Hurricane Natalee

November 22, 2007

Something I want to research and write on for my M.A. is “Missing White Woman Syndrome,” wherein disproportionate media coverage is given to cases involving pretty, white, female victims (or would-be victims) of crime. Think Natalee Holloway, Jennifer “Runaway Bride” Wilbanks, Chandra Levy. (The current Missing White Woman is named Emily Sanders who, it turns out, lived a double life as an Internet porn star. I’ll have to keep my eye on this case.) In particular, I want to look at the intricate construction of the CNNian/MSNBCinian mythos of Missing White Woman Syndrome, including an extensive and considered analysis its obsessive tropes and stock characters.

In any case, I thought the term Hurricane Natalee was not only catchy but appropriate, given the tropical locale in which Miss Holloway disappeared. Googling “Hurricane Natalee” turns up nothing, so I’m laying claim to the term here and now. Hurricane Natalee is the media phenomenon linked to Missing White Woman Syndrome, in which a gigantic, yet rather predictable, storm of media frenzy descends upon an otherwise unspectacular crime, forcefully displacing more newsworthy stories in favour of hails of self-righteous platitudes, misplaced victimology, demonization of the foreigner, and pretty yearbook photos.

I must point out, for the thick, that anything I write would not be about Natalee Holloway herself, but rather the media’s perverse eagerness to turn the case into yet another another excuse for circus-like wall-to-wall coverage, complete with a catchy logo and montage and theme tune. It just seems to me that this case in particular set a new standard for sensationalist, over-the-top news coverage, cementing the place of Missing White Woman Syndrome as a real phenomenon in today’s media. Natalee’s disappearance, like any other, was tragic—but at what point does news reporting thereof cross the line and, in fact, become disrespectful to the memory of, and to the family of, a victim of crime?

Hurricane Natalee = Peter-James Nicoll’s term.

Entry Filed under: media, school. .

1 Comment Add your own

  • 1. Lorie Conkling  |  January 31, 2008 at 9:49 am

    I agree with you on this subject. I am a senior undergraduate student and am currently working on my capstone project. I am looking at the disparity that occurs in the media when adults go missing. I am looking for scholarly articles to help me with my body of literature. Do you have any sources that you would or could share with me. I would appreciate any information that you might have. I have been searching for this information and have found several blogs and newspaper articles, but so far not much scholarly done. Thank you. Lorie Conkling

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Name: Puck
Age: 29 forever
Location: Montreal, Canada
Occupation: Student of Sociology; English Literature graduate, Concordia University

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