I just did a quick bit of research about this Sorkin chap. He defended what many are describing as a homophobic review by a theatre critic by claiming the problem is that the media and public now expect and pay too much heed to personal information about public figures. He has one paragraph in which he states the following:
Sorkin wrote:
I can only imagine that Setoodeh's piece felt like a solid kidney punch, not to just Mr. Hayes and the other actors tagged in the story, but to teenagers -- kids who live in daily fear of what their parents are going to say, of getting the hell beaten out of them at school, of being an oddity.
link
The irony is that this could describe anyone with an Autistic Disorder and Mr Sorkin is sure not helping us by trying to pry into and portray in a very public manner Zuckerberg's neuro-status (or the suspicions of unqualified folk in respect thereof).
Why is it any more legitimate in Mr Sorkin's mind to serve up someone's (alleged or suspected) neuro-status as though it is the property and fodder of the public when he seems to think we should not do this with a person's sexual orientation, personal habits whether or not they are an alcoholic, or the current status of their love life? Indeed why is that when someone in the media asserts a homosexual actor cannot "play heterosexual" everyone gets up in arms, but when a different "journalist" suggests elsewhere that it is the public's business whether or not a Prime Minister is Autistic, because (to paraphrase) the public have a right to make (knee jerk and uninformed) judgements on this basis, no one raises so much as an eyebrow?
It's no longer trendy to discriminate and spew bile on someone for their ethnicity or their sexuality, but it's apparently more trendy and acceptable than ever to do the same on the basis of any neurological difference and, it would appear, Autistic difference in particular. In my opinion, people like Sorkin seem to want to think of themselves as tolerant of difference (and would probably be offended to be included alongside the Savages of this world), but to me it appears that they are only tolerant of difference that it is unpopular and currently "different" to discriminate against. If everyone else discriminates against a characteristic, all tolerance seems to fly out the nearest window.
Or maybe it is not Sorkin who is the problem, but Max Fisher. Who exactly is inserting Autism here? Is it a descriptive from those producing the film or something Fisher is inserting? Either way I think the above quote of Sorkin's is aptly applied to us and it's past time people stopped viewing us as an exception to the wrongness of discrimination, including public mischaracterization.
As an added irony, note that in the linked to (above) page, you are invited to use "Facebook" to connect in order to leave comments on Sorkin's article. I wonder if people will be invited to connect and purchase tickets to Sorkin's upcoming movie about Zuckerberg through Facebook.
Last edited by pandd on 14 May 2010, 9:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.