Scandal 【2024-2026】

From political sex scandals to corporate fraud exposés, “scandal” captivates publics and dominates headlines. But what makes an event a scandal rather than just a crime or a mistake? A scandal requires three elements: a transgression (real or perceived), an audience that finds it shocking, and a mediated process of revelation and judgment. This paper contends that scandal is fundamentally a social ritual: it identifies a violation of norms, dramatizes it, enacts public punishment (often via shame or resignation), and ultimately strengthens the very norms it appeared to threaten.

Local citizens started breeding cobras in their homes to collect more bounty money. The Result: Scandal

For a century, Silicon Valley ran on a mythos of visionary genius. Elizabeth Holmes weaponized that myth. The Theranos scandal—blood tests that didn't work, machines that lied, investors defrauded of nearly a billion dollars—is a textbook case of modern scandal. It involved (the moral heroes of the scandal era), an adoring media, and the terrifying realization that the emperor had no clothes. The Theranos scandal changed venture capital forever, forcing investors to demand "proof of concept" over charisma. From political sex scandals to corporate fraud exposés,

Elizabeth Holmes promised a revolution in blood testing. When The Wall Street Journal revealed the technology was a sham, a corporate scandal erupted. Here, the transgression was not sex or violence but the betrayal of a modern sacred value: innovation backed by truth. The ritual played out in documentaries, podcasts, and courtrooms. Holmes’s conviction and imprisonment (2022) provided the cathartic punishment, reaffirming that even charismatic founders must obey factual and financial norms. This paper contends that scandal is fundamentally a

While often viewed as a breakdown of social order, scandal functions paradoxically as a mechanism of moral reinforcement and cultural boundary-setting. This paper argues that scandal is not merely a revelation of wrongdoing but a ritualized performance in which communities reaffirm shared values through the condemnation of transgressors. Drawing on Émile Durkheim’s theory of collective conscience, contemporary media studies, and high-profile case studies, I demonstrate how scandals serve to purify norms, assign blame, and restore symbolic order.