Voices: Johnny Depp’s career is on the up. What did we expect in a culture that worships winning?

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Public relations experts say that Johnny Depp’s career is “on the upswing”. Since the June defamation trial, he’s performed with the singer Jeff Beck, signed a seven-figure deal with Dior, and been cast as King Louis XV in a new feature film. To paraphrase LL Cool J, don’t call it a comeback. Johnny Depp’s been here for years.

Still, I’m puzzled. I can’t say much about Johnny Depp’s acting ability, other than that I thought Edward Scissorhands was quite good, and that I’m not mad about those Dior Sauvage ads I keep seeing. I should also say that, partly because I loathe celeb culture but mostly because the whole thing seemed so ugly, I tried my best to avoid the coverage of the trial against his ex-wife Amber Heard, though without success.

But in the wake of the thing, which seemed to whip up a positively poisonous atmosphere and invite all sorts of nastiness, I expected there might at least be a fallow period. After all, whether or not you accept the findings of the judge in the trial, that Heard had defamed Depp, and that Depp’s attorney had defamed her; whether or not you think Heard abused Depp, or Depp abused Heard, or neither, or both, no one came out looking pretty. (A side note: it seems to me that televising any trial, let alone the trial of two professional actors, is sheer lunacy.)

Even Johnny Depp’s most die-hard fans must surely concede that his behaviour during his relationship with Heard was far from laudable. There was compelling evidence of violence and awful behaviour from both the people involved.

We seem unable even to entertain the notion that this was a story without good guys. Early on in the trial, much of the watching public lined up between one of the two parties, describing themselves as “team” Johnny or “team” Amber. Clearly, for some, the details didn’t matter: this trial was primarily a competition, even a spectator sport, and not a vicious case with highly credible suggestions of violence at its centre. The whole thing was a tragedy.

As it is, the content of that trial, (and the one in the UK, as well as its verdict), has been forgotten. Johnny Depp won in the US, and “winning”, being a bit of a cultural fetish, is all that counts. Crossing the finish line first makes whatever happened during the race disappear. So having been declared the “winner” of this tawdry dispute, there was no reason for Johnny Depp not to accept the glut of lucrative opportunities that came his way.

It raises the question of what we lose in a culture where winning seems to wipe the whole slate clean. It’s evident in other departments of life. The Conservative Party made a serial winner with a pretty dubious past their leader on the grounds that he was a serial winner – and then forced him out. That serial winner won – and won big – but his party seems to have concluded that he did so at a high price to themselves.

If the Conservatives are thrown out of office at the next general election, Boris Johnson’s massive victory, with its enormous majority, may be considered Pyrrhic – to use a term befitting a classicist. You could say the very qualities that were put to one side because he was a winner were his – and their – undoing.

And speaking of the classics: consider also the assault on the humanities, most recently by Rishi Sunak, who pledged to abolish degrees that did not increase the “earning potential” of the students who take them. To stretch my point, wealth, like fame and power, is a typical criterion for “winning” at life. Liberal learning might teach us not to gather up facts like trinkets, not to learn for the purpose of making money; it might teach us to lose ourselves in the experience of others, and become more rounded human beings. But that’s unimportant. Winning is what matters, and it matters so much that little else does.

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There’s a price for failing to win, too. It’s been pointed out that where, in the past, football players would earn the respect of their fans simply for “putting in a good shift”, as we like to say, they’re now liable to receive pretty sharp abuse just for playing poorly, or even playing for a losing team. Harry Maguire, once beloved, and beloved in part because he did not really “look” like a typical footballer, is one of the most attacked football players in the country. Not winning, no matter how hard you try, no matter how you conduct yourself off the pitch is now deserving of punishment.

All this is far from ideal. To worship the winner and ignore the rest is to downgrade decency, or effort, or enjoyment, or any number of humane qualities. You can win and win well; you can win with grace; winning is often the point of an exercise.

But it seems to me that to value winning above all, and think that overrides whatever happened before, is liable to produce poor role models, sow division, and to encourage selfishness. More: it’s to strip complex situations of their nuance or didactic value. It’s a narrow, narrow understanding of things.