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The media landscape in the US is changing rapidly. As all forms of
journalists face massive layoffs, analysts fear that journalism’s role
as a counterforce against the powerful is in jeopardy. For progressives
and radicals working in media, it’s time to not only question what
format news will come in, but also how to approach our work so it is
both accountable and sustainable.
While corporations have shown an ever-decreasing interest in funding
investigative journalism, independent media is undergoing its own
transformation. Part of it is in economic challenges to old methods of
distribution, such as rising print costs and postage rates for print
publications. But the larger transformation has been in where people
turn for news and information.
For much of the last century, a vibrant world of left journalism was an
important part of movements for change. Hundreds of radical magazines,
newspapers and radio stations did the hard work of covering stories
that the corporate media wouldn’t take on. But, in recent years, that
work of journalism has been increasingly abandoned to the corporate
media, while radicals and progressives – especially through websites
and blogs – have been more likely to comment on the stories reported by
others. This work of media criticism is vital. However, now that news
corporations are increasingly making the decision that journalism is no
longer profitable or needed, there is also a need for an organized
alternative to take their place. At last year’s Allied Media Conference
– an annual gathering of radical grassroots media-makers – organizers
asked the question, “What is our evolution, beyond survival?” The State of Corporate Media
The US military has not withdrawn from Iraq, but the US media has. The
New York Times reported in December that, “America’s three broadcast
network news divisions have stopped sending full-time correspondents to
Iraq.” The article went on to note “network evening newscasts devoted
423 minutes to Iraq [in 2008]…compared with 1,888 minutes in 2007.” The
fading coverage of Iraq is a reflection of political decisions and
ratings pressures, but it also illustrates some of what we are losing
as funding is cut for serious journalism in almost every format.
The cuts are affecting every type of media. NPR, which until recently
had been undergoing a growth in staff and programming, recently
canceled News and Notes, their only news program that focused on Black
issues. This came as they cut almost 10% of their staff nationwide.
The much-discussed end of print seems to portent the biggest changes,
especially for local news coverage. At least 525 magazines went out of
business in 2008, according to mediafinder.com, and even more went
under in 2007. The Los Angeles Times has cut nearly half its staff in
the last eight years, while the Tribune Company announced that they
would trim 500 pages of news each week from their twelve papers. The
Miami Herald slashed 370 jobs last year, nearly a third of their
workforce, with more cuts announced for this year. Book publishers –
corporate and independent – have also been announcing staff layoffs and
bankruptcies. Many of these reductions happened before the current
economic freefall, and there are dire predictions of steeper drops on
the horizon.
When The Christian Science Monitor recently ended weekday publication
after a century, the New York Times quoted the paper’s editor as
saying, “We have the luxury – the opportunity – of making a leap that
most newspapers will have to make in the next five years.” Last month,
the Seattle Post-Intelligencer became the largest US paper to make the
shift to being only available online, laying off most of its staff in
the process. Journalism and Money
The story behind the statistics is this: consumption of media hasn’t
gone down – if anything, it’s gone way up. But as more and more people
have become accustomed to getting their media online and for free, who
will fund journalism?
Corporations will continue to make money off of media. And they will
certainly fund a certain amount of journalism as a part of this. But
for independent media-makers, will this work continue to be financially
sustainable? And will new models of funding work for them?
As technology has made most kinds of media creation easier, the range
of people doing this work has grown. At the Allied Media Conference,
held each year in Detroit, it appears the future of media is alive and
well. From hip-hop artists to radio activists to video journalists,
radical educators, and a network of women of color bloggers, the
several hundred participants at last year’s gathering were younger than
most conferences, with many high school students who are already deeply
involved in challenging work, and the gathering had much more of a
queer energy than most media gatherings. The conference was also
majority people of color, and very much focused on organizing and
social movements.
Although print is under-represented at the conference (which ironically
began as a gathering of zine makers), the dialogue that exists between
different mediums represented is inspiring. Seeing gatherings like
this, I believe that there is a new generation coming up who will
continue to use these tools to hold the powerful accountable.
But even with many technological barriers removed, there is still a
need for money. Every potential source of funding has its problems.
Advertising funds some news websites, but that’s not an option for
anti-corporate media-makers. Foundations have stepped in to fund
investigative reporting and other projects, but this funding doesn’t
nearly meet the need, and – in this time of economic crisis – this form
of support is going down. Finally, critics point out that getting
funding from foundations is not so different from getting money from
corporations. Through your funding, you become accountable to the
wealthy people who are paying you, and not to your community’s needs. Community Support
Without alternative sources of funding, publishing any kind of print
publication can be extremely difficult. Bitch Magazine is one of the
larger independent publications, selling tens of thousands of copies of
each issue. The magazine has an extremely small staff, a specific niche
that they fill that no one else does, and a loyal readership. Yet even
with these advantages, they recently faced a serious financial
shortfall.
Last September, Bitch’s editor and publisher announced on their website
and in a youtube video that they need to raise $40,000 by October 15 or
they would have to cease publishing. They raised $46,000 in three days,
and over the next several weeks tens of thousands dollars more came in.
They now have well over 500 sustainers who have pledged to donate
anywhere from $5 to $100 or more every month. The crisis they faced
illustrates the fragility of all independent magazines, but the quick
and massive outpouring of support demonstrates that financial support
is possible from our communities.
While media companies have repeatedly failed in their attempts to get
readers to regularly pay for their product, examples like Bitch provide
some evidence that communities will pay to keep a valued resource alive. New Distribution Models
Grassroots organizers and activists founded Left Turn Magazine – the
publication I work with - as a political project. The magazine has
focused on writing by people directly involved in movements, rather
than journalists or academics. We are an all-volunteer collective with
members in cities across the US, including Chicago, Durham, Washington
DC, New York City, Oakland, and New Orleans.
In 2004, the magazine was passed on to an editorial collective made up
mostly of organizers and activists. Instead of media-makers who founded
a magazine, we are organizers who suddenly had a magazine given to us.
Because of this, we have always seen the magazine as a tool or resource
for social movements, and we have looked for alternate models of
distribution, not relying on corporate distributors and bookstores, or
anonymous mass mailings.
Most of our distribution happens through what we call our activist
distribution network – grassroots organizations, activists, infoshops,
and collectives who pay what they can and distribute the magazine to
their communities. Many of these distributors also suggest content for
the magazine and write articles about organizing happening in their
communities.
This model is not necessarily sustainable for a larger project, and has
many drawbacks. But we have consistently grown while magazines all
around us have gone out of business over the past years. Most
importantly, we believe that our model - which involves much more
direct contact with our readers - creates a kind of journalism that is
more accountable to the communities it seeks to serve. Grassroots Media Tour
Recently, Left Turn joined a coalition of activist projects that
launched the Grassroots Media Tour. Sponsors included several print
publication, such as Bitch Magazine, ColorLines Magazine, $pread
Magazine, and Make/Shift Magazine, as well as Free Speech Radio News.
The tour brought performances, film screenings, poetry, workshops, and
discussions to communities across the South – from Greensboro, North
Carolina, and Miami, Florida, to Denton, Texas. Nearly one thousand
people saw the tour, with standing-room only crowds in several cities.
As participants in the tour, the most exciting aspect was the
opportunity to connect with people across the South who are engaged in
the vital work of connecting media and social justice. We met with
organizations such as the Hive in Greensboro, Project South in Atlanta,
Take Back the Land in Miami, Esperanza Peace and Justice Center in San
Antonio, and many more. We found inspiring and exciting organizations
struggling in innovative ways for justice and liberation.
Some of our inspiration for this tour came from the mass mobilizations
for the Jena Six in 2007. Almost 50,000 people from around the US came
to support high school students in a small town in northern Louisiana
who were facing life in prison for a school fight. The organizing and
publicity for the Jena case originated from the families themselves,
and spread from there. Left Turn was the first national news outlet to
cover the case, and the story spread over email, blogs, social
networking sites, Black radio, and other noncorporate outlets such as
Democracy Now and The Final Call newspaper. While CNN and every other
major corporate news outlet eventually covered the case, there is no
doubt that it was activists that made it a story they couldn’t ignore.
The attention certainly helped the students – all of them are in
school, rather than in prison. While five of the six still have charges
hanging over their heads, they are in a much better situation, with
much better legal representation, than most Black youths entangled in
the Prison Industrial Complex. However, this public scrutiny was also
hard for the young students at the center of the case. Mychal Bell, the
only member of the Jena Six to have been convicted, recently attempted
suicide, shooting himself in the chest with a gun.
The Jena Six case serves to illustrate two important points. The first
is the power of independent media, which helped to nurture this story
until the major outlets could no longer ignore it. The second lesson is
the importance of accountability in our movement. It’s not enough for
media to be focused on grassroots struggles; we also need
communication, collaboration, and empathy for those directly affected.
As Mychal Bell has demonstrated, there are lives at stake.
New technology will continue to change the way we consume information.
But the need uncovering the deceptions of the powerful remains
unchanged. We need to find ways, as a movement, that we can support –
and hold accountable – grassroots, community-oriented media that
investigates as well as comments. Its clear that corporations wont do
it for us. Jordan Flaherty is a journalist based in New Orleans, and an
editor of Left Turn Magazine. He was the first writer to bring the
story of the Jena Six to a national audience and his reporting on
post-Katrina New Orleans has been published and broadcast in outlets
including Die Zeit (in Germany), Clarin (in Argentina), Al-Jazeera,
TeleSur, and Democracy Now. He is also co-director of PATOIS: The New
Orleans International Human Rights Film Festival. He can be reached at neworleans@leftturn.org.
A full report from the Grassroots Media Tour is online at durhamtodenton.blogspot.com
Allied Media Conference - http://www.alliedmediaconference.org
Other Resources:
Left Turn Magazine - http://www.leftturn.org
PATOIS: The New Orleans International Human Rights Film Festival - http://patoisfilmfest.org
Other recent reporting by Jordan Flaherty:
Torture at Angola Prison - http://monthlyreview.org/mrzine/flaherty270109.html
New Orleans reactions to Obama’s election (in Spanish) - http://www.clarin.com/diario/2008/11/10/elmundo/i-01799537.htm
Video report for Democracy Now during Hurricane Gustav - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GtfcMkdoNhk
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