Steven Slater: A hero for our times?

The former JetBlue flight attendant's dramatic leave-taking—down the chute with beer in hand—resonated with thousands of Americans.

“Steven Slater is the folk hero we’ve been wanting—nay, needing,” said Jessi Klein in TheDailyBeast.com. The 38-year-old flight attendant quit his job last week in “epic fashion,” using the cabin intercom to curse out a rude passenger before grabbing a beer from the beverage cart and exiting via the plane’s inflatable emergency chute. He was later arrested and charged with reckless endangerment. Slater’s dramatic rendition of “take this job and shove it” obviously sent a “vicarious thrill” through our stressed-out nation, because within a couple of days, he had 200,000 fans on his Facebook page, a legal defense fund, and an agent fielding offers from TV executives. The immediate cause of Slater’s meltdown may have been, as Slater claims, a passenger cracking him on the head with an overhead bin door, said Daniel Gross in Slate.com. But the reason his “cathartic meltdown” resonated so deeply with the American public was that Slater, like so many of us, was contending with a teetering economy that’s pushing workers far too hard “without adequate reward.”

What a pathetic excuse for inexcusable behavior, said Shmuley Boteach in WashingtonPost.com. When did we elevate whiny brats to hero status? While the nation fawns over this ill-tempered quitter, hundreds of thousands of young Americans are putting their lives on the line in Iraq and Afghanistan, enduring “pressures that a spoiled child like Steven Slater can scarcely comprehend.” Where are their fans? “What does it really say about American culture” that we worship those who crack under pressure more than those who handle it with courage and stoicism? The notion that any act of rebellion must be admirable, said Stanley Crouch in the New York Daily News, is downright juvenile. Those lionizing Slater need to grow out of their childish resentment of all authority and “find an actual hero to bet on. Life still makes them.”

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