And I fucking despise the media for being incapable of using judgment, like grownups, to distinguish between important, relevant stories and fucking tabloid celebrity-gossip material that barely disguises a juvenile fascination with toilet humor. Is there not something going on with, say one of the two wars that we're in that wouldn't merit more screen time than somebody's damn dick?
Sex sells, and the media is all clamoring for ratings and a nice appearance.
Go watch the un-aired reporter footage of 9/11 if you don't believe me. Before the broadcast starts all of the reporters are fixing their hair up to look pretty while people die in the background. Would have sold well... but prominent media outlets refused to carry the story.
This is why I don't immediately trust everything that's said on the news. Have you ever seen that one story that you knew a little bit about, but the news "covered?" It's wrong every time. I'll give you an example:
Napster for all you whippersnappers was the first big peer-to-peer network. It was basically an indexing service that let anyone connected browse shared files on hard drives. (That's not meant to be condescending, I really don't know how prominent all this still is anymore)
The news coverage I saw of it directly stated that Napster was a website that people could download songs from. That was not the case. That simple erroneous sentence changes the entire parameters of the issue (Ask and I'll clarify if anyone's interested). This was a nationally debated topic, with a fundamental error in the basic premise of the story.
Regarding the Weiner case: The word "unsolicited" gets thrown out a lot. I've also heard at least one account that the exchanges aren't publicly available, and at least once the exchange was initiated by the woman photo recipient with a sexually loaded greeting. In the first contact between them.
Which of these accounts is true? I don't have access to the correspondence for every incident, so I can't say for certain. I know which one stands out more though, the implication that a big crazy politician is twitter-flashing people at random. That makes a better story than the one where it wasn't an isolated incident and is more of an embarasment for both involved parties.