If you’re wondering why the state of education in this country… especially higher education… is in such a sad state of affairs, Rutgers University has just given you a major reason by simply putting its money where its mouth is. The Rutgers University Programming Association has announced that they paid Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi $32,000 for a scheduled speaking engagement at the University.
Where do I even begin with what is wrong with this. It took me a bit to even start formulating a list because of the time it took me to pick my jaw up off the floor after reading this. But once I got started, there was material enough to actually break it into two categories: The choice of and selection process surrounding Snooki herself, and of course, the money.
Why Snooki?
The first thought that popped into my mind when I read that they picked this vapid monster to speak to students was “Are you fucking serious?” And it’s not even so much that they hired her, although that’s bad enough. It’s what they hired her to do.
When I was in college, I got to hear many speakers from various backgrounds speak on a multitude of subjects. Some were known (Ralph Nader), some were known not by their names, but certainly by their reputations (the Oxford University Debate Team), some were there not to educate, but to entertain (George Carlin), but the one thing they all had in common was that, regardless of how you felt about their politics or their personalities, as speakers they were all brilliant. Everyone brought in was brought in because they all had 12-cylinder brains operating at high RPMs all of the time, and as a result, they all killed at their respective appearances. Whatever amount they were paid, they delivered their money’s worth and then some. Snooki is, on her best day, little more than a professional dipshit with freakishly gargantuan breasts, or if you really needed a comparison, she’s The Situation with tits, or an orange, scary Paris Hilton. She offers less than nothing as far as subject matter that could cause two synapses to exchange electricity, and if she is entertaining to her audience at all, then that speaks volumes about the talent pool that are being admitted to Rutgers these days. I know some Rutgers alumi, and they’re damn smart people, but a decision like this is not representative of a group of students who are busy learning the finer points of business, the law, complex mathematics or the classics, but rather a drooling herd of self-absorbed youths sporting spray-on tans and hair with enough shellaced-on product to simonize the hull of a battleship, and whose English, grammar, and spelling skills do not extend beyond text message-speak and who see terminal idiocy as a lucrative career option rather than something that should be avoided at all costs, and who manage funds like a crack addict with a cashed welfare check on a Friday night. The fact that this choice was made, over-paid for, and, worst of all, defended by Rutgers students pretty much proves that. Specifically, this choice was defended by numerous Rutgers upperclassmen. The one ray of hope for our future’s prospective job applicants came from a freshman… a freshman… who when interviewed expressed his opinion about the choice of Snooki…
“Such a waste of my money. If I want to listen to someone talk, they should have something intelligent to say,” said freshman Dan Oliveto, 18, rolling his eyes.
Given Snooki’s popularity and the fact that not enough people really give a shit about this, I’m thinking Dan is the exception and not the rule. Mr. Oliveto does not so much display a wisdom beyond his 18 years as he does display a sad commentary on our society that an 18 year-old freshman has more common sense than the bulk of those graduating ahead of him.
The Money
This is a fairly simple equation. Snooki got paid $32,000 for her babbling gig. I refuse to call what she does “speaking.” That would be like broadening the definition of “classically trained musician” to include those that can play Beethoven’s Fifth using underarm fart noises.
“My feet can’t touch the ground. Awkward!” Snooki said as she sat in the chair, her feet dangling.
When asked what her advice was for Rutgers students, she said: “Study hard, but party harder.”
(Actual quotes from Snooki’s appearance at Rutgers)
Picture 2 hours of that. That’s a $32,000 algonquin roundtable that you got going there.
Rutgers paid Toni Morrison, who won the both Nobel and Pulitzer Prizes for Literature, gave the Jefferson Lecture (sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the U.S. Government’s highest honor for achievement in the humanities), and the National Book Foundation’s Medal of Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, $30,000. Basically, if Ms. Morrisson were a socially retarded elf, that would have warranted a $2,000 bonus. The real irony of all this is that, and it makes me shudder to even write this, Toni Morrison and Snooki actually have one thing in common in that they are both… brace yourselves… published authors. However, that is where the similarities end. Toni Morrison’s books, while I’m not personally a fan, have enough of a following to have topped the NY Times Bestseller List several times over, with Beloved (the one that won the Pulitzer) being voted as one of the Best Works of American Fiction. Snooki’s book (I refuse to call it a novel) sold 9,000 copies and makes a great coaster, doorstop, and if used sparingly, its pages will provide a solid six months worth of birdcage liner or fireplace tinder. Your preference.
The main argument you’ll hear over this discrepancy is that Snooki was paid out of student activity fees, and that Toni Morrison was compensated out of an honorarium. Semantics. Both reflect on the university, and if the decision surrounding Snooki’s appearance are the kinds of decisions being made by Rutgers students… especially seniors, and bad press for the university results from it, then I think the case could be made that there should be some adult supervision involved, be it faculty or otherwise. Ultimately, the reality of the situation is that it’s the parents that are paying for the education of these students are more than likely also footing the bill for Snooki’s appearance. I would love to know their opinions on this.
You’re probably thinking, “Dude, you’re way too upset over something far too small,” and taken by itself, you’re probably right. But I look back over the past couple of decades and I see society at large turning into what Henry Rollins refers to as the “intellectual vacuum.” We’ve gone far beyond tolerating stupidity to the point where the bulk of humans that are schlepping around this country are now celebrating it, and I find that disgusting. We live in a society where a comedian delivers the only news show that can pass a fact-checker, where we elected an under-achieving, draft-dodging, surplus-squandering, economy-destroying, retarded cowboy to the Presidency… twice, where education is slammed in political ads as being “elitist” and any kid getting good grades in school is rewarded by having their head shoved in a toilet, having a vocabulary that doesn’t consist of “Y’all,” “Shucks,” “Science is evil,” “family values,” and “Can you get my kid into Yale? There’s two wars on and I donated money to the Library,” is considered being out of touch with mainstream America, and where the people paying for the folly of the financial crisis are not those that caused it… they get bailout money because they are too big to fail… but the middle-class and working poor American public, the same people who are getting their public education funding cut, the very thing which is critically important to the long-term future of this country and far too important to let it fail. But it seems letting it fail is exactly what is going to occur.
But hey, look how many Snooki’s our de-evolution will generate then. Shit, we can start exporting stupidity at that point.