Latest News:

【hard sex video】

We Have the Stars

By Sadie Stein

Our Daily Correspondent

0715_Examined-Life2

The other side of the red carpet.

Over the past several years, a series of reports have said that fewer medical students than ever are choosing to go into psychiatry. There are factors the authors generally cite: the wider availability of prescription drugs, the decline of analysis, the range of alternative therapies. There are fewer stigmas about seeing a psychotherapist nowadays—and people who might once have visited a psychiatrist can now avail themselves of yoga, meditation, and other means of self-help.

Having watched the Oscars red-carpet coverage last night, I have yet another theory: E! From what I could gather, every member of the network’s team—Ross Mathews, Kelly Osbourne, special correspondent Khloé Kardashian, the inevitable Giuliana Rancic—is well versed in the jargon of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. (Doubly impressive as they are also all trained in fashion law enforcement.) They threw out self-diagnoses with the confidence of a 1960s Jungian analyst: Osbourne was “obsessed” with Marion Cotillard’s dotted Dior; Zoe Saldana’s post-baby body was “literally insane.” Countless things were, of course, crazy. I started to keep a tally on a paper napkin, but I couldn’t bear to watch the whole thing, so my results were compromised. (I already had a little hieroglyphic army, though.) 

Now, people have been co-opting the language of mental illness for as long as there’s been language and jerks.  Think about the many pejorative terms for insanity that fill any edition of the American Dictionary of Slang. Language inflation is always declawing scary terms; maybe it’s a human impulse. What’s different about the tone of the current usage is that it’s so earnest, so reverent. There’s no sense of reclaiming or owning something; like the previously neurotic Bette Davis in Now, Voyager, the new version has emerged glamorous and confident, with no hint of her past life to mar the impression. 

I’m imagining a sketch in which Freud and Jung act as E! correspondents, or maybe in which they put Rancic on the couch and seriously discuss her manifold obsessive tendencies. It wouldn’t be funny at all.

Sadie Stein is contributing editor of The Paris Review and the Daily’s correspondent.

Related Articles

  • The State of 5G: When It's Coming, How Fast It Will Be & The Sci
    2025-06-26 19:44
  • 'M3GAN' ending explainer: How that final shot sets up a sequel
    2025-06-26 19:36
  • M3GAN the murder doll weighs in on Elon Musk, Taylor Swift, Chucky and more
    2025-06-26 19:19
  • New York governor bans the sale of flavored e
    2025-06-26 18:21
  • Elon Musk breaks silence on stock plunge as Trump claims he'll buy a Tesla to help
    2025-06-26 18:19
  • Very tired bear holds up bathroom line by napping on the sinks
    2025-06-26 18:11
  • The Frenz brainband talks you to sleep with artificial intelligence
    2025-06-26 18:07
  • TikTok creators will soon be able to restrict their videos to adults
    2025-06-26 18:03
  • Trump delays TikTok ban for another 75 days
    2025-06-26 18:01
  • CES 2023: Ring drops pre
    2025-06-26 17:53

Popular

Top Reads

Recommendations