Sun.Star Cebu

Duterte’s kiss got him massive worldwide press. Here’s why.

- PACHICO A. SEARES publicands­tandards@sunstar.com.ph or paseares@gmail.com

“You’re just envious... We enjoyed it.” -- The president, on criticisms against his kissing of a woman on the lips in Seoul

THE envy that President Duterte said prompted critics to lash out over the incident in South Korea last Sunday could refer to the planet-wide publicity that he reaped, not just the “enjoyment” from that controvers­ial kiss with a married woman.

Rarely do news media overseas give much attention to leaders of small countries unless they are deposed, assassinat­ed, or accused of genocide or large-scale corruption.

Foreign media have reported about Duterte’s hostile statements against the U.S., his cursing of the European Union and the Pope, and his bristling response to the moves of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights and Internatio­nal Criminal Court over 12,000 or so killings in the illegal drugs war.

Those, and the human interest stories such as his “crude jokes” about women, notably his order to shoot women communist rebels in the vagina and his frustratio­n that he didn’t take part and lead in the gang rape of an Australian woman missionary.

It’s the latter category, the “interestin­g stuff” about Duterte, that foreign media readily pick up and use from the glut of stories that pour into their newsrooms from all over the world.

Newsworthi­ness

His newsworthi­ness (he’s a controvers­ial president) and the subject (woman, kiss, misogyny) combined to make the Seoul performanc­e of worldwide interest. Images of Duterte cajoling a married woman to kiss him on the lips were front-page, prime-time material even abroad.

A president’s news value comes with the position and power he holds. And newsworthi­ness grows by accretion: the more interestin­g or bizarre a president does or says, the higher notch his drawing importance goes up. Duterte’s news stock has risen since he assumed office, mostly by his mouth, which foreign media recognizes and even the president himself admits (“don’t mind my mouth,” he once complained).

The Filipino who last caught the interest of foreign media in the human interest, or bizarre, category was then First Lady Imelda Romualdez Marcos. She had earned such a niche in news halls of the world that to this day a story about her would still get media space or time, even if it would no longer be about her closets of shoes.

He has learned how

Eat your heart out, other presidents out there whom the foreign media ignore most of the time.

Our president has learned how to make it to such publicatio­ns as the New York Times, Washington Post, The Telegraph and Daily Mail of London, BCC News, Japan Times, Associated Press and Reuters which picked up the story for the rest of the world to use. “Inggit lang kayo.” This column is also published by Sun.Star Online, www.suntar.com.ph. Access by clicking “Public and Standards Editor” under “The Company” at the foot of home page or click this:

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