Irish Daily Mail - YOU

I think I’ve finally lost the plot

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There are times in your life when you feel radically misaligned with the prevailing opinion. It’s the feeling you get when you’re outvoted at a national referendum or when you’re surrounded by a group of people all speaking a language you don’t know. And it’s the feeling I got when I watched the latest sensationa­l box set everyone was raving about.

I speak of Tiger King: a Netflix series on the strange story of zookeeper Joe Exotic and his profession­al nemesis, a flutey-voiced woman named Carole Baskin who devotes herself to saving big cats from life in a cage (but who then, bafflingly, also puts them in cages at her rescue centre).

Joe Exotic, a confection of peroxide hair, blue eyeliner, multiple piercings and snakeskin shirts, once tried to run for president of the United States (spoiler alert: he failed). Subplots involve nubile female tiger trainers in animal-print bikinis, a polygamous homosexual marriage and the theory that Carole killed her millionair­e first husband, greased him up with sardine oil and fed him to the tigers (a claim she, unsurprisi­ngly, disputes). You couldn’t make it up. Tiger King has sunk its teeth into the collective neck of an adoring global audience. The New Yorker gave it a lengthy review, calling it ‘prestige trash’. It hit top spot on Netflix Ireland and its dramatis personae launched a thousand memes. I sat down to watch with high expectatio­ns

and, well, I was underwhelm­ed. It

SOOTHING my lockdown face with Emma Hardie’s Moringa Cleansing Balm – it’s lusciously smoothing and can be used as an overnight cream as well. mainly seemed to be an excuse for the documentar­y makers to chronicle the antics of mullet-sporting narcissist­s, unbalanced misfits and criminal strip-club owners who share an obsessive desire to own big cats. It was mildly diverting but I honestly could have stopped watching long before the seventh and final episode. I carried on because I kept thinking I was missing something. If everyone else was obsessed with it, what was wrong with me that I couldn’t see the point?

It’s strange to feel so out of step with the majority, especially when we’re currently looking for things to connect us in our socially isolated existences. I suppose this is partly why there’s a herd mentality when it comes to culture that offers light relief – we are so keen for diversion that we suspend our critical faculties. I desperatel­y wanted to love Tiger King. With so many people telling me it was the best thing on TV, I felt lacking when I didn’t agree. It’s not even that I disagreed strongly enough to make a proper case – I quite liked it but didn’t feel a pressing need to finish it.

It sometimes seems as if we’re living in a time of overly enthusiast­ic perception, where the quality of the object itself is less important than the reaction it creates, so the fact that something generates memes and social-media mentions becomes a validation of its merit. But just because something prompts a reaction doesn’t make it good.

With Tiger King, part of my discomfort came from the fact that it felt like examining a petri dish of not-entirely-sane people. It reminded me of those early X Factor auditions, where we were encouraged to laugh at terrible singers, without taking into considerat­ion the contestant’s mental-health history. And it reminded me, too, of The Jeremy Kyle Show, the series renowned for its confrontat­ional style (described as ‘bear-baiting’ by one High Court judge) which was taken off air last year after the death of a guest.

So perhaps Tiger King’s popularity stems from the need to define ourselves in opposition to something: as viewers, we can mock at a distance and feel relieved these lives are nothing like our own, and that’s at the root of our shared enjoyment. But it leaves a bad taste in the mouth – and it’s not sardine oil.

This knitted basket bag will look perfect slung over your shoulder for 2km socially distanced walks.

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€49, Cos

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