This is something that’s been simmering in my head for a couple of years now. Please forgive me for venting here, but it actually does have some relevance to our favourite discussion topic.
The UK media is just so absolutely stuffed with Celebrity crap, it’s beyond belief. They are totally besotted with the idea that celebrity is, in some way, important. First they started with ‘Big Brother’, ‘Fame Academy’ and ‘Pop Idol’, (mostly talentless nobodies getting their fifteen minutes of fame), then they graduated(?) to ‘Celebrity Fit Club’ (fat celebs trying to lose weight – yes, honestly!) and the ultimate kack(sp?) – ‘I’m a Celebrity – get me out of here’. (‘C’-rated celebs taken to the Aussie Outback and paid to do ridiculous stunts).
What’s worse is, the tabloid papers and TV are now FULL of the minutiae of these idiots lives. The really important stuff, of course: Who they’re sleeping with, where they are shopping, what clothes they’re wearing. AND people pay attention!
Jeezus H Kee-rist! Has the western world dummed down so far that this is the kind of thing now judged to be great entertainment? What happened to art, music and literature. Actually, that’s rhetorical. I KNOW there’s still some decent stuff out there. It’s just getting harder to find.
Back to GCA: the latest thread on Ernie Els (who I’m sure is a fine chap) foray into design only adds to my hypothesis that apparently even golf course design is not immune from this creeping influence. Designing golf courses seems to be more commonly looked upon as ‘another string to the bow’ of Pro golfers. But we know these CELEBRITY golfers are clearly being asked to do things of which they are incapable and for which they actually have to employ the talents of EXPERTS. I don’t expect them to be Harvard graduates, but let’s face it, most of them are pretty ‘thick’. I, for one, wouldn’t trust 200 acres of my backyard to many of them.
The saddest part of this is that I can see nothing which might bring about a change to any of this. Corporate business and its desire for celebrity association and perceived success will continue to support a market which the average golfer only analyses in terms of what he’s been ‘marketed’ with. Why should he really care anyway that his favourite golfer didn’t REALLY do the design. He MUST have at least SEEN it, right?
Should it not be the business of the Trade Associations to more actively, if not even more aggressively, to tout the abilities of their memberships in much more public forums than they currently do. For example, why not do a campaign involving the above-the-line media to advertise their services? It certainly seems to me that they presently waste a colossal amount of cash ‘preaching to the converted’ in the Trade Press of their own business, which could easily be better spent. Not very well targeted marketing, in my opinion!
Okay, vent over and back to watching ‘Celebrity Nose-Picking’ now. It’s currently my favourite half-hour on TV. I wonder what whats-her-name will be wearing?
FBD.