NYT: Objectifying the Accused: What happens when violent crimes are overshadowed by appearances?
NYT - (archived: https://archive.ph/cbMCq ) Objectifying the Accused
What happens when violent crimes are overshadowed by appearances?
By Vanessa Friedman
The author has covered image-making in court and politics for The Times since 2014.
Dec. 11, 2024, 12:18 p.m. ET
From the moment the world saw the smiling, unmasked face of the young man in the New York City hostel, memes began spreading about his looks. In the days since, after Luigi Mangione was identified and charged in the murder of the United Healthcare chief executive Brian Thompson, it has been impossible to escape his photo. Or photos. They are proliferating.
They are on television, in the newspaper and all over social media. Not just pictures of Mr. Mangione from his booking at a police station in Altoona, Pa., or his mug shots in prison orange, but photos of him in earlier times, in a navy blazer, crisp white shirt and tie. Images of him hiking shirtless in the hills. In all of them, he is clean-shaven, curly-haired, often flashing a bright, white grin. Even his Tinder profile has made it into the public, with more pics featuring his six-pack. One commentator compared the stream of pictures to an endless photo shoot.
And with them have come the comments. The swooning. The fan cams.
If the guy is fit, you must acquit, went one post on X.
Hes even hotter with his mask and shirt off, went another.
Indeed, it didnt take long for Mr. Mangione to be popularly christened the hot assassin.
/snip
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