Sunday 1 May 2011

Super-injunctions, Celebrities & Privacy... Who's in the right?

If you see someone you know, cheating on their partner would you go and tell the partner...?  You would have a moral dilemma and more times than not you probably wouldn’t – but whether you would or wouldn’t doesn’t actually matter.  Compare this to a celebrity who gets caught doing something they shouldn’t.  Is it our right to plaster this across the tabloids about people we don’t know?  Whereas with people we do know we may turn a blind eye?

This post is on the subject of super-injunctions - court orders preventing a given matter being discussed and on top of that, preventing the fact that the order even exists from being reported – essentially making it vanish into thin air.  This has been in the news recently because the Lib Dem MP John Hemming has threatened, using a certain parliamentary privilege, to oust certain individuals - which he has now done so (23rd May).  This has led to a wider debate about issues of privacy...

Personally, I don’t see how it is anyone’s business what these people do in their private lives.  Does the fact that a Premiership football player, now confirmed as Ryan Giggs has been having an affair with Big Brother star Imogen Thomas impact our lives in anyway?  Not my life no.  Some may argue that due to their public status they gain certain advantages in life and should therefore be prepared to bear the brunt of the media if and when their misdemeanours are uncovered.  I would disagree with this argument...

However, on BBC News (April 26th), Niri Shan, head of law firm Taylor Wessing made a great point.  If celebrities’ go out and share their private lives in magazines and on television then they are voluntarily inviting public opinion - they surely cannot expect their lives to all of a sudden be private when they decide.  But then part of me feels that in this age of technology, half the population are making their private lives public on a daily basis through the likes of twitter and facebook... So is there even a difference...?

There is also the issue that these super injunctions cost 50K – Yes 50 THOUSAND POUNDS!  Slapping on such a high price tag automatically makes them exclusively available to the wealthy.  The geeza down your local who gets caught by his wife’s best mate can’t exactly nip down to court and buy one!  Imogen Thomas couldn't afford to either so as a result became the sole target of a media onslaught for her part in the affair – yet the ‘other party’ has effectively got away scot free minus a week’s wages – surely that’s not right or fair?

It is not a secret that many people, male and female, have affairs - there is no argument there.  It is also true that certain people are aware of and tolerate their partner's affairs for reasons personal to them.  If a newspaper then becomes aware of the indiscretions and decides to stick them on the front page families can be torn apart unnecessarily in the name of 'news' when the non-offending partner was already fully aware and 'content' with the situation.

What do you think...?

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11 comments:

  1. These celebrities make their money from being in the media spotlight. Like they say, "if you live by the sword...."

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  2. Celebrities who promote themselves as being 'family men' and receive money for sponsorship deals, stories in 'Hello' magazine etc, lose the right to privacy as the lives they are promoting are a lie. I think the fact a certain actor is having pointed digs at him in the press and receiving a lot of attention online is due to the recent article where he went on about being such a family man and how important his wife is to him.

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  3. @Hephzibubbli I can't agree with you more. if you go out publicly promoting a lie then when you act in the opposite way you are inviting criticism from all angles - if you are private about everything however then I feel like it is perhaps a bit unfair to have your dirty laundry dragged through the tabloids.

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  4. I'm putting out a shagging order-along with WikiJunctions.

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  5. I know that Jose Mourinho has TWO injunctions with the High Court. It was reported in the Daily Express online article when super injunctions were in their infancy but it was removed shortly afterwards. He and Avram Grant are the football manager injunction people. JM definately comes into the category mentioned by @Hephzibubbli. I know another injunction is Tiger Woods which is mentioned on wikileaks....

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  6. How do you all know so much???

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  7. My information comes from what I have read, heard, and seen. I cannot speak for others who have made allegations, but I will say that it only takes one person to speak out and word can spread like fire.

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  8. Is anyone really interested in what these guys do and who they do it with?, but as soon as they want privacy then the world wants to know who, why, when and where and will do anything to find out who done it.

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  9. There are more important things going on in the world. The only benefactors are big media and lawyers.

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  10. These people are big celebrities, they live on the global stage, if you or I had an affair, then the people who know us would gossip, the same is true for these celebrities. It is wrong that these people are trying to defend an image that is not real, it is wrong that the other person involved is told to supress the truth and it is wrong that our law is preoccupied with supporting these things under the pretend concern of privacy.

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  11. ... but Ryan Giggs doesn't make his money from being in the media spotlight.

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