no identificiation.

I also feel that the media has a responsibility to tell us what went on in the world/city ... that relates to us as its citizens. A solo jumper or someone on the brink of suicide, as cold as it may sound, doesn't in the least affect me as a citizen living in the city.

Sure it's sad, and I feel for whatever demons they're fighting, but it's not my fight. It's theirs and if they can't bring themselves to get the help they need, there really is nothing I can do.

Lord knows the last thing someone wants to hear is the following report.

"In the news today, a man took his life over the DVP over pass onto the 401. In his letter, the man praised the nude jumper and thanked him for inspiring him to do what he's been thinking about doing for awhile now."

Posted by: Christine at September 7, 2005 11:27 PM

Christine - the no ID thing is valid, but the Lord knows that I am the person that wants to hear that very last thing.

I tried to point out that car wrecks and murders don't affect me in the least as a citizen in the city, since they aren't happening to me. But it seems to me that if the news wants to tell us about them, they could tell us about those who kill themselves as well. For you to say it's not your fight is fair enough, but the sort of callousness you're admiting to is part of the problem.

It seems to me that people kill themselves because people have turned their backs to them. And for you to suggest it's all their fault because they haven't gotten the help that they need is a lot to suggest, since depressed people can barely feed themselves.

I'd like to know what their problems are, what their notes read, and have some sense of how common or uncommon this is. I'd like to know why people are turning their backs to them in the first place.

I think the argument here is: how does one decide what's newsworthy? I'm feel like 90% of what's regularly considered newsworthy is in fact not, and I'm saying that in my case, there's at least 1 audience member who thinks suicides are newsworthy.

Posted by: Timothy at September 7, 2005 11:42 PM

"In the news today, a man took his life over the DVP over pass onto the 401. In his letter, the man praised the nude jumper and thanked him for inspiring him to do what he's been thinking about doing for awhile now."

This is EXACTLY why they don't report it. Suicide rates go up after a suicide is publicised. It's sad, but there's a lot of people out there that just need that extra confidence of knowing that it CAN be done, and someone's done it, y'know?

Posted by: brokenengine at September 8, 2005 10:42 AM

The point of not reporting it is to stop the copycats. Whenever they report a suicide, suicide rates jump up as more and more people do it for the attention.

Posted by: Stevie at September 8, 2005 11:07 AM

Is the TTC's reluctance to talk about the people who kill themselves on its tracks because they think it's morbid?

Commiting suicide on the TTC can be potentially dangerous. Several years ago, some of my friends were busking in a subway station and yanked someone off the tracks who tried to jump in front of a train, putting themselves at risk during the resuce. SImilar stories appear in the paper from time to time.

Subway suicides can also be traumatic for witnesses and TTC staff. So yeah, reducing copycats is a good idea ...

... but maybe the TTC is TOO quiet. maybe they need to be a little more vocal about how suicides and suicide attemtps on transit hurt others.

Posted by: blamb at September 8, 2005 11:49 AM

As a comment on sensationalism in the news, this article has a point. Why should one type of human tragedy get more play than another. But personally I'd rather not hear or see any sort on the news. Fire, accidents, murders, fistfights. These are the relm of sensationalist news reports on the commercial local channels. It becomes so repetitive that each event becomes a non-event. Its the pornography of human misery and I wont be apart of it.

Posted by: Michael at September 8, 2005 1:21 PM

many years ago, a female teen idol singer committed suicide in Japan due to an affair with her manager, it was widely reported, of course, due to her fame... many teenagers followed her and jumped off office buildings to kill themselves. It was insane..

Posted by: JackatM2 at September 8, 2005 4:35 PM

what a disgusting post. this is not news at all. is a person dying of cancer news? it sounds like you are just trying to be provocative and on some level you have succeeded = you have provoked me never to read this awful blog again. this site has really dumbed down writing anyway. i'll do my best to bad mouth it around town.

Posted by: luke at September 8, 2005 4:53 PM

a collective reply to comments:

Re: copycat argument This argument makes a lot of sense to me. But then it's unfortunate that this logic doesn't apply to the rest of what's considered newsworthy. Depressive suicides get a gag order to prevent copycats, but suicide bombers get 'breaking news' banners. I mean, a terrorist group like Al Qaida relies on media coverage. Like I once wrote to the CBC after one of the July's bombings in London, it only seems to give the terrorists what they're after. And as Stevie says, they don't announce them to prevent the copycats looking for attention. All I can say is that if you kill yourself looking for attention you should win a Darwin Award, since as Camus pointed out, you're not going to be around to bask in it.

I agree with Blamb's point that the TTC (and the Go Train for that matter) are too quiet about the issue. As Katherine raised in her post, sometimes, this is none of our business. But as Luke asks in his reply, 'is a person dying of cancer news?' Well, I guess it is when it's Chuck Strahl or Chuck Cadman. It's also a big deal if your name is Terry Fox or Lance Armstrong. So yes, a person dying of cancer is news sometimes. I was prompted to write the post, and start this discussion, because when people jump off overpasses onto busy highways, that's something I think we have as much a right to know about as the other accidents that tie up traffic. I mean, there was that example last spring of the suicide and attempted murder of the little girl. The only suicides that get into the news are the murder-suicides, which is nothing we all need to know about. I remember the woman who jumped in front of the subway with her newborn in 2000. That prompted news stories about post-natal depression. And the next time you're delayed for whatever because someone has jumped onto the tracks of the TTC or GO, wouldn't it be better to tell us that is the reason the schedule's gone wonky? Isn't it more fair to have this common knowledge so that the person you're supposed to meet knows this to be the case?

Michael and I are the same page. As much as Luke thinks I'm being provocative (not consciously in this case) I'm sort of just asking why not add suicides to the misery porn. Just now at supper I had the misfortune to have the TV tuned to CTV, and they gave my the 'breaking news' and helicopter p.o.v of 'another shooting!' I don't want to know about any of this stuff, but I think it's fair to say that suicides in some cases are something we have a right to know about.

Posted by: Timothy at September 8, 2005 6:44 PM

This is a really great site. Thanks! I ll be back soon!

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