Wednesday April 16, 2008
An Alternative Passover Story
The city of Ramses was almost ready. The deadline, set for the
inauguration of the new king of Egypt couldn't be missed. When the
construction was falling behind, more Hebrew slaves were taken off
other construction projects and diverted to Ramses. There was too much
at stake. The news media from every corner of the world converged on
Egypt to cover the inauguration of both the new city and the new king.
Reporters, journalists, cameramen and anchors were pretty much
everywhere. It was almost impossible to find parking, and hotel prices
went sky high. Tent cities
were put together near the pyramids, satellite dishes everywhere, like
mushrooms after a rain.
The Hebrew slaves, knew that this was a wonderful opportunity to get
the entire planet's attention to their misery, and figured that a well
staged mutiny, close to the celebration day will capture everyone's
minds and make the Egyptians look really bad. So they contacted a PR
specialist, a retired wizard who insisted that his brother is hired as
well, and a God. For years they trained, experimented with blood,
swamp and farm animals, various kinds of insects and a lot of light and
sound.
A few months before the big day, the Hebrews sent the wizard and his
brother to the king. The strange looking guy with the long hair, the
beard and the robes told the king that Hebrews are to be set free or
else. The king found it very amusing. When Moses turned his stick
into a snake, the king's own magicians did the same without delay. But
Moses' snake was hungrier, so it ate the others and turned back to a
stick. Moses left the palace.
A few weeks went by, and the PR specialist instructed the team to start
staging their performances. The God was instructed to simply not let
the Pharaoh free the Hebrews until he's been told to. So the vicious
cycle had started. The Nile river turned to blood, then got infested
with frogs. The media went wild. The networks started sending more
senior anchormen, and was broadcasting live. Ratings for the Hebrew
rebellion went through the roof. But the Pharaoh wouldn't hear of
freeing the Hebrews, the God made sure of that. So it continued. Very
serious lice infestation mysteriously showed up and the funny side
effect was that you could have watched the evening news, with the
distinguished looking anchormen, seriously delivering the news while
scratching their entire body with long, wide motions.
No deliverance yet.
In the meantime, the media and the world paid no attention to the
nearing inauguration of the king and the City of Ramses. The story of
the strange plagues of Egypt was way more interesting. Game shows,
realistic TV, even the Late Night hosts started talking of nothing
else. Retired actors, rock band leaders around the world, who had no
clue what being Hebrew is all about, started attending protests,
writing articles and letters to the editor, throwing slurs at the
Egyptians, while glorifying the Hebrews. The plan was working well.
Moses and the gang showed up at the palace again, this time smug with
the success of the presentation of power, and the media coverage. But
the Pharaoh wouldn't budge, after all, the God was in charge of that,
and he was doing a good job.
Bad animals started showing up from the desert next. But nobody really
paid attention, in fact, they were attracting all the excess lice,
relieving the residents of Egypt. When the plague started hitting the
cattle, everyone immediately blamed the neighboring countries for
deliberately infecting them with the Mad Cow disease. When the boils
started appearing on the bodies of the Egyptians as well as the media,
the summer heat and global warming was blamed. The Pharaoh was
unimpressed. Deliverance? Give me a break. The media continued a
full 24 hours coverage, live, but the anchormen, infested with lice,
and covered in boil scars, started to look somewhat tired of the
ordeal. The inauguration of the king and the city was promptly
forgotten.
Hail followed by locusts which all got lost in the complete darkness
which followed. Imagine that: reporters standing in the spotlight,
everything else is pitch dark, large locusts are flying around, and the
boil scars and the scratch marks still clearly visible. Ratings broke
the records of the 2000 BC Olympic Games. It was a media frenzy.
Finally, following the death of the firstborns, and with a lot less
people around, including quite a few reporters, the Pharaoh gave up.
He ordered the Hebrews to just get the hell out of sight, and out of
Egypt. They really wanted to take their time packing and organizing
delegations to explore possible residence, but the media managers told
them that if they don't rush out, there will be no coverage. So they
quickly packed, got ready to leave. A baking fiasco made all their
bread look like cardboard, which the media found mysteriously
appealing. The Hebrews have left Egypt. The media forgot why it has
shown up in Egypt in the first place, and went down to the Red Seashore
to watch and cover the final presentation of power by the Wizard, his
brother and the God.
Thousands of reluctant Hebrews were standing at
the seashore, waiting for some sign. Moses raised his stick. The red
sea started rising right away. But the OWTV cameraman missed the shot,
so he asked Moses to repeat that motion, this time a little more
gently. Moses did, and the sea rose faster. Everyone drowned.
Moral of the story: none. Well maybe one. Or more. Don't underestimate the power of the media. Don't assume that media coverage is always impartial. Don't assume that the media designation of the victim is always correct. Don't assume that the media designation of the villain is always correct either. Always doubt coincidences. Myths are powerful, but not always they are well aligned with reality.
But maybe most important of all: the media can manipulate events and to drive the outcome. But neither the media, nor the public opinion are there to understand the consequences, to deal with the results, to fix what was broken. The media assumes the "obligation to report" but denies the driving of the public opinion and therefore its influence of the turn of events and consequences. As I said before: myths are powerful, but not always are well aligned with reality.
If you are one of those who observe Passover, have a great Holiday. For those of who don't, have a great Holiday as well.
Posted at 10:03AM Apr 16, 2008 by Amiram Hayardeny in Personal | Comments[4]
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Cute version :) I wrote this a year ago, gee has it been that lon:
http://blogs.sun.com/jo/entry/four_questions
Posted by Yonatan on April 16, 2008 at 01:21 PM CST #
don't over-estimate the power of the media. They too get manipulated.
If Hebrews had no will to leave Egypt, they would have never walked out, and there would have been no stories to tell. The bottom line is, the Hebrew slaves wanted out. The media may played catalyst.
If there is a will, there is a way. Maybe not right away, but if the will outlasts time, it'll happen eventually. You don't need to look far into history - just the look at the unwillingly annexed republics of USSR.
Posted by pirates on April 17, 2008 at 03:53 AM CST #
there is 10 plagues
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