Now Driving Online Now Hiring Online Home Seller Subscribe to the JG-TC
82°F
If you could add a contest to Bagelfest what would it be?
More
Bagel toss
Bagel eating
Bagel stacking
Bagel recipes
Bagel crafts
View Results
 


















 
Monday, January 5, 2009 10:17 PM CST
Press, paparazzi new worries as Obama children begin first term at D.C. schools



WASHINGTON (AP) — President-elect Barack Obama’s two daughters were whisked into their new schools on Monday past a line of waiting photographers.

If custom is any guide, the news media will keep their distance now that they have captured 10-year-old Malia in her puffy pink jacket and 7-year-old Sasha with her pigtails, pink camouflage backpack and turquoise Uglydoll.

But protecting the privacy of the presidential children is more difficult than ever. Even if White House photographers are no problem for the Obamas, there are still the paparazzi to worry about, as illustrated by the “beefcake” photos of a shirtless president-elect taken during the Obama family vacation in Hawaii.

Then there’s any seventh-grader with a cell phone camera and a Facebook page.

“It is an exaggerated example of what parents face routinely when their kids are online,” said Carolyn Jabs, who writes a syndicated column called Growing Up Online. “For the Obama girls, that is a given that it will get out of hand.”

Blogs have already critiqued what every member of the family wears. A bad hair day, schoolyard gossip or a manipulated photo can cause problems for any child, Jabs said. Imagine if the greater free world were watching.

“Mean things about them online are going to be problematic,” she said. “They’re going to have to develop a thicker skin in the way all celebrities do.”

At Sidwell Friends, children are not allowed cell phones at school, which should keep the girls shielded at least through the school day. Malia is in fifth grade at the middle school campus in the District of Columbia, while Sasha is in second grade at the Bethesda, Md., elementary-school campus.

“We do hold students accountable for cyberbehavior,” said Associate Head of School Ellis Turner. “I think our students understand that we expect them to be responsible Internet users.”

Facebook requires users to be at least 13 and MySpace 14.

The school won’t talk about special security precautions but has experience with the Secret Service from former students Chelsea Clinton and Al Gore III, the son of former Vice President Al Gore. Tuition is nearly $30,000 for its more than 1,000 K-12 students.

Amy Carter’s trips to public school became “a pretty big circus” with photographers lying in wait, said Doug Wead, a former aide to President George H.W. Bush and author of “All the President’s Children.”

Bill and Hillary Clinton took the advice of Jacqueline Kennedy to establish strict privacy for daughter Chelsea. In the Clinton era, aides would sometimes call publishers to keep stories about Chelsea under wraps, Wead said.

The national press has generally kept its distance: NBC’s “Today” show crew left Sidwell Friends on Monday even before the girls arrived. Like other media outlets, NBC will allow the girls privacy except when they are appearing in public or there is a great public interest, as on Monday.

“What we tried to do was cover the story but be respectful and discreet about it,” said Mark Whitaker, NBC’s Washington bureau chief.

But gentlemen’s agreements mean little when any child, school employee or curious onlooker can act as his own publishing house.

“It’s a new age,” Wead said. “Every word is worth money. It’s currency. Every photograph is worth money. It’ll take a lot of cooperation and the school year’s a long time.”


Share:          Submit to Reddit         Add to My Yahoo!   



  Add your comments

*Member ID:
*Password:
Remember login?
(requires cookies)
  Forgot Your Password?
 

Not already registered?
Then click Here.


JG-TC.com encourages readers to engage in civil conversation with their neighbors. Comments that are submitted are not posted to the site immediately. They go into a queue to be moderated and may take several hours to be reviewed. Comments posted on Saturday may not be reviewed until Sunday afternoon.

In order to keep the page a set width, long lines (mostly long links) will be chopped. Try putting spaces in your links or consider using tinyurl.com to make a smaller link that you can include.

We will never edit or alter your comments, but we do reserve the right to remove comments that violate our code of conduct.

No comment may contain:

* Potentially libelous statements; such as accusing somebody of a crime, defamation of character, or statements that can harm somebody's reputation.
* Obscene, explicit, or racist language.
* Personal attacks, insults, threats, harassment or inciting violence.
* Commercial product promotions.

If you have any questions, please contact our moderator.


Tom Andres wrote on Jan 6, 2009 11:09 AM:

" What the ...?! And here I was thinking that Obama was such a strong proponent of our public schools. Oh, wait a minute. We talking about schooling for HIS kids, not ours. OK, I understand now. "

61938 wrote on Jan 6, 2009 3:23 PM:

" you got that right Mr. Andres, mutt would never let his kids go to a public school "

ed miller wrote on Jan 6, 2009 4:59 PM:

" Now we hear the whining about the evil paparazzi bothering the poor Obama kids. Where was the outcry about the media feeding frenzy on Palin and her family? "

Harry Potter wrote on Jan 6, 2009 7:00 PM:

" With all the nut-bags out there, why in the world would the president of the United States send his kids to a public school, especially in a metro area. You people are amazing. This seems to be a no brainer to me.

An ed...Palin was not the president of the USA (thank God). lol!

And if she had gotten in, do you think she would send her kids to a public school? She may be nuts, but I doubt that she's that nuts. "

Early Bird wrote on Jan 7, 2009 6:43 AM:

" Any President would only be asking for trouble by sending his children to a public school.

You can never be assured of total safety in a private school setting, but I would think the public school setting would be easier for some wacko to get to them and cause harm.

I've heard that membership in hate groups has increased since Obama's election, so can anyone really blame him for his caution?

Looking a who is making the complaints on this issue here, I suspect their objections and indignities are based more on politics than reason or logic.

Sorry fellas, this is not a political issue. It's about parents trying to insure the safety of their children. "

even steven wrote on Jan 7, 2009 10:12 AM:

" As is typical of our "do as I say, not as I do" politicians, Obama is not sending his children to public schools. "

NeoCon Academician wrote on Jan 7, 2009 10:21 AM:

" "Press, paparazzi new worries as Obama children...."

What about the poor school children of Hamas terrorists that are being killed 'cuz their parents wouldn't stop shooting rockets into Israel over the past six years? "

Tom Andres wrote on Jan 7, 2009 10:48 AM:

" Harry, I agree, sending his daughters to private schools is a no brainer. There are many problems in our public schools, but my point is that while Obama shelters his kids in private schools, he expects the rest of us to fully support public schools.

My recollection is that Obama is against school vouchers - something which would allow regular folks to afford sending their children to their choice of schools.

Maybe they should have home schooled the girls. LOL. "

Harry Potter wrote on Jan 7, 2009 11:53 AM:

" Neo, I'm starting to worry about some of the leaps logic you've been expressing on here lately. Your intense bitterness seems to have taken over your thinking.

Although I usually have disagreed with you in the past, at least you USED to make sense. Now you seem all over the place. Did you change medicine or something? "

The Question wrote on Jan 7, 2009 1:18 PM:

" The Bush twins never had this problem, and they went to plenty of public taverns in any number of countries. "

NeoCon Academician wrote on Jan 7, 2009 2:34 PM:

" " Neo, I'm starting to worry about some of the leaps logic you've been expressing on here lately. Your intense bitterness seems to have taken over your thinking.
---------------------------------

As always Harry, an excellent observation...I may just be becoming a democrat!!!!!!! "

Harry Potter wrote on Jan 7, 2009 9:07 PM:

" No thanks, Neo. We don't want you. "

red,white,blue wrote on Jan 7, 2009 10:37 PM:

" Children should be left alone. They don't ask for it but unfortunately all this attention comes with the territory. The Palin children did not deserve this attention either. The Bush twins were in their late teens when their father was elected president. They did stupid things that millions of teenagers/20 somethings do every day. But those girls grew up to become lovely young women who have become teachers, worked with children with AIDS in Africa and authored books. People grow up and change but some posters never do. "

Harry Potter wrote on Jan 8, 2009 10:51 AM:

" People grow up and change but some posters never do. "

I see Granny continues her attack on her fellow posters. Grow up, granny, show some class for a change. You're making your fellow granny's look bad with your mean spirited comments. lol... "

The Question wrote on Jan 8, 2009 12:14 PM:

" Some people get thrown out of bars, Reddy, but the drunken 25-year-old Bush twins managed to get themselves thrown out of a whole country (Argentina). What great goodwill ambassadors for the U.S., eh?
And I am surprised you are not citing the inspiring example of Palin's daughter, a high school dropout who may even marry the high school dropout who fathered her child someday. But probably not. Those great "family values" at work. Wink, wink, wink, whink, wink, wink. wink. "

red,white,blue wrote on Jan 8, 2009 12:41 PM:

" Proving my point, HP, proving my point. Thank you. "

Harry Potter wrote on Jan 8, 2009 2:06 PM:

" Proving your point? About the only point I ever see from you is criticism of your fellow posters, granny. That and a little slobbering all over the Bush family. "

Harry Potter wrote on Jan 8, 2009 2:17 PM:

" Children should be left alone.

I agree. When Clinton was president he asked that his daughter be left alone, and the press went along.

The situation with the Bush twins was different. They didn't learn their lesson after the the first incident and went on to act like reprobates and consequently had several arrests for alcohol abuse. That, in my opinion, made them fair game for the press.

However, I do agree that the Palin kids should have been off limits. It really didn't help when Sara kept parading her unwed pregnant daughter around the stage at her rally's though. Her support for her daughter was admirable, but did she have to shove it in people's face? "

redwhiteblue wrote on Jan 8, 2009 2:21 PM:

" Proving my point, HP, proving my point. Thank you. "

Tom Andres wrote on Jan 8, 2009 3:16 PM:

" And, Harry, if her daughter had been left off the stage, what would you have said then? Honestly, would you have thought that was OK, or would you have accused her of trying to hide the situation? Come on, honestly. LOL. "

Harry Potter wrote on Jan 8, 2009 3:29 PM:

" Proving my point, HP, proving my point. Thank you.

Good grief, Granny, do you need a nap, or you just getting so lazy the best you can do is to cut and paste your own inane nonsense? By the way, you're not from Arthur are you? We had another old granny from up that way who seem to think like you do. Like you, she too was a Palin fan. She said she liked Palins values, what ever that meant. lol! "

red,white,blue wrote on Jan 8, 2009 4:30 PM:

" No idea why my posts are appearing twice. Been meaning to ask someone about that.

You are absolutely right Mr. Andres. "

Harry Potter wrote on Jan 8, 2009 4:35 PM:

" Did you miss the point I made about saying it was admirable that she stood by her daughter, Tom?. I think it was.

I just think it was a bit much to parade her around on stage like an exhibit.

Would I have criticised her for hiding her? Probably, but that's the way the game is played, and you know it, Tom.

Having said that, I think the Bush twins were a much bigger issue with their multiple arrests for alcohol abuse and Paris Hilton-like escapades.

I read somewhere that Laura Bush, to her credit, wanted to get her daughters professional help, but the always stubborn Bush refused.

But in reality I think the Palin issue is moot because I think Sara has used up her 15 minutes. I think everyone but her knows it. While I don't expect any of the Republicans on here to admit it, she was, in reality, an embarrassment almost from day one with her total lack of knowledge of about any topic.

However I do realize you folks had to support her, after all she was the Republican VP nominee but I think most of you, if you were honest about it, secretly held your nose while doing so.

In all sincerity, Sara Palin is obviously dumber than dirt, and I have to question the intelligence of any one who can't see that. "

The Question wrote on Jan 8, 2009 5:01 PM:

" On Nov. 6, 1992, three days after her father won the presidential election, Rush Limbaugh called Chelsea Clinton the "White House dog" on his television program. She was 13 years old at the time.
Now wonder the Republican spokespig is no longer on TV. "

Harry Potter wrote on Jan 8, 2009 8:32 PM:

" Nothing from granny in a while, so I guess she put her teeth in a jar and headed off to bed. Sweet dreams granny... "

 


©2007 Journal Gazette and Times-Courier, divisions of Lee Enterprises.    JG/T-C Do Not Call Policy    Privacy Policy    Contact Us