I've been interested in the apparently widespread phenomenon of people crying 
upon viewing the Susan Boyle video, as discussed recently in a New York Times 
blog.  Indeed, at least one person admitted to crying upon just hearing the 
story of Susan Boyle--prior to even viewing the video.  I did not 
cry--exactly--but almost.  I suppose if she had been singing Charlie Mingus' 
"Duke Ellington's Sound of Love" instead of Andrew Lloyd Weber's whatever, I 
might have been weeping copiously.

Without doubt she is a wonderful singer, but I don't think that her singing 
alone would have brought anyone to tears.  I am thinking that she looks on the 
outside the way many of us feel on the inside in some important domain of life, 
and the way she wiped the smirks off everyone's faces so dramatically may have 
triggered any or all of the following in a lot of people:

a)    Vicarious revenge
b)    Vicarious redemption
c)    Vicarious vindication
d)    Vicarious glory

Paul Okami
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