The Problem of Atlanta and Hollywood’s Lazy Media Tropes

Americans need to interrogate their failure of moral imagination, and pop culture needs to participate.

Jenara Nerenberg
4 min readMar 18, 2021

--

I sit at a juxtaposition as an interracial family advocate and mental illness media strategist and the killing spree of six Asian American women in Atlanta leaves me in paralysis.

The murderer’s horrifying behavior was a hateful choice he made, not the result of mental illness, as much as people try to make it so. It is not about having a bad day or being mentally unwell. This was a man who engaged with every other facet of life and chose, of his own volition, to commit murder against vulnerable targets.

Mental illness has been the scapegoat for far too long, an easy coverup for the urgent problem at hand: terrorizing moral judgment and consequent action, tainted by the filth of racism, sexism, white supremacist thinking, and other forms of bigotry.

As such, we must challenge the social norms, stereotypes, and beliefs we hold about mental illness. Everyone knows someone with depression, anxiety, or bipolar, and the majority of the time…

--

--

Jenara Nerenberg

Author, Divergent Mind (HarperCollins). Journalist at UC Berkeley & Garrison. Founder, The Neurodiversity Project. divergentlit.com