One of the first “most popular” YouTube clips was a cat
playing the piano. A Tiger Tabby climbed up a piano bench and starting touching
the keys. Then was another cat played the piano; that time, the owner moved the
surly feline’s paws over the keys. The Orange Tabby “Keyboard Kitty” went from
catnaps to celebrity catnips in a matter
of days. A few years later, CNN’s Anderson Cooper lamented the by-gone days of “Keyboard
Kitty”, following the rise of accidents and personal bloopers which were
dominating YouTube.
Musical talent has transformed YouTube into another commercial
venue. Rihanna, Pitbull, and Justin Beiber dominate the YouTube charts.
Language professors, political commentators, and all the television shows that
you never got to see, you can now see at any time. Let’s not forget the
infectiously annoying “Gummi Bear Song”. Yes, a singing gummibear dancing
around in his (or its?) underwear has commanded a multi-viral following, along
with some baby in a bumblebee costume in a bathroom. . . .
This YouTube Boob-Tube explosion wars against the serious
and ignores the eternal.
First, stirring yet stalling political problems do not get the
press as they deserve. Instead, the younger generation listens to the same stupidity
over and over. How many times freshmen in a computer class watched fat people
fall down stairs – I neglect to recall. The disturbing number of gang-fights
recorded online is a call for discretion still unheeded. Everyone wants to be a
star, but the mediocrity of millions of “fifteen minutes of fame” reduces the
light years of brightness in the sky.
One example of the dominance of the unserious: the 2012
Berman-Sherman Congressional race. The tussle for the newly-drawn California 30th
Congressional District drew national endorsements. One YouTube clip focused on
the last five minutes of a Berman-Sherman debate at Pierce College. The “elder”
(not necessarily “mature”) statesman taunted the younger Democrat Brad Sherman.
Bad idea, since Sherman has a notoriously rough reputation, with the high
turnover of Congressional staff to prove it. “You wanna get into this?!”
Sherman grabbed Berman, getting in the older incumbent’s face. The sheriff
stepped in, and all was well. They had debated pressing issues, but the only
segment impressed on the rest of us was a schoolyard altercation.
In March, the “Joseph Kony” documentary went viral. Kony the
Ugandan warlord heads the “Lord’s Resistance Army”, replete with child soldiers
and humanitarian atrocities. The activist group which filmed the thirty-minute
expose, U.S. organization Invisible Children, harnessed the attention of high
school youth and ABC political correspondent George Stephanpoulos. Just one
week after the worldwide attention, Kony remains at large and lethal, the
YouTube Documentary has peaked at 90,000,000 hits, and the documentary director’s
indecent exposure led to a meltdown, both of which practically stole the show
from his own show.
The second concern, one of eternity, could just as well
reference identity. What has propelled Korean popstar PSY into YouTube
NumberOne-dom? An artificial interest on behalf of a globally-connected
community to reach an Internet milestone. Here, the frivolous intersects with
an unrealized yearning for the infinite. Everyone wants to be a “big deal”, and
playing a little part of making a big deal even bigger is quite appealing.
Yet the ancient King and prophet had already discovered the
quest, the question, and the answer deepened into this electronic hub-bub:
“He hath made every thing beautiful in his time: also he
hath set the world in their heart, so that no man can find out the work that
God maketh from the beginning to the end.” (Ecclesiastes 3: 11)
A more recent translation reveals the greater meaning reveling
of this verse:
“He made everything appropriate in its time. He also placed
eternity within them—yet, no person can fully comprehend what God is doing from
beginning to end.” (New International Version)
Man is looking for something that he must receive by
revelation. All the YouTube hits, the numbers, the outlying celebrity, all of
it shrinks to nothing, like adding anything to infinity. The noise, the bells,
the whistles, and we are left with the emptiness of many hits on a YouTube
clip. The serious remains uncertain, and the celebrated does not last, like the
wind which never stops, never stays, yet ever flows.
The world is looking for the eternal. Our hearts demand it,
yet as much as we cut, paste, film, and make haste to find it and share it, these
efforts ignore the importance of the men and women around us, while making
something of nothing, yet ever still we yearn from anything to be “something more”.
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