Thursday, November 5, 2009

Brandenburg Wall

U2 concert sparks fury over 'Berlin wall'

Brandenburg Gate is where Ronald Reagan gave his famous "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall" speech. U2 gave a concert there, and selling out all available tickets. MTV constructed a wall around the area so that non-paying customers couldn't see it for free.

The irony of a "wall" covered in white plastic sheeting almost identical to the colour of the original Berlin wall was lost on exactly no one.


This is a tough case, because how do we describe this situation. The fact of the matter is, this is human nature. When you watch the Daily Show every night, and see how politicians say one thing when they're in power, and the exact verbatim opposite 4 or 8 years later, you wonder at what hypocrites they are. It makes complete sense to have different standards for your side and there side. MTV is a company trying to make money, this is capitalism. The Berlin Wall was supposed to help Communism. So insanely, the people who are complaining about this are actually themselves the ones who are being "ironic".

It's funny that the people who give credit to Reagan for ending the Cold War do to massive (incomprehensible really) military spending are mostly the same who think we need a giant border fence with Mexico. It's not ironic. Is putting a wall up at a place significant for tearing down walls ironic? The issue is that if they called it the "Freedom" or "Openness" concert, then that would be actually irony, since the wall MTV put up stopped the openness. This bleeds over to the whole event being called ironic, which I will live with, as long as people acknowledge the underlying fact that there is an implicit semantic meaning of openness being the venue in question.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Big difference in a fence to keep people in as opposed to one intended to keep them out! Drawing a comparison and calling it ironic is intellectual dishonesty.

seanahan said...

I would say that intellectual dishonesty is a bit harsh. Was the Berlin Wall meant to keep the East Germans in or the West Germans out? I would argue both. However, the new wall was built to keep free concert goers out. Either way, a wall has a clear purpose as a way to hamper movement between two places. It is this aspect that is considered ironic here.