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HAS THE MEDIA GONE TOO FAR?
boblonsberry.com ^ | 09/16/08 | Bob Lonsberry

Posted on 09/16/2008 5:33:03 AM PDT by shortstop

Have you had enough of the evening news?

Has the condescending lecture of the network anchor gotten old? Are you sick and tired of "reporters" who couldn't tell the story straight if their lives depended on it?

I am.

I am about fed up with a news industry that fundamentally fails to do its job, and which every day strays further and further from its purpose. I'm tired of partisan lectures and propaganda dressed up like the news. I have had about all I can take of the self-important blowhards who seem to think their role is to rudely mock and shout down the people who we elect to office.

I'm just tired of their crap.

If there's one group of people I trust less and have more contempt for than politicians, it is reporters. We are a nation awash is news products which contain virtually nothing of subsance or worth. We have channels full of 24-hour crap, and hardly a reporter anywhere who can actually tell it to us straight.

The media has called itself to some position of importance and significance in our society, taking upon itself an air or power and superiority that is almost comical. They have almost made themselves a special class of people whose every notion or whim is "right" and any contrary view is "wrong." They are collectively the most arrogant and self-important group of people in our society today.

And yet they are terrible at their job.

They are so wrapped up in recirculating their own speculation that they seldom truly report. They are so bound up in the cliches of their trade that they become useless.

Here's an example. For two months the various news organizations, around the clock, talked about the potential Republican vice presidential candidates. Over and over reporters said that Mitt Romney was the most likely, with the Minnesota governor or some executive thrown in as well. There was a conventional wisdom and these blowhards repeated it and amplified it over and over and over. And yet it was completely baseless. Mitt Romney had never even met privately with John McCain. There had never even been an interview.

It seems like real reporting would have found that out.

Just as real reporting would have discovered -- while commentators opined on a Democrat "Dream Team" -- that Barack Obama had neither met with nor vetted Hillary Clinton.

The news business is very good at baseless commentary, but essentially incompetent at real reporting.

Ideally, the news business is nothing more than a pipe. Its job is to gather and transmit information. Like the water pipe that leads from the main to your kitchen sink. You turn on the tap and you should get, unadulterated, cool, clear water. You don't want to taste the pipe. You just want water.

The news should be like that. It should be free of the bias and opinion of the reporter, it should just be information. We all have a brain of our own, we don't need things interpreted for us, we don't need them spun. Just give us the information and we'll go from there.

Instead, virtually every newscast or significant newspaper story smells of the rotting carcass of agenda and bias. So-called experts and analysists are nothing more than shills selling snake oil. Paul Begala and Donna Brazile are not analysts, they are Democrat propagandists on the evening news. Karl Rove is their Republican counterpart. No one gives an honest opinion or legitimate insight. They merely spin and confuse, putting predictable political slants on everything they say.

And that is not journalism or anything like it.

We are not informed by the news, we are shaped by it. At least they hope we are. It's as if they think we are a herd of mindless sheep looking to their televised selves for the guidance we cannot provide for ourselves.

There is a palpable antagonistic air to so much of the media, whether in the news magazines or on the evening news or the weekend talk shows. It is clear they neither like nor trust the American people.

Recently, I had the opportunity to attend the Republican and Democratic national conventions. At each, reporters outnumbered delegates and officials more than 3-to-1. The vast majority of these media people were doing nothing but regurgitating what others had said, over and over and over. In almost every situation, the priorities and topics of the reporters were very different from those of the delegates. For all the news media, for all the coverage, all you got by watching TV at night was the opinions of the anchors and reporters, you don't learn a thing, truly, about the convention or the delegates.

Nothing is more emblematic of that than the frequent sight during convention coverage of various talking heads in the TV networks' skybox studios prattling on while in the distant, out-of-focus background some legitimate newsmaker was giving a speech. It's as if the media feels that its people and what they have to say is more important than the people who truly are the news and what they have to say.

So how do we take it down? How do we knock over this self-appointed royalty?

I have no idea.

But I do know that, in this day of technology, we don't need reporters as much as we used to. Speeches, press releases, official reports -- we can see them all directly ourselves via the Internet. If we have the time to do some reading ourselves, we don't need the news media.

More news programming with less true content, reporters with plenty of self-esteem and not a bit of competence, clear political agendas on the part of some reporters and networks. That's where it stands today. The media isn't the solution, the media has become the problem.

Charlie Gibson made that pretty clear the other night as he tried to trip up Sarah Palin.

How do we stop them?

Pretty simple. Just turn them off. Let them talk into dead air.

Like the stuff between their ears.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: drivebys; election; enemedia; lonsberry; media; propaganda; propagandawingofdnc
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To: shortstop
I don't watch network news anymore, nor do I read the NY Times after reading it religiously and regularly for more than forty years. But the paper is still delivered here because my wife wants it, so I caught the main headline when I brought the paper in today. Check this out!
ML/NJ
21 posted on 09/16/2008 5:54:52 AM PDT by ml/nj
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To: shortstop
I recall reading a couple columns following the 1964 elections asking did we (the media) go too far destroying Goldwater.

The MSM employees are aware of what they are doing.

22 posted on 09/16/2008 5:58:17 AM PDT by WilliamofCarmichael (If modern America's Man on Horseback is out there, Get on the damn horse already!)
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To: shortstop

Sarah Palin was out fishing with her husband. Her hat blew off her head and into the cold water. “I’ll turn the boat around so we can get it.” Todd told her. “That won’t be necessary,” she responded. She calmly got out of the boat and walked across the water, picked up her hat and returned to the boat. Reporters on shore, to their amazement saw the entire incident. The next day the headlines read, “SARAH PALIN CAN’T SWIM!”


23 posted on 09/16/2008 6:00:20 AM PDT by pke
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To: shortstop
In truth, the networks have blown it. They have gone from biased to partisan and in doing so they have diluted the effectiveness of their propaganda.

We have always known that the networks were lefties, because we knew that they were omitting important facts or not asking the right questions. However, that subtle approach was effective on the uneducated. They really thought that the leftist dribble they were getting fed was balanced coverage.

Reagan's presidency started to change all that. The leftist media started to lose it. By the time George H. Bush ran in 1988, they were starting to let go of pretense. In a panel discussion that cycle, several anchors actually agreed publicly that the election was “too important for objectivity” because the common man wasn't understanding the issues when delivered in a mock balanced format. That was the beginning of open partisan coverage by the networks.

The next election cycle they were openly partisan, and the entertainment side of the networks also kicked in. “Designing Women” had several “vote Clinton” episodes, among others.

The Clinton years gave them a bit of a breather and with GOP candidates like Dole they decided they could safely go back to just being biased. W. changed all that, and with each passing year they have become more and more desperate to turn public opinion.

I think they have now crossed the Rubicon. Only their sycophants still believe that their reporting is anything but partisan or more likely just approve of it. Proof appears in Gov. Palin. They have openly mocked her, defamed her, repeated the nastiest lies with glee, yet the public seemingly ignores them.

But WE MUST STOP REFERRING TO THEM AS BIASED. They are post-biased. They are now partisan and we need to continue to drive that message home.

24 posted on 09/16/2008 6:01:58 AM PDT by SampleMan (Community Organizer: What liberals do when they run out of college, before they run out of Marxism.)
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To: shortstop

After being stationed overseas for the past year, I can’t tell you how little my TV was used, unlike when I still lived state-side. I lurked on FR for quite a while until I left the country and now this is where I come for all my news/political needs. What do I use my TV for now? A place to display all the coins I’ve received.


25 posted on 09/16/2008 6:03:29 AM PDT by Clarinet_King (Det 4 21st Operations Group - Siempre Vigilantes Del Cielo - Detect, Track, Deter HUA!)
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Comment #26 Removed by Moderator

To: shortstop
How do we stop them?...Pretty simple. Just turn them off. Let them talk into dead air.
C-Span, was a hopeful trend...until the Washington Powerbrokers (MSM, DBM, DNC & RINOs), put a stop to their coverage.
27 posted on 09/16/2008 6:04:23 AM PDT by skinkinthegrass ("Annoy the media, elect PALIN and McCAIN....errr....McCAIN / PALIN.....MCPALIN" 8^)
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To: JaneNC

I would have to watch the shows to know who their advertisers are.

I have no clue who sponsors what. I just do not watch the MSM nor much print media.


28 posted on 09/16/2008 6:05:56 AM PDT by Jemian (Nobama - wants to kill babies & raise taxes; Palin - wants to kill taxes & raise babies!)
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To: JaneNC

A national boycott of their advertisers would help to express our disgust.


29 posted on 09/16/2008 6:08:53 AM PDT by ExTexasRedhead
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To: shortstop

I get all of my news from FR. Haven’t watched TV news (other than for major breaking stories, such as on 9/11) in a decade. I rarely even touch newspapers — any topic they deign to cover is already discussed, and discussed more intelligently, here.


30 posted on 09/16/2008 6:16:40 AM PDT by kevkrom (McCain/Palin '08 -- Palin / ??? '12)
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To: shortstop

Barackfest ‘08 has finally opened the eyes of millions as to just how biased the media is. The free-fall in newspaper sales is only part of the story. Network News is no longer an evening family staple. And the unprecedented attacks on Governor Palin, and particularly her children, is mobilizing many to put the heat on advertisers who underwrite it.


31 posted on 09/16/2008 6:20:02 AM PDT by xDGx
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To: shortstop
I quit watching the lies that cam out of the tube form Viet Nam. They were at it way back then. Then Kerry muddied us and showed himself as the traitor he is. Now he and murtha are in congress with Pelosi with the 9% rating and they still think they are something. My dogs are better for me than congress.
32 posted on 09/16/2008 6:29:50 AM PDT by mountainlion (concerned conservative.)
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To: shortstop

“HAS THE MEDIA GONE TOO FAR?”

Who cares if they have? Does any intelligent person still watch or listen to the leftmedia?

There are a lot of folks who want to boycott the leftmedia. I don’t see the point. A boycott implies that once behavior changes, you’ll be back. I won’t be. The leftmedia can do whatever it wants or say whatever it wants. I’ll still be tuning them out.


33 posted on 09/16/2008 6:32:39 AM PDT by RKBA Democrat (Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner!)
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To: shortstop
Ideally, the news business is nothing more than a pipe. Its job is to gather and transmit information. Like the water pipe that leads from the main to your kitchen sink.

But now days, the "water" travels through reporters kidneys and bowels before it gets to the kitchen sink.

34 posted on 09/16/2008 6:33:30 AM PDT by CPOSharky (Blaming CO2 for global warming is like blaming your thermometer for your kid's fever.)
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To: shortstop

“has the media gone too far?”

too far? the media has been far-left obnoxious revolutionary for a long time. it has already fallen off the far left scale. can it go any further?

IMHO


35 posted on 09/16/2008 6:34:01 AM PDT by ripley
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To: Baynative

“If you have ever been involved in a story that made the paper or the evening news, you know darn well that very little of what made print or got aired was factual and correct.”

True, and sad. Part of the problem, apart from he bias, is that the reporters often don’t really know much about what they are reporting on. A journalism degree, or a degree in English or literature doesn’t qualify one to write about climate change, or the economy, or stem cells etc.

But the bias is clearly the biggest problem. I remember years ago thinking how terrible it was that the citizens of the USSR had the propaganda of Pravda as their main news source. Ironically we are now not much better.


36 posted on 09/16/2008 6:38:48 AM PDT by pieceofthepuzzle
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To: shortstop
Nothing is more emblematic of that than the frequent sight during convention coverage of various talking heads in the TV networks' skybox studios prattling on while in the distant, out-of-focus background some legitimate newsmaker was giving a speech. It's as if the media feels that its people and what they have to say is more important than the people who truly are the news and what they have to say.

Exactly why I kept my TV tuned to CSPAN during the RNC.

37 posted on 09/16/2008 6:48:27 AM PDT by pgkdan (Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions - G.K. Chesterton)
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To: shortstop
Nothing is more emblematic of that than the frequent sight during convention coverage of various talking heads in the TV networks' skybox studios prattling on while in the distant, out-of-focus background some legitimate newsmaker was giving a speech. It's as if the media feels that its people and what they have to say is more important than the people who truly are the news and what they have to say.

Exactly why I kept my TV tuned to CSPAN during the RNC.

38 posted on 09/16/2008 6:48:33 AM PDT by pgkdan (Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions - G.K. Chesterton)
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To: refermech
News, whether broadcast or print, is a business. Its customers are advertisers. Its product is audience.

It creates material that is designed to attract its product, audiences. What attracts audiences?

Actual events
Sensationalism
Change
Controversy
Conflict
Celebrity

The news media cannot control actual events. Hurricanes, floods, earthquakes, wars, accidents, etc. happen in their own time. These occurrences are completely independent of what reporters or editors would desire. Sometimes they double or even triple up and at other times nothing is going on for extended periods in terms of events.

Unfortunately, the news media can either completely or, at least, partially control things, other than events, which attract audiences. By slanting, censoring, controlling or omitting context and otherwise manipulating coverage, news organizations can create sensationalism, advocate change, stir controversy, deepen conflict, and, to a degree, generate celebrity.

Think about it. Which of the following headlines is more likely to cause a reader to buy a newspaper or listen to a radio broadcast: City Council Determines Water Supply Treatment Plant Is Not Using Latest Technology OR Is Your Drinking Water Killing You?

Both articles can be about the same set of basic, underlying facts. However, one article can be constructed to artificially emphasize sensationalism, deepen controversy, advocate change, and emphasize conflict where none really existed in any great amount. Viola, the news media has attracted audience and sold it to their customers, the advertisers.

There is one other issue that drives news media: politics. Politics is, be definition, about the control of power. The old “saw” comes into play, here, “information is power.” Controlling information can partially, or completely, control “power,” especially in democracies and republics. Controlling mass information, with advent of the printing press, meant controlling the presses either, directly, in terms of output or, indirectly, in terms of input. Obviously, the term, “press” in this context also means broadcast media as well.

Control can be direct as it was during Joseph Goebbels’ tenure as Hitler’s propaganda minister. Alternately, such control can be indirect as in having selection of all of the news media producers and reporters restricted to a few sources with exactly the same training, graduation criteria and governing philosophy.

The counter to bias in the news media, whether from a desire to attract audience or exercise power, is not demanding noble, public interest and morality from reporters and editors. Such will happen only haphazardly. Rather, the cure for bias in news media is unfettered competition. Audiences will eventually, if not immediately, figure out which sources are biased and gravitate toward competitors that are less so. Advertisers will also figure out which news providers are attracting the largest audiences and capitalism will eventually balance the bias, either in terms of alternative sources that are biased in opposite directions or single sources that have minimum bias. Regardless, both the audiences and advertisers will benefit.
39 posted on 09/16/2008 7:08:25 AM PDT by Lucky Dog
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To: CPOSharky
[ But now days, the "water" travels through reporters kidneys and bowels before it gets to the kitchen sink. ]

Thats the money quote..

40 posted on 09/16/2008 7:16:47 AM PDT by hosepipe (This propaganda has been edited to include some fully orbed hyperbole....)
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