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How Well Are the Media Serving American Society?Allan C. Brownfeld
Allan
Brownfeld covers Washington D.C. as a freelance reporter. In
a democratic society, the decisions we make as citizens can be no better
than the information upon which such decisions are based. In this sense,
the media play a crucial role, what some have called the “fourth
branch” of government. Unfortunately,
the evidence of media malfeasance is growing—beyond the questions of
actual falsehood or plagiarism, as in the cases of Jayson Blair of The
New York Times, or Stephen Glass of The New Republic. British
historian Paul Johnson laments the “huge change in the public perception
of those who bring us news and views.” In the past, notes Johnson, the
media were widely viewed as . . . beacons of
enlightenment and progress . . .generally identified with knowledge and
improvement, helping to produce a responsible citizenry. . . . Now, the
general view of the media is almost entirely negative. It is associated
with ignorance, lies, malicious invention and scurrility. A Los
Angeles Times poll found that 67 percent of respondents agree with the
statement, “The news media give more coverage to stories that support
their own point of view than those that don’t.” Polls conducted by the Gallup, Harris and Yankelovich organizations have all shown a
similar decline in public confidence in the news media. In The Times poll,
fewer
than 25 percent of the respondents said the media generally do a“ very
good job” in presenting the news fairly and impartially. A
report issued in March 2004 by the Project for Excellence in Journalism
found that, Americans think
journalists are sloppier, less professional, less caring, more biased, less
honest about their mistakes and generally more harmful to democracy than
they were in the 1980s. One example: those who
believe news organizations try to cover up their mistakes rose from 13
percent to 67 percent. If public trust in the
media has been declining for 15years, this report suggests there’s some
reason for that, that it’s kind of a rational response . . . says Tom Rosenstiel,
the group’s director. In
newspapers, 22 companies control 70percent of the circulation, In local
television, 10 companies own the stations that reach 85 percent of the U.S.
On the Web, more than half the 20 most popular news sites are owned by one
of the 20 biggest media companies. Diversity is rapidly shrinking. The
group examined a month’s worth of network newscasts, newsmagazines and 16
newspapers with five days of programming on three cable networks and online
news sites. Half
the lead stories on local T.V. networks were about crime or relatively
routine fires and accidents. In fact, since 1993 the homicide rate
nationwide has dropped by 20 percent. Yet in the same period, the coverage
of murders on ABC, CBS and NBC evening news has increased by 721 percent,
according to the Center for Media and Public Affairs. The
three major newsmagazines have gone soft, with a 25 percent decline in
pages devoted to national affairs and a doubling of entertainment and
celebrity stories. Such infotainment material accounted for 37 percent of Newsweek’s
content, 31 percent at Time and 6 percent at U.S. News and World
Report. The number of health pieces more than quadrupled. Except
for “60 Minutes,” the network newsmagazines “in no way could be said
to cover major news of the day,” the study says. When it comes to cable
news, 60 percent of cable segments were “repetitious accounts of
previously reported stories without any new information.” Cable
“news” often seems obsessed with the celebrity story of the
moment—Michael Jackson, Kobe Bryant, or murder cases such as that of Laci
Peterson. William Powers, writing in National Journal, notes that, There’s one thing the
(media) trade has gotten really good at. It’s a skill that’s on florid
display these days. .. . I’m talking about the media’s ability to take
a single news story and blow it up to such gigantic proportions that it
appears to blot out the rest of our collective reality. Commentator
Lou Dobbs provides this assessment: We have become a nation
obsessed with gossip and disguised as news. Otherwise intelligent,
thoughtful adults can without hesitation tell you the color of Janet
Jackson’s tear-away bustier, cite the carat weight of the penitential
diamond ring Kobe Bryant gave his wife, and describe the legal history of
Michael Jackson’s accuser’s family. Janet Jackson’s breast exposure
received three times as many Internet searches as the 2000 election and 25
times as many as the Mars rover, according to the search engine Lycos. In
Dobbs’ view, While many news
organizations continue to focus on gossip-tainment, they are all but
ignoring such serious issues as our out-of-control national deficit, the
depths of our government’s under funded liabilities, which is up to tens
of trillions of dollars, and the exporting of hundreds of thousands of
American jobs to cheap overseas labor markets. Not to mention what is no
less than an immigration crisis. Our society has reached a point at which
none of us would be surprised if the average individual is more likely to
know the name of Michael Jackson’s defense attorney than President
Bush’s defense secretary. Even the war on terrorism has lately met with
flagging interest on the part of the media. On the day that Michael Jackson
surrendered in California, there were two terrorist bombings in Turkey,
protests in Miami over the Free Trade Area of the Americas, and a
coalition-building trip to London by President Bush. Yet the event that
dominated the news that day was the pop star’s legal battle. Michael
Jackson’s legal fate has little bearing on most Americans’ safety,
their pocketbooks, or their children’s future. L.
Brent Bozell, president of the Media Research center, says: News media is becoming
more and more indistinguishable from tabloid outlets like the National
Enquirer. Circulation of the National Enquirer, in fact, far
outpaces that of The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times
and the Washington Post. . . . The more you pander to the lowest
common denominator, the more you drop that lowest common denominator. And
the more that the descent continues, at a certain point, it’s incumbent
upon society to ask itself if this is how serious it really wants to be. .
. . It begins with the news-gathering organizations getting back into the
news. In
the book The News About The News, Leonard Downie, Jr. and Robert G.
Kaiser report that in the late 1970s Los Angeles television stations
traded in their Sacramento bureaus for helicopters. The payoff—choppers
tracking police highway chases on Los Angeles freeways at prime time—came
only some years later with the advent of . . . camera stabilizers
and powerful lenses that zoom in on targets from thousands of feet away.
But now it defines a good Southern California T.V. news day. In 1998, station KTL
Abroad cast live the moment when a driver set his truck on fire and shot
himself. Television industry consulting firms now offer client stations
prepackaged stories that they can plug into newscasts—a mix of
“investigations,health probes, consumer alerts” and other “hot
topics,” Radio
and television talk shows often provide more heat than light by presenting
argument and debate between those holding the most extreme positions on any
given subject and ignoring those with more moderate, nuanced views who, in
fact, usually represent the vast majority of Americans. To appear regularly
on radio or T.V., a commentator usually has to have an easily predictable
position—liberal or conservative, Democrator Republican, in favor of the
current administration or opposed to it. Any journalist who thinks each
issue through and comes to individual conclusions is not wanted. Those who
want to achieve fame and fortune through such venuestail or their opinions
to what the market demands. Susan
Estrich, a law professor, Fox News commentator and formerly a top campaign
aide to presidential candidate Michael Dukakis, tells of being invited to
appear on a T.V. talk show to discuss the question of affirmative action.
The producer said, “I hear you’re against affirmative action.”
Estrich replied, I am, I explained, most
of the time. The Supreme Court has ruled that quotas and set-asides are
unconstitutional most of the time. But I do believe in special efforts at
outreach. And I believe that there may be a very limited number of cases
where there is a clear pattern of past discrimination and a compelling
interest in diversity. There was a long
pause. The producer said, “Would you say you are for or against?” In
the end, Estrich was not invited to appear because her opinions were not
conveniently on one extreme or the other, This, she declares, . . . is not how we
should be addressing issues of consequence. Turning every issue into a
yes-no proposition, as articulated by two people representing the furthest
extremes and pushing the most emotional buttons, has turned moderation into
a no-man’s land in American politics. Instead of finding the common
ground most Americans yearn for, we define the opposing camps. The media do
not do this because of any ideological bias. They do it because it’s the
easiest way to produce hot television, hot radio, hot talk. . . . It’s
not the media’s job to solve society’s problems, but it is also not
their role to make things worse. The
media cannot even tell us that standards have deteriorated because that is
what the market demands. The business is shrinking—perhaps as a result of
the performance we have seen. Audiences are down by a third at Fox News,
while CNN and MSNBC both have lost about half their audiences, according to
a Nielsen ratings released in April, 2004. Fox had 2.2 million viewers in
prime time a year ago; the figure now stands at 1.4 million, for a drop of
36 percent. CNN had 1.6 million prime-time viewers in 2003—now down to
806,000 a drop of 48 percent. At MSNBC there were 666,000 prime-time
viewers last year; now it has 333,000, or a drop of 50 percent. “The
audience knows the difference between real news and news sparkle, no matter
how glitzy the graphics are,” said Matthew Felling of the Center for
Media and Public Affairs. Tom
Rosenstiel, director of the Project for Excellence in Journalism, says: If young people aren’t
reading newspapers, we contributed to that. If network news hasn’t
innovated beyond adding a third hour to the “Today” show, we
contributed to those problems. We didn’t bring them all on ourselves, but
we made them worse. The
decline in the media is neither good journalism nor good business. Those
who have presided over this decline must, at some point, ask themselves
what they have been doing and why. Neither we—nor they—have been well
served. Ω “Possibly subtler
factors entered into the weakening of Athens. The life of thought
endangers every civilization that it adorns. In the earlier states of a
nation’s history there is little thought; action flourishes; men are
direct, uninhibited, frankly pugnacious, and sexual. As civilization
develops, as customs, institutions, laws, and morals more and more restrict
the operation of natural impulses, action gives way to thought, achievement
to imagination, directness to subtlety, expression to concealment, cruelty
to sympathy, belief to doubt; the unity of character common to animals and
primitive men passes away; behavior becomes fragmentary and hesitant,
conscious and calculating; the willingness to fight subsides into a
disposition to infinite argument. Few nations have been able to reach
intellectual refinement and esthetic sensitivity without sacrificing so
much in virility and unity that their wealth presents an irresistible
temptation to impecunious barbarians. Around every Rome hover the Gauls;
around every Athens some Macedon.” —Will Durant, The Life of Greece,
(page470) |
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