Teens, Saturday morning, library?
Andrew Edwards
The rain was starting to let up, but author Joe Klein still managed
to attract about 200 high school students into a library Saturday.
Klein, a columnist for Time magazine and the author of “Primary
Colors,” visited the Newport Beach Central Library on Friday and
Saturday as a guest of the Newport Beach Public Library Foundation’s
Distinguished Speaker Lecture Series. Students from Corona del Mar
and Newport Harbor high schools and Sage Hill School were invited to
hear the longtime political writer share his perspectives on
learning, politicians and the media.
“I thought it was actually interesting to get his views on
politics today, and it’s interesting to know what [other] students
know,” 16-year-old Newport Harbor student Jake Fleming said. “I just
wanted to hear a different view because I talk to my parents and
other kids’ parents about politics.”
Klein opened his remarks with an effort to contradict advice given
to many teenagers occupied with pressures from standardized tests and
college applications.
“Let me just say that a lot of the time, parents don’t want me
talking to kids your age because my message is, ‘You can screw up,’”
he said, suggesting teenagers could take advantages of opportunities
like travel before packing up for the university.
“You don’t have to be a part of the intense college roulette
you’re all facing,” he said.
Klein called himself a “flaming moderate,” who disagrees with the
conventional wisdom that Republicans are strong on national security
while Democrats have domestic policy advantages. He said
conservatives make good points for privatizing Social Security to
give future retirees more investment choices and avoid a potential
collapse in the system’s funding, but he agrees with liberals who
oppose the war in Iraq and believe terrorism should be confronted
multilaterally. He said his views are different than most in the
nation’s capital.
“No one in Washington trusts me very much, which is kind of the
way I want it,” he said.
Many of the students wanted to hear Klein’s take on the media.
Eric Lamotte, an 18-year-old Sage Hill student, asked if Klein
expects major media outlets to delve deeply into complex policy
debates or to showcase arguments between talking heads. Klein
responded that large media agencies cover stories people show
interest in, noting Time could sell more magazines if they put
Brittney Spears on the cover than if they promoted an in-depth
article on Social Security.
“Big-time journalism, establishment journalism, the kind of thing
that I do, is very much market driven,” he said. “The public is
interested in sensational things, in sex. Politicians having sex is
usually a good thing for business.”
Another student asked Klein if he sees bias in the news.
“There is bias, obviously; the notion of objectivity is a
fantasy,” he said. “You are molded by the things you have seen,
genetics and a host of other things ... the best you can hope for is
fairness.”
After the talk, Klein said the young audience was a departure from
the graying crowds he usually speaks to. He said he is often
disappointed by apparent apathy among young Americans, and his
audiences usually “look like an old people’s house.”
Students who would take time out of their weekend to listen to
Klein talk about Social Security and journalism might be an exception
from most people their age, but 17-year-old Sage Hill student Phil
Kaye said there is no excuse not to care about politics.
“I think politics, by nature, is the future of our country, and
I’m kind of appalled by the lack of interest,” Kaye said.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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