Word: cobain
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Cobain's suicide was the first death of a major rock star in the age of MTV. Indeed, Cobain's music snaked into the homes of millions of cable-viewers before it ever took to the radio airwaves. We knew his face as soon as we saw the music...
Watching the network Friday afternoon reminded me of the coverage of the attempt on President Reagan's life in 1981. Kurt Loder, MTV's newscaster, sat at the station's New York headquarters with a stern look on his face, repeating that Cobain had killed himself and telling the audience "if you never saw this band, you never will have another opportunity." I had figured that out myself...
Loder had interviews with Rolling Stone's David Fricke and Cobain biographer Michael Azerrad on what might have influenced Cobain's decision to put a 12-gauge to his head and end it all. Fricke and Azerrad mouthed the normalities about "inner pain" but really had no more of a clue than anyone else. These interviews were interspersed with past interviews with Cobain himself and, of course, a healthy does of old videos and performances...
Fifteen years ago this would have been impossible. Cobain's photo would have been flashed briefly on the network news programs and one of the three major talking heads would have mispronounced his name. With the advent of MTV, those who were intimately familiar with his life were allowed to speculate unconvincingly on the causes of his death. Progress, I suppose...
Already the comparisons have been made between Cobain and the pantheon of dead rockers that have pantheon of dead rockers that have piled up over the years. While it cannot be denied that Cobain was rocker and is now dead, the way he shuffled off this mortal coil differed drastically from his new analogy-mates...