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The Day After Rupert Murdoch Takes Over America
TAS ^ | 5/18/04 | Ivan G. Osorio

Posted on 05/18/2004 4:08:06 PM PDT by swilhelm73

Fresh off the contrived controversy of Michael Moore accusing Disney of censorship for refusing to distribute his anti-Bush celluloid screed comes another politically charged film. The Day After Tomorrow, a flick that purports to warn about destruction wrought by global warming, crashes into multiplexes across the land on May 28. Already, Al Gore and the lefty Internet clearing house MoveOn.org are planning to exploit the movie's New York premiere with a rally the same day. MoveOn.org is calling it "the movie the White House doesn't want you to see."

The Day After Tomorrow is being released by Twentieth Century Fox, a division of the News Corporation -- yes, that News Corporation, headed by Rupert Murdoch, the conservative Australian-American media magnate who serves as poster boy for scolds who warn about the dangers of the Federal Communications Commission liberalizing media ownership rules.

According to one popular just-so story being peddled by the anti-corporate Left, a small handful of media companies are currently buying up more and more outlets, reducing the range of opinions voiced in the major media -- effectively blocking news and information unfavorable to, or contrary to the ideologies of, the media's owners.

YET HERE IS A GIANT counter-example. The Fox Network, which is a vital part of the News Corporation, is helping to promote the film. On May 12, Fox featured a 10-minute preview of The Day After Tomorrow -- on prime time. This film is being used as an overtly political project to promote a green agenda, as even a casual look at the "Weather Gone Wild" section of the film's official website shows (it doesn't feature meteorologists getting drunk on Daytona Beach, alas).

In fact, the movie's very concept comes across as a forced attempt at a political statement. It's the first time director Roland Emmerich, whose previous hits include Godzilla, Independence Day, and The Patriot, has delved into a moribund genre: the disaster movie. Remember The Towering Inferno, Earthquake, The Poseidon Adventure, and the myriad Airport movies?

Popular in the 1970s, disaster movies now fail to capture the public's interest -- few people want to see films in which the plot revolves around something big and impersonal going really wrong. Quite simply, these movies have no real plot -- no villains, no moral conflicts, and no struggles beyond survival. Sure, we've had Twister and Armageddon in recent years, but reappearances of this genre are rare.

In his earlier movies, Emmerich recognized the need for conflict in a story: In Independence Day there were aliens to fight; in Godzilla a giant lizard; in The Patriot, redcoats. Who are the heroes of The Day After Tomorrow up against? An angry Mother Nature revolting to point out the folly of men (to paraphrase Blue Oyster Cult on the protagonist of an earlier Emmerich flick). A short list of such follies might include driving SUVs and failing to endorse the Kyoto Protocol.

Would anyone promoting such a film ever not expect Al Gore and MoveOn.org to try to exploit it to score political points? And yet, according to groups opposed to media ownership rule liberalization, controversial content will nearly always be trampled under the boot of the boss's politics.

For instance, the Media Access Project, citing that other big-media bogeyman Clear Channel, argued that loosening up media ownership rules would allow the radio company to "select music based on whether artists pay Clear Channel promotional fees or" -- here comes the kicker; italics added -- "whether Clear Channel agrees with their politics or message."

ACCORDING TO THIS VIEW, the power of someone like the conservative Rupert Murdoch would be overwhelming and decisive. However, the release and heavy promotion by the News Corporation of an enviro-left political film should prove that Murdoch, as chairman and CEO, is either (a) stupid, or (b) concerned with what's good for business regardless of politics.

The first option renders Murdoch's success an inexplicable mystery. So we are left, Watson, with the second option, which puts the lie to an awful lot of the yammering about media consolidation silencing anti-corporate opinions. Rather than censoring them, the News Corporation-owned Twentieth Century Fox is giving climate alarmists a golden propaganda opportunity. Don't expect the greens to say thank you.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: fox; marketingdoomsday; rupertmurdoch

1 posted on 05/18/2004 4:08:08 PM PDT by swilhelm73
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To: swilhelm73

The author convieniently fails to mention the movie "Armageddon".


2 posted on 05/18/2004 4:17:30 PM PDT by Jason Kauppinen
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To: Jason Kauppinen

Whoops I posted too soon there.... he did. And "Twister" too.


3 posted on 05/18/2004 4:18:48 PM PDT by Jason Kauppinen
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To: swilhelm73
Rather than censoring them, the News Corporation-owned Twentieth Century Fox is giving climate alarmists a golden propaganda opportunity. Don't expect the greens to say thank you.

Gotta love it. A capitalist will make money from an anti-capitalist, militant-environmentalist message.

It's only fair. If a commie such as the bloated michael moore can use capitalism for his real purpose of undermining it, the capitalists can counterattack with the same methods.

4 posted on 05/18/2004 4:21:46 PM PDT by Vision Thing
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To: swilhelm73

please no more photos of moore


5 posted on 05/18/2004 4:22:49 PM PDT by SF Republican (You know what I like about John Kerry? his daughters dress at Cannes)
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To: swilhelm73
The clip I saw on TV sucked. Horrible.

This will not do anything of substance to change minds one way or the other.

A movie about a guy who gets out of the armed services after serving heroically, who then finds his way to Alaska as a rough neck, and then falls in love with the gorgeous oil ceo, who then finds or creates some method that yields a century of cheap crude oil, which ends forever Mideast oil dependence and terrorism, who is then elected president...would pack the theaters like sardines.
6 posted on 05/18/2004 4:23:24 PM PDT by antaresequity (This is not the "War on Terror", Islam is the common denominator)
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To: swilhelm73
concerned with what's good for business regardless of politics.

This reminds me of the stories of computer virus protection companies writing virii. According to this article one would think that the virus protection companies are crazy! They are there to protect against virii, not spread them!

I think the simplicity of this argument, as well as this case with Murdoch, are both fairly obvious. Virus protection companies make money only if there are computer virii in the wild causing people to run out and buy protection software. Murdoch makes money by exploiting the gap in partisan politics - how can he make money from the right unless there is a left from which to set itself against?

7 posted on 05/18/2004 4:24:34 PM PDT by Abulafia
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To: swilhelm73
It looks like a good flick... just turn off the sound when you rent it, and imagine that an asteroid hit.

Then go read "Lucifer's Hammer" and find out why we need to accelerate industrial growth and technological advancement on this planet...

...in order to get the hell off it.

8 posted on 05/18/2004 4:24:38 PM PDT by Mr.Atos (The Earth is too fragile a basket...)
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Comment #9 Removed by Moderator

To: swilhelm73

I can't wait to go fishing for lunkers from the top of the Sears tower. Am also looking forward to blasting polar bears strolling down Michigan Ave. Have to go now. I see the alligators are migrating back south from Canada.


10 posted on 05/18/2004 4:58:26 PM PDT by sergeantdave (Gen. Custer wore an Arrowsmith shirt to his last property owner convention.)
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To: sergeantdave
I see the alligators are migrating back south from Canada.

I think those are just climbing out of the sewer onto Lower Wacker. Perhaps their looking for a "Cheeseburger, Cheesburger!..."

"...no fries! Chips!"

11 posted on 05/18/2004 5:02:48 PM PDT by Mr.Atos (The Earth is too fragile a basket...)
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To: antaresequity
A movie about a guy who gets out of the armed services after serving heroically, who then finds his way to Alaska as a rough neck, and then falls in love with the gorgeous oil ceo .... would pack the theaters like sardines.

Hmm.. I doubt that. Aren't all the oil CEOs men? =)
j/k!

12 posted on 05/18/2004 5:12:56 PM PDT by AntiGuv (When the countdown hits zero - something's gonna happen..)
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To: AntiGuv
Sounds sorta like Atlas Shrugged. Gorgeous Railroad CEO goes to Colorado befriends Oil tycoon, and falls in love with stern Industrialist.

The Left drains the industrial world and destroys Capitalism, while a mysterious group of men destroys the Left by stopping the motor of the world from further feeding thugs and butchers.

I hear the movie is coming soon.

13 posted on 05/18/2004 5:27:04 PM PDT by Mr.Atos (The Earth is too fragile a basket...)
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To: Abulafia

ABC-Disney owns radio station WABC in New York. This is
the station from which Limbaugh and Hannity came. It
has almost 24 hours of Conservative talk, but every hour
there is five minutes of news from the ABC network spouting
the liberal bias of the the Corporate parent. Figure it
out.


14 posted on 05/18/2004 6:24:14 PM PDT by Uncle Guido
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To: Spann_Tillman

That sounds like tin-foil hat territory to me.


15 posted on 05/19/2004 8:13:06 PM PDT by Jason Kauppinen
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