Kamala Harris Leads of Chant of 'Amber Nicole Thurman' in Georgia
Survey: Fewer Than 4 Percent of Journalists Are Republicans as of 2022
Influencer Says Watching Tim Walz Pretend to Work on His Truck is Like...
James Woods Uses Meme to Slam Gavin Newsom's Ban on Memes
NYT Explains Why Her Cooking Could Make Kamala Harris a Great President
Your Betters Have Spoken: 'Let Them Eat Bugs'
MSNBC's Stephanie Ruhle on Kamala Harris Avoiding Interviews: 'We Don't Live in Nirvana'
BRING IT ON: Trump Vows to End Sanctuary Cities Using 'Full Weight' of...
Rachel Maddow Says It Would Take 'Months' for Georgia to Hand-Count Ballots
Tim Walz FINALLY Said Something Honest, Folks: We CAN'T Afford Four More Years...
Frank Luntz Asks Why Kamala Harris Didn't Just Do the Fox News Debate
Tyrants Fold When You Push Back: Ireland Scraps Hate Speech Law That Would've...
Cards Against Humanity Sues Elon Musk
LOL WUT?! Missouri Dem STRAIGHT UP Lies About SAVE Act Preventing Married Women...
What Voter Integrity? AZ Court Rules 98,000 Unconfirmed Citizens Can Vote Full Ballot

New York Times op-ed says it's time for 'some sharp, focused terrifying realism' about COVID-19

When we hear a call for focused realism about COVID-19, we think people should be better informed about the survival rate from the coronavirus and the near-absence of COVID transmission in schools. But that’s not what Elisabeth Rosenthal wants; in an op-ed for the New York Times, she recalls the graphic scare campaigns around smoking that gave her nightmares and thinks the messaging around COVID-19 should be similar, not some “We’re in this together” nonsense. She’s not talking fear-mongering, though; she just wants nightmare-inducing imagery over cute slogans.

Advertisement

She writes:

As cases were mounting in September, the Michigan government produced videos with the exhortation, “Spread Hope, Not Covid,” urging Michiganders to put on a mask “for your community and country.”

Forget that. Mister Rogers-type nice isn’t working in many parts of the country. It’s time to make people scared and uncomfortable. It’s time for some sharp, focused terrifying realism.

I’m not talking fear-mongering, but showing in a straightforward and graphic way what can happen with the virus.

Another message could feature a patient lying in an I.C.U. bed, immobile, tubes in the groin, with a mask delivering 100 percent oxygen over the mouth and nose — eyes wide with fear, watching the saturation numbers rise and dip on the monitor over the bed.

Um, didn’t Gov. Andrew Cuomo just win an International Emmy for his coronavirus messaging, which included that silly #NewYorkStrong poster that even Chris Hayes 100 percent thought was a joke?

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

It’s bad enough we already have unhinged Karens driving around screaming “Kill yourself” at lockdown protesters.

Advertisement

Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement