For the past several months the media has attempted to
defile Joe Paterno’s great legacy which he worked so hard to build over the
years. They have described him as more than merely incompetent, actually
attributing to him a degree of evil greater than that of Jerry Sandusky in this
incident. It seems that the need to exaggerate, sensationalize, and exploit in
order to sell papers has resulted in a grave decrease in the journalistic
integrity of the media’s works. It is this sensationalism which has lead
people, who have no idea who Paterno is or what he has done, to see Paterno as
a man who is more at fault than Sandusky, the actual perpetrator of the heinous
acts. As recently as this Monday, one of my high school acquaintances, who attends
Auburn University, posted on Facebook, “Are they going to turn JoePa’s statue
around during the funeral so that way he can’t see anything?” I tried to
respond to this comment calmly, although it was tremendously hard. Since I could
not possibly explain to him all of the impact that Joe had on the Penn State
community, I contented myself with naming only a few by telling him about Joe’s
part in building one of the best libraries in the nation, an entire wing of the
hospital, and an interfaith center where kids and people of all religions can
come together to practice their religion. Even in the ensuing months after the
tragic revelations were made, Joe never uttered a word of reproach for how he
was treated and even encouraged all to embrace the values of being a Penn
Stater. Not surprisingly, my high school acquaintance had never heard about any
of these things. After talking to him a little while longer, he decided he
would no longer post anything about Joe Paterno, and eventually he completely
deleted that comment. A key lesson that I have learned from this entire fiasco
at Penn State is that when other people disagree with you, you can’t be angry with
them for disagreeing. Although I have previously been angry at those who
disagree with my ideas, Joe has taught me that cooler heads actually do prevail
and that actions do speak louder than words. Even though all odds may be
against you, it is better to remain calm and give the media nothing, rather than react to opposing views and give the media
another story to write.
It is really frustrating as Penn Stater to here other people talk about Joe Pa and be completely ignorant of his actions. All they associate with the legend is football and scandal. I don't know whether the fault lies more with the ignorance of the person or with the media. The media told the world bits and parts of Joe's life. Specifically the parts they thought would sell. Unfortunately that meant scandal. I’m not sure where the blame should lay, or if there should be blame at all, but it is sad that it is taking away from a great man’s life.
ReplyDeleteDealing with the whole Penn State scandal and having to explain it to others has been very frustrating for me as well. It is so hard to ignore people who make negative comments about Joe Paterno or even our university as whole especially because they really have no clue what actually went on. I try to calmly set some of my friends from back home straight, but when they continue to pick a fight with me about it I end up just ignoring them all together. Its so different for people who are on the outside versus people on the inside, like us as students here.
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