ZB ZB
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Listen to NAME OF STATION
Up next
Listen live on
ZB

Kate Hawkesby: Welcome to the year of moral outrage

Author
Kate Hawkesby,
Publish Date
Fri, 9 Feb 2018, 7:18AM
Gordon Ramsay sparked outrage amongst vegans after attempting to make a joke on Twitter. (Photo/ Getty)
Gordon Ramsay sparked outrage amongst vegans after attempting to make a joke on Twitter. (Photo/ Getty)

Kate Hawkesby: Welcome to the year of moral outrage

Author
Kate Hawkesby,
Publish Date
Fri, 9 Feb 2018, 7:18AM

I see Gordon Ramsay has offended vegans.

Did he not get the memo that this is the Year of Being Offended? The Year of Moral Outrage?

These are not times in which we can make jokes, use irony, be sarcastic, or indeed even toss out a throwaway line. The place you are least able to make light of anything is of course Twitter.

Unfortunately, Gordon Ramsay chose this most earnest of platforms to make an attempt at a joke. He tweeted in response to a fan who sent him a picture of their vegan lasagne, that he was a member of PETA.. People Eating Tasty Animals.

Oh dear.

Cue the moral outrage. He was lambasted by vegans and accused of hating on them, told he was anti-vegan, and anti the ‘vegan movement’. And even the real PETA weighed in giving him a serve about being out of date. The virtual pile on that is Twitter continued, until there was such a cacophony of vegan versus meat lovers, that I almost forgot what the original affront was about.

The upshot was, his tweet was liked 151,000 times, re-tweeted 44,000 times and commented on by 45,000 people. Moral outrage has traction. It didn’t help I suppose that Ramsay’s got form. Two years ago, when asked if he had any allergies, Ramsay replied, “vegans”.

And then there was the internet meltdown over ‘Lady Doritos’. An alleged ‘throwaway line’ from a staffer at Pepsi Co resulted in reports that Doritos was bringing out a special silent chip just for women.

Less crunch, and in a smaller bag to fit inside a handbag.

For three days solid this raged round the internet like a wounded bull blinded by orange Dorito dust.

You name it, they were offended by it. Wailing from all quarters. Turns out, or so Pepsi Co claimed, it was ‘fake news’. Lady Doritos, they said, were not a real thing.

A statement from the company read, “Doritos already makes a chip for women, they’re called Doritos.” So what was that? Genius marketing? Certainly, if you want to get worldwide internet coverage and free column inches, appealing to the morally outraged seems the way to do it.

And then yesterday, YouTube phenomenon and seemingly perpetually bewildered Logan Paul, goes and tasers a dead rat.

Not particularly wise given his recent disastrous Suicide Forest video and the fact people were already hot on the offence button regards him, but still, it was a rat. A dead one at that.

Vermin.

Their live brothers and sisters have makeup and medicines tested on them.. on a daily basis. This one was at least dead already. But social justice warriors don’t need too many facts, nor do they need context. Don’t get me wrong (people will anyway).. the morally outraged can be an integral part of any society, and often do a lot of good.

But they’d do themselves a huge favour if they could stick to being outraged about genuine events, real issues, and those that affect more than one dead rat.

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you