also see:
/info/en/?search=Talk:Mary_Kay_Letourneau#Additional_sources_not_yet_used_in_the_article
Mary Kay is a pseudonym of a well-known individual named Mary Fulaii.
Conclusion: The tabloids took her name and changed it.
some crimes turn subjects into national fascinations. It's noteworthy that quasi-news venues like Inside Edition and People made events in the subject life into copy, and were often also loose with the facts. This subject became a target of international interest almost immediately. We don't need to speculate or understand exactly why. There's clearly an audience that demanded exactly this kind of low-brow, low-bar info-tainment. Coverage in the legitimate press is much more routine, but it is solidly there on a national level, also. There were zigs and zags of the subject's life reported in the local press that were only deemed newsworthy because the subject and subject's relationship had been deemed generally newsworthy over about a decade of time. This is, I suppose, notoriety. Are there better words? Fascination? Attention garnered from a crime is typically known as notoriety.
Many commit similar crimes. Few receive this degree of intense, sustained, global attention. It's even reasonable to suspect the degree of attention has been a contributing factor to the outcome of these events.
The story also includes multiple instances where the unusual level of attention caused unusual results. Said Salon, "The scandals on the scale of Letourneau... expertly catalogs the corrosive role the media played in the affair."
We need to acknowledge the unusually high visibility of this criminal.
Some kind of both fascination and notoriety among national and some international "scandal news" audiences is a substantial facet of this subject's story. I'm reminded of Italy's obsession with the American Amanda Knox. words that come to mind are: scandal, fascination, notoriety. (Ms. Knox was acquitted of the crimes she was accused of. Notoriety still might be the proper word, but it seems incomplete.)
Here are unusual news sources we cite today: We cite Inside Edition now explicitly. And TruTV. This helps reveal the tabloid nature of the fascination. It's not actual news. It's celebrity combined with crime. People have argued that she's not generally noteworthy (link) and while I see the point, for whatever reason(s), she has been targeted for an undeniable substantial and sustained amount of scrutiny and observation. This means she's generally noteworthy in WP language.
I start to understand the subject's last change here:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:MobileDiff/629007758
One think I ask of those who might disagree: Could you assemble similar coverage for a different person accused of a similar crime? I find coverage of this subject unusually high, and also see it classified under "entertainment". Barbara Walters is a journalist, but she's a journalist who interviews well-known people, often seeking details that aren't strictly newsworthy. From the start and over many decades, there was a fascination with this particular criminal.
The Daily Telegraph described /info/en/?search=Disappearance_of_Madeleine_McCann as "the most heavily reported missing-person case in modern history".
And that wikipedia article based on all that reporting is dramaticly detailed, involves international politics, quite complex. This subject isn't so complex, but attracted similar fascination. MKL is the most heavily reported teacher-student unlawful sexual relationship case in the world. Testament to this is the frequency of dubious citations added and removed in this article. MKL entered popular culture rapidly, and stayed there through her life. This fact is not much of a reflection on the crime, but on coverage of the crime, at least nominally so, as an excuse for ongoing focus on the individuals involved. MKL, like Brittany Zamora, was the subject of fascination. I continue to be struck by the number of similar cases that have nearly zero coverage on this website. Brittany Zamora appears one time in plain text on Wikipedia. This teacher, also a woman, criminally engaged with a 13-year-old boy. It's arguable that Ms. Zamora may be noteworthy on this site. The coverage of her crime is broad and legitimate. While it verges on the gawking, as with this item in The Sun, it's clear they're providing adequate NPOV-secondary sourcing due to the general noteworthiness of Ms. Zamora.
https://people.com/crime/vili-fualaau-split-mary-kay-letourneau-he-sees-things-clearly/
Vili Fualaau 'Sees Things Clearly' After Split from Mary Kay Letourneau: Source
"He's starting to get some perspective," a source close to Fualaau tells PEOPLE. "He sees things clearly now, and realizes that this wasn't a healthy relationship from the start."
Well... this isn't attributed to the victim. But it gives cause to limit the victim's current statement as published.
LeTourneau was sentenced under an alternative sentence law called Special Sex Offender Sentencing Alternative, and did not negotiate a plea agreement.
Sources:
also see:
/info/en/?search=Talk:Mary_Kay_Letourneau#Additional_sources_not_yet_used_in_the_article
Mary Kay is a pseudonym of a well-known individual named Mary Fulaii.
Conclusion: The tabloids took her name and changed it.
some crimes turn subjects into national fascinations. It's noteworthy that quasi-news venues like Inside Edition and People made events in the subject life into copy, and were often also loose with the facts. This subject became a target of international interest almost immediately. We don't need to speculate or understand exactly why. There's clearly an audience that demanded exactly this kind of low-brow, low-bar info-tainment. Coverage in the legitimate press is much more routine, but it is solidly there on a national level, also. There were zigs and zags of the subject's life reported in the local press that were only deemed newsworthy because the subject and subject's relationship had been deemed generally newsworthy over about a decade of time. This is, I suppose, notoriety. Are there better words? Fascination? Attention garnered from a crime is typically known as notoriety.
Many commit similar crimes. Few receive this degree of intense, sustained, global attention. It's even reasonable to suspect the degree of attention has been a contributing factor to the outcome of these events.
The story also includes multiple instances where the unusual level of attention caused unusual results. Said Salon, "The scandals on the scale of Letourneau... expertly catalogs the corrosive role the media played in the affair."
We need to acknowledge the unusually high visibility of this criminal.
Some kind of both fascination and notoriety among national and some international "scandal news" audiences is a substantial facet of this subject's story. I'm reminded of Italy's obsession with the American Amanda Knox. words that come to mind are: scandal, fascination, notoriety. (Ms. Knox was acquitted of the crimes she was accused of. Notoriety still might be the proper word, but it seems incomplete.)
Here are unusual news sources we cite today: We cite Inside Edition now explicitly. And TruTV. This helps reveal the tabloid nature of the fascination. It's not actual news. It's celebrity combined with crime. People have argued that she's not generally noteworthy (link) and while I see the point, for whatever reason(s), she has been targeted for an undeniable substantial and sustained amount of scrutiny and observation. This means she's generally noteworthy in WP language.
I start to understand the subject's last change here:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:MobileDiff/629007758
One think I ask of those who might disagree: Could you assemble similar coverage for a different person accused of a similar crime? I find coverage of this subject unusually high, and also see it classified under "entertainment". Barbara Walters is a journalist, but she's a journalist who interviews well-known people, often seeking details that aren't strictly newsworthy. From the start and over many decades, there was a fascination with this particular criminal.
The Daily Telegraph described /info/en/?search=Disappearance_of_Madeleine_McCann as "the most heavily reported missing-person case in modern history".
And that wikipedia article based on all that reporting is dramaticly detailed, involves international politics, quite complex. This subject isn't so complex, but attracted similar fascination. MKL is the most heavily reported teacher-student unlawful sexual relationship case in the world. Testament to this is the frequency of dubious citations added and removed in this article. MKL entered popular culture rapidly, and stayed there through her life. This fact is not much of a reflection on the crime, but on coverage of the crime, at least nominally so, as an excuse for ongoing focus on the individuals involved. MKL, like Brittany Zamora, was the subject of fascination. I continue to be struck by the number of similar cases that have nearly zero coverage on this website. Brittany Zamora appears one time in plain text on Wikipedia. This teacher, also a woman, criminally engaged with a 13-year-old boy. It's arguable that Ms. Zamora may be noteworthy on this site. The coverage of her crime is broad and legitimate. While it verges on the gawking, as with this item in The Sun, it's clear they're providing adequate NPOV-secondary sourcing due to the general noteworthiness of Ms. Zamora.
https://people.com/crime/vili-fualaau-split-mary-kay-letourneau-he-sees-things-clearly/
Vili Fualaau 'Sees Things Clearly' After Split from Mary Kay Letourneau: Source
"He's starting to get some perspective," a source close to Fualaau tells PEOPLE. "He sees things clearly now, and realizes that this wasn't a healthy relationship from the start."
Well... this isn't attributed to the victim. But it gives cause to limit the victim's current statement as published.
LeTourneau was sentenced under an alternative sentence law called Special Sex Offender Sentencing Alternative, and did not negotiate a plea agreement.
Sources: