Breaking gossip on Tiger Woods

By KATHLEEN PARKER   Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2009
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— The feeding frenzy over Tiger Woods’ tiny run-in with a fire hydrant has taken voyeurism to new depths.

Where was he going at 2:25 in the morning? Why wasn’t he wearing shoes? Why was his wife smashing his Cadillac Escalade’s window with a nine-iron?

Prying minds apparently want to know all this and more. And the insatiable, ubiquitous media—from the bloviating blogosphere to the cackling cable commentariat—are all too happy to oblige.

Might we interrupt this terribly unimportant episode in the private life of a professional golfer to point out that it’s nobody’s business? This isn’t breaking news. This is breaking gossip.

The news ended with the report that Woods had run into a fire hydrant outside his Windermere, Fla., home and has decided not to play in his own tournament because of minor injuries suffered. That should be a wrap.

Instead, enter the “experts,” thousands of whom must reside in an underground bunker near the television studios—either awaiting the next calamity or, perhaps, zipping out releases to newsrooms suggesting fresh story angles.

I get a dozen a day: “If you’re thinking of writing about Such-and-Such, you might be interested in talking to So-and-So.” Thus, crisis management experts are filling airtime, yakking about what Woods should do to salvage his public image. The rumors, after all, could be true!

Pssst: He might have been having an affair.

Pssst: His wife might have smashed the window in anger rather than trying to get him out of the car.

Pssst: His (alleged) mistress…

You see, Woods, the richest athlete on Planet Earth, has had an idyllic image and now it’s been tarnished by…what? Innuendo and whispers by that scurrilous wormtongue, Anonymous.

Among the many less-than-brilliant observations made the past few days is that Americans will forgive almost anything if people will just fess up. The implication is that Tiger will be forgiven his transgressions, whatever they are, if he’ll just TELL US THE SALACIOUS DETAILS!

For God’s sake, Tiger, tell us or we’ll have to get back to our own pedestrian lives. Or, heaven forbid, focus on the prospect of 30,000 more American troops being sent to Afghanistan.

The notion that Woods owes America an explanation is based only on the fact that he is a celebrity. Meaning, some percentage of Americans worship him, or at least his amazing talent, and thus feel entitled to scrutinize his private life. His enormous success—71 PGA Tour victories, including 14 major championships and a billion in earnings from winnings and product endorsements—makes him a sort of public endowment from which gawkers expect dividends. They’ve tithed at the altar of Tiger Woods, and they expect confessions in return.

Celebrity-obsession is cut from the same cloth as identity politics. Tiger is not one of us, clearly, but he is of us—one of those unique characters in American history who make us feel good about ourselves. A human melting pot, he’s the American Dream personified, who grew up in our living rooms, breaking records and hearts along the way.

We boosted him to Mount Olympus. How dare he descend and bleed?

Celebrity in America no longer means that one is admired for accomplishment. It means ownership by the masses. The stars may twinkle, but their reflection depends on the upturned gaze of those with dustier feet. As all gladiators know, the people are fickle. Like Caesar, they give a thumbs up or thumbs down in response to their own narcissistic injury. By denying the rumorists entry to his inner sanctum, Woods has invited a gathering of crows.

It gives solace to believe that most Americans don’t really think someone’s personal problems are any of their concern. Tiger isn’t running for public office, after all. He isn’t leading a congregation to the moral high ground. He’s not trading trust for public funds, except to the extent that people willingly pay to watch him do what no other human can.

Might we think less of him should details emerge that confirm the rumors? To each his own. But someone, somewhere along this dark path to lost privacy needs to shout, “No more.”

My own fandom, and related golfing motto, can be summed up as follows: I don’t care if the little ball goes in the little hole. But Tiger Woods will be my forever-hero if he locks the gate and shows voyeurs the road customarily paved with good intentions.

Kathleen Parker is a columnist for the Orlando Sentinel. Her e-mail address is kathleenparker@washpost.com.

reader COMMENTS
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(13)
Zoom
Dec 2, 2009 at 4:19 p.m.
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SwissChick, read up on the 5th amendment. You don't have to talk to the police, even if they arrest you.

Anything a celebrity says to an officer could somehow wind up becoming public, so I understand why Tiger didn't want to talk to them. The police have a responsibilty to investigate the accident for criminal behavior (DUI, battery, etc.), but since there was no evidence of criminal behavior from witnesses, the accident scene or the 911 calls, he gets a traffic citation and four points off his license. Case closed. Nothing to see here. Move along.

SwissChick
Dec 2, 2009 at 1:51 p.m.
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Sorry, I thought that if there was an accident such as the one in the article, and if the police, as part of the investigation, wanted to talk to you, it seemed you had to have a chat with them. Thanks for the info.

curtaincall
Dec 2, 2009 at 1:01 p.m.
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I guess that is something I thought most people knew. You don't have to talk to the police. They may try to intimidate you and make you think you do but you don't. Even in criminal cases , people can refuse , to talk to the police even with a lawyer sitting right there. I think its clear he is protecting his family. He was not drunk, he was not under the influence, he did give them a statement. Ticket the guy and leave him alone. He may be a celebrity of sorts, but he has the right to privacy. I don't like golf, I don't watch him play. But I have and still do think he's a great guy. He is human. He is allowed to make mistakes and that is between him and his wife. People need to get a life, and that includes these police officers and leave him a lone. HE did not refuse to give a statement to them, he did that right after the accident. He owed them nothing more than that.

creativethinking
Dec 2, 2009 at 12:51 p.m.
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Swiss Chick if you tell a office that you won't talk to them, UNLESS you have done something they can arrest you for.. drunk driving, theft, etc... YOU don't have to talk to them, and all you have to do is tell them that. NOW if you are drunk they can arrest your xxxx right there. IF you are foul mouthed, they can arrest you, if you have stolen property they can arrest you.. THEY had no cause to harass him. HE gave them a statement. THEY were just digging for more. Tax payer money at work. They the police admitted them selves right away, NO alcohol was involved. They should have ticketed him right there, or at the hospital. BUT no they were digging. JUST because you don't know enough not to talk to the police, does not mean the person who did not talk got special treatment. HE had given them a statement.

SwissChick
Dec 2, 2009 at 12:38 p.m.
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If I hit a tree and refuse to talk to the police, they'd just forget it?? I don't think so.
.
So what you're saying is that celebrities get preferential treatment? Yup, I know they do.

creativethinking
Dec 2, 2009 at 12:05 p.m.
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Swiss Chick, that is your choice. But then again you are not a celebrity, who people hound and follow and around looking for dirt on you as it is. Unless you are not telling us something.

SwissChick
Dec 2, 2009 at noon
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I can just see how far I'd get if I were in an accident and told the police, "Sorry, it's a private thing". Yea, right.

curtaincall
Dec 2, 2009 at 11:55 a.m.
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NO one ever has to talk with the police. YOU can refuse to talk. These 'police' were just trying to see what they could dig up.

What a waste of tax payer money.

Leave the guy alone, he already payed the ticket. In record speed.

cynicaleye
Dec 2, 2009 at 11:31 a.m.
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"This isn’t breaking news. This is breaking gossip." And just what do you think cable news is? They have to fill up 24 hours. It's our culture!

AndrewJackson
Dec 2, 2009 at 10:17 a.m.
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We would be arrested for something, maybe even the catch-all charge of disorderly conduct, the shining badge of American police work.

kettleblack
Dec 2, 2009 at 7:22 a.m.
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He's in the public eye.... it goes with the territory. Deal with it. And, by the way Parker, what do you think would be the consequences for any of us "nobodies" by refusing to talk to police about an accident?

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