That was the first word that popped into my mind when
I first saw this picture. If you can’t catch my drift, google the urban
dictionary definition of the word.
When did Time magazine become a joke? I remember, in
the 70s as a kid, eagerly waiting for the weekly issue to arrive in our family
mailbox, and I would read it cover to cover. Now, since at least 2000 I
suppose, everything is partisan. Newsweek’s gone under (or was going under,
last I heard and last I paid attention to it, a few years back), and Time has
surpassed partisanship and slid full force into goofy self-parody land.
Time’s Man of the Year was once a respectable
honorary. But when did that slide into irrelevancy? It was supposed to denote the
figure in the news who, for better or worse, influenced the world the greatest
in that year. In my lifetime Reagan graced the cover, as did Soviet dictators
Andropov and Gorbachev. Heck, even “the computer,” a silly but accurate choice
for 1982, represented not a man but a thing that influenced the world the
greatest that year. I think it must have been 1988, when the editors tried to
be cute again, and hailed “The Endangered Earth” as planet of the year that the
title became obsolete.
Oh well. Rest in Peace, Time Man of the Year. Join
such irrelevancies as the Nobel Peace Prize and the Academy Award for Best
Picture.
EDIT:
While speaking with my wife this morning about this post, she managed to sum it
up succinctly in a way which I wish I had: “Time’s Man of the Year is really
the Liberal Hero of the Year.” I heartily agreed, and added, “If the Time
editorial board had an ounce of intellectual honesty they’d have to have named
Trump – and I’m no fan of Trump – Man of the Year every year since 2015.” But as
both the Mrs. and me have pointed out, in our direct and indirect ways, that
old school definition of “Man of the Year” no longer exists, and hasn’t since
some point in the mid-80s.
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