Ray Rice, Jennifer Lawrence, And The End Of Privacy

Please do not misunderstand me.

By

image – Flickr / Marco Manna
image - Flickr / Marco Manna
image – Flickr / Marco Manna

I don’t watch the news but thanks to Twitter and Facebook, I couldn’t help but notice two recent so-called stories, one involving naked pictures of Jennifer Lawrence, the other a punch Ray Rice landed on his bride.

In my social media feed, there seemed to be consensus: we shouldn’t look at the Jennifer Lawrence pictures because that’s an invasion of her privacy and, worse, sexual assault. And Ray Rice is a violent, wife beating creep — and the NFL, not to mention American culture in general, is misogynistic. I agree with all of the above.

But that’s not what struck me about these stories. What struck me is that no one seemed to be talking about the fact that we’re looking at images of people leading their lives. These aren’t movies or TV shows. This wasn’t even a fan’s videotape or from the smartphone of a crusading activist. It’s a selfie and a surveillance video. Even the articles that decried the theft of Jennifer Lawrence’s images as an invasion of privacy, yelled Thief! not Panopticon! (This may seem like a pedantic distinction but thief assumes we record everything; panopticon questions said recording of everything.)

What the what? How did we get to the point that no one questions that fact that everything is always being recorded? And that these recordings are there to be watched by all at any time? And that the images we’re not supposed to look at are selfies by an actress and the ones we are supposed to look at are from a surveillance camera?

Don’t get me wrong. I agree that it’s invasive and creepy to look at Lawrence’s private pictures. My question is: Why then are we allowed to look at the Rice video? Why is that not an invasion of privacy? He was recorded without his knowing! Talk about creepy. Watching that ubiquitous clip — yes, I watched it, but for many reasons did not see Ms. Lawrence’s images — I felt an unsettling complicity with a police state that monitors all our actions.

The discussion of Ray Rice moved exclusively into the content of the images, ignoring the event of ubiquitous recording and the casual evacuation of any presumption of privacy. As Marshall McLuhan would say, the media focused on the message, not the medium.

Please do not misunderstand me. I am not saying we don’t live in a culture of violence against women. In fact, I see how the hacking of an actress’s nude pictures and the punch of a woman by a sports star share a common ideology: women are objects to be viewed and hit. It is troubling and grotesque and worthy of much discussion and more, although I couldn’t find articles that made that connection.

What I am saying is that there is another commonality here: the will to hack and view Ms. Lawrence nude images is the will that has us feel righteous watching and condemning Mr. Rice’s video. They stem from a culture that assumes, without question, that everything is recorded and hence there to be seen. Yes, the content is dramatically different. Yes, his behavior looks repulsive and endemic of violence against women. But both events entail the utter evacuation of privacy in the age of the always-on, always-recording web.

I am wondering why we feel we have the right to look at the Ray Rice video and pass judgment but we’re not supposed to look at Jennifer Lawrence’s pictures, a woman who oddly enough makes her living by people watching images of her. How is this distinction drawn? How is it OK to watch one but not the other?

I am not saying that we can’t draw distinctions between images and their respective right to privacy (or lack thereof). As a culture, this is what we do all the time. In some instances, it is the law of the social. Other times, it’s the law of the state. For instance, unlike the Lawrence photos, the Rice video could and should be subpoenaed as part of a criminal proceeding.

Is the Rice video ok to see because he didn’t take it? Because it’s a surveillance video? And it’s not OK to watch Jennifer Lawrence because she didn’t want them to be seen? That just doesn’t seem right to me. Watching both seems creepy and wrong. But, frankly, it’s the surveillance video that really creeps me out.

What I find troubling is that in all the discussion of these events, I’ve seen no one question how we came to see the Rice video at all. In fact, I’ve heard criticisms of the NFL that it didn’t seek the video actively or thoroughly enough! Isn’t the NFL a private company? How or why would it or should it be looking at private video? And yet the hackers are criticized for looking so thoroughly for images of someone whose images are everywhere.

Both parties, it seems to me, have been wronged by a culture that has accepted the ubiquitous recording and viewing of everything, a culture that has gleefully — indeed giddily — abandoned the right to privacy.

No doubt, the content of both sets of images is of the utmost importance. Violence against women is horrific and takes many insidious forms, from viewing private nude pictures to systemic physical abuse. But equally disturbing to me is that we live in a world where we assume that everything is recorded and everything is there for our viewing and, moreover, that we reserve the right to pass judgment based on that viewing. Who needs the NSA when we have ourselves? Thought Catalog Logo Mark


About the author

Daniel Coffeen

Daniel is an independent writer, reader, teacher, and philosopher. Follow him on Twitter here.