Manawatu Standard

Schappelle Corby circus likely to last

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The mad spectacle of Schapelle Corby’s arrival back in Australia after more than 12 years as a guest of the Indonesian justice system suggests that this extraordin­ary saga is not over just because she has regained her freedom.

She has been released into a world where being a celebrity is now a career option. Expect there to more chapters in the Schapelle Corby story which, rightly or wrongly, has held people agog since she was arrested with 4kg of cannabis at a Bali airport in October 2004.

Corby touched down in Brisbane on Sunday, with her minders comprehens­ively outwitting a pursuing media pack.

The meticulous­ly planned homecoming operation involved a lastminute change of planes, the possible use of a body double, supporters in bizarre masks, and an exit from the arrivals area of Brisbane Airport through a service tunnel.

A spokeswoma­n for her security company then stepped in front of the cameras.

She appealed for the family’s privacy in a spirit of ‘‘humility’’ and ‘‘dignity’’, even as reporters were involved in a bizarre chase across southeast Queensland, trying in vain to find Corby in a fleet of black decoy SUVS which went off in different directions.

The term ‘‘media circus’’ seems apt, and the reporters were made to look like the clowns. Frustrated news organisati­ons were reduced to blasting each other’s excesses in the coverage, and writing articles wondering who was paying for Corby’s orchestrat­ed escape.

Yet, the Corby story has always been sensationa­l. Her 2005 trial verdict and sentencing was broadcast live across Australasi­a. A 2006 autobiogra­phy sold 100,000 copies. A similar number of Australian­s signed a petition calling for her release.

Do not expect Corby to now fade into obscurity. In the years of her incarcerat­ion and subsequent parole, the focus of an increasing­ly competitiv­e and audience-driven media has shifted from covering matters of public interest to reporting things in which the public are simply interested.

Lucrative offers will be made to Corby for everything from women’s magazine cover stories to reality TV shows. Will she accept them? If Corby had intentions to lie low, she would not have started an Instagram account last week which immediatel­y attracted 100,000 followers.

Her first Instagram postings turned the camera on her pursuing media posse, and showed an image of the champagne flutes used to celebrate her freedom. They suggest that Corby’s definition of ‘‘humility and dignity’’ might be combative and assertive. Expect the Australian news media at least to lap it all up.

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