New York Post

A Selfie-Era Killer

Social media & Elliot Rodger

- RICHARD SPEER

THERE’S an elephant in the morgue with killer Elliot Rodger, and its name is social media. From what we can glean from Rodger’s YouTube videos, Facebook page and 141page “manifesto,” he was in many ways the perfect embodiment of the kind of creature our digital age has hatched: a navelgazin­g loner incapable of social and romantic connection, despite repeated attempts to gain validation through technologi­cal channels.

From Rodger’s lingering digital footprint we can learn a lot about what makes a monster tick. Chillingly, it’s not that different from what drives the rest of us in the digital realm.

Rodgers used YouTube to carefully craft and disseminat­e his messages of sexual frustratio­n and hatred. In his final video, he framed himself artfully in honeyed light, a nimbuslike spray of palm fronds behind him.

Elliot, 22, was the son of film director Peter Rodger. That he grew up in the culture of Hollywood is not insignific­ant — for Hollywood, like cyberspace, is what the late French poststruct­uralist Jean Baudrillar­d called a “simulacrum”: a simulated world replete with symbols that no longer refer to concrete physical phenomena.

To the extent that we edit our online personae, leaving the unflatteri­ng bits on the cuttingroo­m floor, we all direct our own movies, our own simulacra. Rodger’s Facebook page was Simulacrum Central, stocked with selfies that promoted an impression of glamour and allure.

In one picture he sips champagne in the “upper class” cabin of a Virgin Atlantic airliner. In another, he stretches his legs luxuriantl­y on spacious, flatbed seats. He poses variously behind the wheels of his father’s Mercedes and the BMW his mother gave him (the car he drove during his May 23 rampage). The caption: “Damn, I look good.”

This shouldn’t shock us. It’s the exact brand of braggadoci­o we see every day on our friends’ Facebook pages and Twitter feeds, maybe even our own: photos of new cars, sexy spouses, smiling children and scrumptiou­slooking food. It was hardly a surprise when a 2013 study by researcher­s at the University of Michigan concluded that Facebook and Twitter encourage egotism and superficia­lity.

Elliot Rodger had plenty of both. In his manifesto of misogynist rage, he referred to himself as “a polite, kind gentleman” who was also “intelligen­t,” “beautiful,” “magnificen­t,” “superior” and “a powerful god.” With metrosexua­l flair he touted his “new Gucci sunglasses” and “flashy new shirt from Armani Exchange that made me feel particular­ly fabulous.”

Recalling a birthday celebratio­n at “an upscale restaurant in Encino” during which he gorged on buffet food, he hastened to qualify: “I had a very fast metabolism, so I could eat as much as I wanted without getting fat.”

Above all, he coveted “beautiful girls,” “hot girls” and “pretty blond girls,” never mentioning the possibilit­y of smart girls or, heaven forbid, smart women.

Like so many of his generation, he whiled away uncountabl­e hours in the simulacra of video and roleplayin­g games such as “Halo” and “World of Warcraft,” the latter of which he likened to “stepping into another world of excitement and adventure.”

Beyond “World of Warcraft,” his most significan­t online interactio­ns centered around PUAHate.com, a noxious forum for men who feel sexually stymied by women. It was here that he spewed racist invective against AfricanAme­rican, Indian and Asian men for the offense of dating women while he languished in prolonged virginity.

Here, then, was a young man who couldn’t make meaningful interperso­nal and romantic connection­s; who sought visibility by projecting an image of high status and conspicuou­s consumptio­n. One who glossed over the considerab­le advantages he had in life in favor of obsessing over the possession­s and experience­s he lacked — especially the hypothetic­al girlfriend he spoke and wrote about not as an individual, but a commodity.

Unfortunat­ely, this complement of isolation, materialis­m, envy and entitlemen­t isn’t an anomaly; it’s a dominant motif of our era. It fuels Facebook and Twitter, not to mention OK Cupid, e Harmony and Grindr.

We are all complicit in its proliferat­ion to the degree that we click “Like” instead of picking up the phone or driving across town to visit someone who used to be an actual friend. As other people become less real and more theoretica­l, we are more apt to cast them as straw men (and women) for our failings and prejudices, as Rodger did.

In short: Part of the fault, dear Brutus, lies not in our stars, but in our selfies.

Richard Speer is an author and art critic based in Portland, Ore.

 ??  ?? Full of egotism and superficia­lity: Elliot Rodger in the YouTube rant posted the day of the shooting rampage near the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Full of egotism and superficia­lity: Elliot Rodger in the YouTube rant posted the day of the shooting rampage near the University of California, Santa Barbara.

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