Shortly after the Enquirer’s story appeared, and thousands of
bloggers became sexually active, Jamie Lynn’s “good name” became
semen-stained when she became pregnant, probably in September. The
father is 19-year-old Casey Aldridge, who lived with Jamie Lynn and her
mother in an L.A. condo, and followed the teen mini-star to the “Zoey
101” set almost every day. So far, no one is filing any statutory rape
charges.
True to the ethics and business practices of tween celebs, Jamie
Lynn hid the news until she could find a price high enough. High enough
to run the story was OK! magazine, which put Jamie Lynn and a mega-hype
teaser on its cover, and trumpeted the six-page in-depth investigation
as a “world exclusive.” The magazine’s hyperventilating publicist told
the media and the public if they wanted to get all the details of this
breaking news interview with Jamie Lynn and her mother, they needed to
“pick up the new issue of OK!—on newsstands everywhere.” In true media
tradition, the “news” was released a day before the magazine appeared
on the shelves, Dec. 19, two weeks before its cover date. Circulation
was expected to rise faster than a pubescent boy’s hormones.
Naturally, the rest of the messed-up mainstream and alternative
media also had to jump onto the story. OK!’s not-so-hard news interview
led off the news segments of the network morning shows, was discussed
thoroughly by the mid-morning and afternoon talk shows, and was
featured by CNN, MSNBC, and FOX News—which paused just long enough to
report about a fire in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building
adjacent to the White House, a chemical plant explosion in
Jacksonville, Fla., that killed three and injured 14, and the President
signing an Energy Bill. Radio, the Blogosphere, and the internet-based
newspapers wasted no time polluting the airwaves and the world’s
bandwidths; print newspapers were caught in the wrong news cycle and
had to publish “day after” not-so-investigative stories. Underreported,
or not reported at all by most of the media, was that in four separate
instances in Iraq, seven civilians were killed and 27 wounded.
Nevertheless, enquiring American minds wanted to know all there was
about Jamie Lynn; within a day, Google recorded more than 150,000
separate stories and blogger comments.
Jamie Lynn says she will raise her child in Louisiana, “so it can
have a normal family life.” What she really meant was that those danged
Hollywood people, infused by pregnancy-causing smog and ocean air, was
what led to her pregnancy. If she stayed in Southern California, she
feared she could again become impregnated before she graduated from
Home-School High School.
Since the Spears family are devout Christians, they believe in
abstinence-only sex education; older sister Britney even rode the
reputation as a chaste and oh-so-moral virgin, saving her hymen until
marriage—until she was so overwhelmed by California air and pop singer
Justin Timberlake, as well as several others, before her two-year
marriage to model/rapper Kevin Federline.
Abstinence-only education originated during the Clinton
Administration, but was pushed to its climax as the foundation of a
domestic policy program by the Bush–Cheney Administration. On the day
that Jamie Lynn’s obstetric condition was spread out for all America,
the House passed a $556 billion pork-laden appropriations bill that
included $109 million for abstinence-only education for the first six
months of the fiscal year. Bush himself had wanted a $204 million
appropriation for the entire year, thus placating a base of Catholics,
fundamental Protestants, and world-is-flat philosophers. States that
teach abstinence-only sex education in their schools can apply for
Health and Human Service funds to supplement millions they already
spend; teaching that life gives people many choices doesn’t yield any
funds. Not getting any funds are 14 states that believe students should
be told not only about the problems of unwed teen pregnancies but also
that there are many ways to prevent pregnancy and sexually-transmitted
diseases should the teen be overcome by hormonal rage.
A Congressional study in April revealed there was no correlation
between abstinence-only education and sexual activity. Such education
programs do nothing, the study concluded, to keep teens from having
sexual relations. A later study by the nonpartisan National Campaign to
Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy concluded, “[T]here does not exist
any strong evidence that any abstinence program delays the initiation
of sex, hastens the return to abstinence or reduces the number of
sexual partners” among teenagers. That same independent study also
debunked the myth that comprehensive sex education classes lead to an
increase in sexual activity and teen pregnancy.
Devout and once-abstinent Jamie Lynn’s condition, combined with
whatever condition sister Britney is in, has also led to collateral
damage. Mother Lynn Spears is the author of a book about parenting,
scheduled for publication during the Spring 2008 season. Thomas Nelson,
America’s sixth largest trade publisher and the top publisher of
Bibles, and Christian and inspirational books, has delayed but didn’t
cancel the “how-to/memoir indefinitely. That “exclusive” information
was revealed by journalistically-challenged People magazine, which
undoubtedly believes it, not OK!, should have gotten the Jamie Lynn
world exclusive.
Dr. Brasch is professor of journalism at Bloomsburg University, a
former newspaper reporter and editor, and author of 17 books. His
latest book is Sinking the Ship of State: The Presidency of George W.
Bush, available through Amazon, Borders, and most major on-line stores.
You may contact Brasch at brasch@bloomu.edu or through
www.walterbrasch.com.