BuzzFeed
 
 
Why Is Religion Invisible To The Media?
A 12-year-old girl wrote herself a note  before she died. It contained an 
amazing message of hope and redemption. That  was before the media got to it.
 
January 10, 2014 By  _Mollie  Hemingway_ 
(http://thefederalist.com/author/mzhemingway/) 
 
 
Seven in 10 Americans identify as “very religious” or “moderately  
religious,” according to a _recent  Gallup survey_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/159050/seven-americans-moderately-religious.aspx) . 
Each week, hundreds of 
millions of Americans go to houses  of worship, pray, or just ponder the higher 
things related to our religious  views. But it’s not news that this religious 
reality is not well reflected in  our media. 
There is some great work being done by mainstream media outlets, but much  
room for improvement. For those of us who are religious, we notice the weird 
 way the media handles religion news and religious topics. We see it every 
time  a broadcaster interviews someone live and _stumbles  when the subject 
mentions something religious_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/getreligion/2013/02/scripture-verses-reporters-kryptonite/)
 . We see it in the _egregious  
mistakes the New York Times makes_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/getreligion/2013/04/this-ny-times-easter-correction-is-a-doozie/)
  about basic teachings 
of the Christian  faith. We see it in the _unmasked  disdain_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/getreligion/2011/08/bill-kellers-modest-proposal/)
  for 
religious people. 
But usually the media treatment of religious people and their religious  
views isn’t so much hostile as absent. We may not be invisible to them, but  
our religious views certainly are. I thought of this when I came across an  
interesting BuzzFeed post titled “_After  The Death Of Their 12-Year-Old 
Daughter, Parents Find The Letter She Wrote To  Her Future Self_ 
(http://www.buzzfeed.com/ryanhatesthis/after-the-death-of-their-12-year-old-daughter-parents
-find-t) .” 
BuzzFeed is known for posting images with brief commentary. It’s wildly  
successful and has even spawned sites such as “_Buzzfeed Articles Without The  
GIFs_ (http://buzzfeedminusgifs.tumblr.com/) .” In tribute to that site, 
here’s what BuzzFeed had to say about the  girl and her beautiful letter minus 
the images: 
Taylor Smith, a 12-year-old girl from Tennessee, died last week of  
complications from pneumonia. She had flu-like symptoms in the days leading  up 
to 
her death, like achy legs and a sore throat, but according to Taylor’s  
father Tim, she tested negative. “We did the usual flu/cold thing and got  her 
prescription, loaded up on popsicles and soup and brought her back to  rest,” 
Tim said. After Taylor died, her parents began sorting through her  things. 
And that’s when they found a letter she had written to her future  self. 
Tim shared Taylor’s letter with BuzzFeed on Thursday. The letter,  which Tim 
said is addressed to future Taylor, perfectly captures what kind  of girl 
Taylor was. As he put it, she was awesome. “She was random, she was  smart,” 
Tim said. “She was super funny and super fun.” Not to mention nerdy.  Past 
Taylor wanted to make sure Doctor Who was still on the air. And if not  at 
least wanted to know what number regeneration they ended on. And if it  wasn’t 
on TV anymore, she wanted her future self to go watch it right away.  After 
she finished reading the letter, of course. “She liked doing quirky  things 
and she liked doing meaningful things, she always created stuff,” Tim  
said. “The fact that she wrote this letter wasn’t a surprise, but what she  
wrote was.” Also, attached was a photo her future self could use to explain  
what a first-generation iPad looked like. Earlier this week, Taylor’s  
classmates were asked to wear blue in her memory. Her family is also setting  
up a 
memorial fund in her name.
This tells us what BuzzFeed found important in her letter and in the story. 
 Now let me share a portion of the fairly brief letter from Taylor to her  
future self, as edited together from various images in the post: 
“I didn’t get to go to that party, though, because I was in Cranks,  
Kentucky for my first mission trip. I’ve only been back for 6 days! Speaking  
of, 
how’s your relationship with GOD? Have you prayed, worshipped, read the  
bible, or gone to serve the lord recently? If not, get up and do so NOW! I  don
’t care what point in our life we’re in right now, do it! He was mocked,  
beaten, tortured and crucified for you! A sinless man, who never did you or  
any other person any wrong! Now, have you gone on any more mission  trips?”
The difference between the Buzzfeed text and the text of the letter was so  
striking to me that I tweeted out about it. More on that in a bit. I asked 
a  fellow reporter who I know to be savvy about religious matters what he 
thought  about the piece. Here’s his response: 
Buzzfeed gives you a picture of a sunny, creative, precocious girl. The  
girl, in a remarkably self-conscious act of self-definition, gave a picture  
of herself as a Christian. It’s so self-conscious, it’s actually designed as 
 witness to herself, in case she is no longer this way. And that’s probably 
 why she wanted it sealed for 10 years. She wanted it to be a distinct 
voice  to her 22-year-old self.
OK, so it’s not just me. It seemed like such an obvious point that BuzzFeed 
 had downplayed the role that God played in this young lady’s  
life...........




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