Love Island's Sophie Gradon and her boyfriend Aaron Armstrong |
Remember
Susan Boyle? One of Britain's Got Talent 2008 semi-finalists? I only know her through social media, but
I gather she did well.
She was lauded as a 'never-been-kissed' cat lady who lived alone in
her 50s by the mainstream press, something she was quick to deny.
After
half a decade, it emerged that she had Aspergers, a form of autism.
When this was revealed, I was at first relieved for her but also
infuriated for her too. Granted, when she was going through school
most teachers wouldn't have heard of autism, and would have put her
down as a difficult child failing to use their full potential. But
for her to have been in the public eye in the 21st
century, in front of millions of viewers, and that not one person in
her circles thought to refer her to a psychologist, is a complete
failure on behalf of the whole of Britain. Not one person working on
BTG, nor anyone watching it, thought to suggest that she seeks help.
The
positive is that she's getting that help now and, as of 2012, was
worth £22 million. But it took a show with 13 million viewers and a
number of breakdowns for that to happen. The guy on the street should
be able to go to his GP an ask for a referral to neuropsychology to
get the support she eventually got.
A
different music star and a different psychological problem:
Avicii. Tim Bergling. House music
producer who, in his early days, made some of the best piano house
tracks this century. Avicii took his own life in
April.
On 26 April, his family released an open letter stating that Bergling 'really struggled with thoughts about meaning, life, happiness.
He could not go on any longer. He wanted to find peace.'
A
different star again, this time focussing on reality TV: Love Island's Sophie Gradon.
Gradon appeared in Season 2 of the ITV2 hit show, broadcast in 2016.
She took her own life this June. A month later, her devastated
boyfriend took his own life too.
Reality
TV personalities rarely receive sympathy from the general public. The
comments section of most articles, and releases over Twitter and
Facebook, are usually awash with -you-made-your-bed type comments
from unempathetic, boring nobodies. Keyboard warriors with no
experience of mental health issues, or of the media industry. I'm
going to buck that trend, though.
To
a lot of teenagers and young adults, Love Island participants and
musicians are role models, like it or not. They've been pushed out through the medium of TV into millions of homes on some of the most popular shows in the last 10 years. Author Neil Strauss, formerly of Rolling Stone magazine and author of hit advice book The Game, once described fame as like a
big magnifying glass: it blows up all your qualities, but your
insecurities and weaknesses are magnified along with it. His advice:
'fix your issues now, because the older you get, the worse they
become.'
My
advice for the TV industry, if for some reason you'd listen to a
business support officer with memory difficulties and depression, is
learn about mental health and how to support people who are
struggling with it. Otherwise, the worst case is that your PR team
has to deal with a contributor's suicide.
My
advice for the everyday person with a mental health issue is to at
least start working on those problems now. You can't turn down every
opportunity forever. Something good could come knocking at any
moment, so don't put things off until you're a better person. But
work on your problems. Don't shelve them. And if TV comes knocking,
deal with it a day at a time.
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