Las Vegas Sun

March 28, 2024

In Las Vegas, first lady prods media to cover opioids as much as ‘gossip’

First lady Melania Trump

Steve Marcus

First lady Melania Trump speaks during an opioid town hall at the Westgate in Las Vegas Tuesday, March 5, 2019.

Updated Tuesday, March 5, 2019 | 3:53 p.m.

First Lady Melania Trump Opioid Town Hall

First lady Melania Trump waves as she boards an aircraft at McCarran International Airport in Paradise, Nev., after participating in a town hall on the opioid epidemic in Las Vegas, Tuesday, March 5, 2019, during a two-day, three-state swing to promote her Be Best campaign. Launch slideshow »

First lady Melania Trump prodded the news media on Tuesday to spend as much time highlighting the opioid epidemic as it devotes to "idle gossip or trivial stories."

Mrs. Trump said she wished the media would talk about the epidemic more "and educate more children, also adults, parents, about the opioid crisis that we have in United States." She spoke during a town hall-style discussion in Las Vegas about the epidemic that claimed nearly 48,000 American lives in 2017. "They do it already, but I think not enough."

The first lady suggested the epidemic should be leading the news when host Eric Bolling — who addressed her as "Lady M" — asked what else the media could do.

"I think it should be on every media and the front pages of the newspapers, and I'm sure a lot of people would follow and go home and talk with the children and educate them so they are responsible adults, and they show them how drugs can be dangerous," she said. Her audience of several hundred people, including entertainer Wayne Newton, was seated in a theater where Elvis Presley once performed at the Westgate hotel and casino.

Mrs. Trump used the event to close a two-day, three-state promotional tour for her "Be Best" initiative, which includes a focus on babies born dependent on opioids. Bolling, a former Fox News host, lost his only child, 19-year-old son Eric Chase, to an accidental drug overdose in September 2017.

During remarks before she answered questions from Bolling, the first lady encouraged the public to look beyond the raw numbers and see the opioid crisis as a "human story."

She also challenged the news media during those remarks "to devote as much time to the lives lost, and the potential lives that could be saved, by dedicating the same amount of coverage that you do to idle gossip or trivial stories."

"When we see breaking news on TV, or the front pages of newspaper — it is my hope that it can be about how many lives we were able to save through education and honest dialogue," Mrs. Trump said.

She said she teaches her own 12-year-old son, Barron, "how drugs are dangerous. It will mess up your head. It will mess up your body and nothing comes positive out of it."

The discussion included lighter topics as well. Asked what her family's choice for a group meal might be, she said "spaghetti."

As for how much cooking she does, the first lady said she leaves that to the "professionals" at the White House, adding that there's "really no time" for her to cook.

The first lady participated in a similar conversation led by Bolling last November at Liberty University in Virginia.

President Donald Trump has declared the opioid crisis a public health emergency and his administration is spending billions of dollars to fight it.