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Gore criticizes war coverage (He also invented TV!)
Sidelines Online (Tennessee State University Paper) ^ | 3/27/03

Posted on 03/27/2003 10:06:33 AM PST by areafiftyone

Former Vice President Al Gore criticized the media and the current administration's war on Iraq and suggested an "unhealthy relationship" between the two at Tuesday's Seigenthaler Lecture.

"I admire these journalists who are covering this war who are embedded, but I don't want the owners of the companies they work for to be in bed with the government," Gore said.

Citing the continued deregulation of the media industry as a major problem, Gore held the media responsible for the role it played in the months leading up to the war.

"The relative intolerance of dissent on the part of the media in America led to a completely inadequate debate prior to the beginning of this war," Gore said.

A majority of the lecture dealt with the issue of entertainment media's impact on American communities and society, which is an issue Gore and his wife Tipper know well.

Tipper Gore, who was invited but did not attend the lecture, was a spokeswoman for the Parents' Music Resource Center, the group that effectively persuaded record companies to place parental advisory labels on material considered offensive in 1985.

Gore fielded many questions from the audience about the ethical problems of labeling music as offensive.

"I would not want someone else telling me what they think my child should see or hear," said Laura Fischer, wife of recording industry professor Paul Fischer and mother of two. "I might object to what they think is appropriate for my child."

Gore replied that the label process was a compromise reached between the record companies and the PMRC.

"I think the imperfect voluntary system is better than no system and better than one that would be more intrusive," Gore said.

Many stores like Wal-Mart refuse to stock compact discs with parental advisory labels and, because Wal-Mart is one of the largest music sellers in the country, music consumers have a harder time finding some CDs, which creates indirect but undeniable, censorship.

"I think there may have been some excesses that have taken on the superficial character of de facto censorship," Gore said.

Still, the Gores have many supporters in MTSU's College of Mass Communication.

Rich Barnet, professor of Recording Industry Ethics, teaches about the PMRC and parental advisory labels in class, but has found some students have misconceptions about what Tipper Gore wanted to do.

"I did a lot of research into Tipper Gore and the PMRC," said Barnet, who co-wrote a book called Controversies of the Music Industry with MTSU journalism professor Larry Burriss.

"The more I read about it the more I realized that she wasn't for censorship," Barnet said. "She was for more information."

Throughout the speech, Gore kept referring back to the idea that entertainment mass media is no longer about good music or a good product, but simply making money.

"Parenting is a tough job," Gore said. "And in a mass culture where the dominant source of information ... comes from corporations sending messages into society for commercial purposes to children, that makes it an even tougher job.

"There is an unfettered riot on the part of some giant corporation that wants to make a little bit more money by peddling it to young children, to just cram it down that child's throat as a part of a mass marketing campaign."

Gore touched on a number of problems in American society he considered direct effects of the mass entertainment industry.

His points included over- consumption of material goods by the American public, a childhood obesity epidemic from playing video games and watching television, lack of voter participation and a lack of diverse viewpoints.

"All of this, I think, has been accentuated by an accelerated trend towards the concentration of ownership of the mass entertainment media in the hands of an ever-smaller number of large companies," Gore said.

While it was clear that everyone in the audience, from journalists to mothers to faculty and students, could not agree on the issues brought up, Gore urged for a greater tolerance for diversity of opinion.

"Our country faces dangers we should not be facing because our best protection ... is free and wide-open debate," Gore said.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: lockbox; riskyscheme; runslikeagirl
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To: mtbopfuyn
You know that inventor! Don't say you don't! He's real famous trade mark is GOREtex!! HEH HEH
21 posted on 03/27/2003 10:37:12 AM PST by areafiftyone (God Bless George Bush and Tony Blair!)
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To: areafiftyone
My, their side is running out of things to complain about, aren't they?
22 posted on 03/27/2003 10:38:00 AM PST by JoeSchem
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To: Howlin; areafiftyone
Not only that, but wasn't Gore actually a journalist in Viet Nam? What is he doing criticizing the journalists embedded with the military in this war when he was one in Viet Nam?

-PJ

23 posted on 03/27/2003 10:39:24 AM PST by Political Junkie Too
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To: JoeSchem
Yes.

And, they hate the public getting to see REAL men, BRAVERY, HONOR, AND LOVE OF COUNTRY.

Also, seeing men and women doing something greater than themselves.
24 posted on 03/27/2003 10:42:16 AM PST by roses of sharon
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To: Political Junkie Too
Why yes, he was. You can tell by the NOTEPAD. (Notice the freshly pressed uniform!)


25 posted on 03/27/2003 10:43:31 AM PST by Howlin
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To: Registered
Whoops. Used your graphic; you get a ping.
26 posted on 03/27/2003 10:43:56 AM PST by Howlin
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To: Howlin
No problem! Feel free.
27 posted on 03/27/2003 10:46:26 AM PST by Registered (If we're not sure he's dead...DROP MORE BOMBS!)
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To: JoeSchem
"I think there may have been some excesses that have taken on the superficial character of de facto censorship," Gore said

Babbling idiot alert! He's completely incoherent now - a mind is a terrible thing.

28 posted on 03/27/2003 10:47:14 AM PST by talleyman (The Left is Sa-damanated by hatred for America)
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To: JoeSchem
Thats because we haven't slaughtered thousands of Iraqi civilians and destroyed their homes like they were hoping! Nothing to bash Bush about in this war so they have to bash the journalists!
29 posted on 03/27/2003 10:47:28 AM PST by areafiftyone (God Bless George Bush and Tony Blair!)
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To: areafiftyone
Yeah Al, tell that to George Steponallofus.
30 posted on 03/27/2003 10:50:39 AM PST by guitfiddlist
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To: areafiftyone
Who ???... who is al gore?
31 posted on 03/27/2003 10:51:47 AM PST by arly
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To: areafiftyone
"lack of voter participation"

What he means... "We just did not get enough dead people and drunks to vote in 2000"
Thank God, my state of Tennessee, went for Bush, and not the local Goreon...Gore is such a Turkey.
32 posted on 03/27/2003 10:53:46 AM PST by AlexW
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To: areafiftyone
To paraphrase Mark Twain(?): It is better to be silent and be thought a loser, then to open your mouth and remove all doubt."

Honestly, does anyone think that if Gore were in the current situation (which he wouldn't be because he would be sucking up to Jacque Chirac right now), he wouldn't be curled up in the fetal position, quivering and unresponsive?

33 posted on 03/27/2003 11:08:51 AM PST by SpinyNorman
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To: areafiftyone
"Al Gore, who claims he used to be somebody, spoke at length about on a variety of subjects. No transcript is available because, frankly, no one bothered to write it down"
34 posted on 03/27/2003 11:17:43 AM PST by rockrr
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To: areafiftyone
I bet that when Gore was an embedded journalist in Vietnam, he didn't over-identify with the American side.
35 posted on 03/27/2003 11:21:47 AM PST by js1138
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To: areafiftyone
"All of this, I think, has been accentuated by an accelerated trend towards the concentration of ownership of the mass entertainment media in the hands of an ever-smaller number of large companies," Gore said.

Ignoring the fact that federal regulations make it increasingly difficult for small companies to compete.

36 posted on 03/27/2003 11:26:50 AM PST by js1138
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To: areafiftyone
He also invented TV!

I don't think so!
Here are the real people that invented TV

http://www.arts.uwaterloo.ca/FINE/juhde/hills961.htm

http://www.farnovision.com/

Want to see what the first TV looked like

http://www.mztv.com/televisor.html

http://www.tvdawn.com/index.htm

37 posted on 03/27/2003 11:38:25 AM PST by quietolong
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To: areafiftyone
Al Gore complaining about the media? When he was teaching that journalism class in New York he kicked them out! He didn't want them reporting on what he was saying to his students. Thank goodness FNC had an "embedded" intern reporter who happened to be a student in Gore's class. (She's now a full-fledged reporter for Fox but I can't remember her name. Young and pretty.)
38 posted on 03/27/2003 11:46:28 AM PST by arasina (PRAY for our troops, our president, our journalists, the POWs and the innocents!)
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To: Flurry
I read this 3 times. Is it just me or did algor say absolutely NOTHING?

We-lllll yesssss, and he said all that nuh-thing ve-ree slooooow-lee and di-stinct-lee, so that all the ell-uh-men-tuh-ree minds could un-der-staaaand it and be hyp-no-tized into believing him.

39 posted on 03/27/2003 11:54:02 AM PST by arasina (PRAY for our troops, our president, our journalists, the POWs and the innocents!)
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To: talleyman
... may have been some excesses that have taken on the superficial character of de facto...

This phrase can be applied to the whole 8 years of Clinton-Gore. Well, 95% percent of whatever happened that
can be directly traced to either Clinton, Gore, or Reno.

40 posted on 03/27/2003 12:27:07 PM PST by Calvin Locke
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