John Nichols and Robert McChesney have written a widely posted Nation article
searching for answers to the current emergencies in the newspaper
business. ("The Death and Life of Great American Newspapers") They
recognize the crisis as an opportunity to rethink public media in
general and their suggestions for remedy are at least a provocative
starter for the needed reassessment and creative activism. They
suggest the government pump in $60 billion over the next three years, a
pricetag that is similar to, though less than, the handouts to AIG and
the US banks.
However,
it's hard to believe that anyone could seriously want to salvage the
"print-fitted" U.S. corporate news. In their article, the media
reformers are trying to prop up the bankrupt "fourth estate" with
proposals for salvation, requesting that Congress help the media
corporations-- well, at least the ones that own newspapers--by
subsidizing delivery by the U.S. Post Office and even free delivery for
some periodicals. They would also bequeath to readers limited tax
exemptions for newspaper purchase. How this would work is a bit fuzzy
and their definition of journalism is more Washington Post and New York Times than the Indypendent,
the NYC based Indymedia weekly, let alone community radio and public
access TV. Missing in the article is any discussion of the popular
tabloids. I doubt if Nichols and McChesney consider the NY Post or even the New York Daily News as
capital "J" Journalism. It may have been a long time since either
Nichols nor McChesney rode a subway, so perhaps they don't have a clue
as to what the masses read. The authors must read the NY Times with their croissants.
Subsidies
The
papers they would subsidize are replete with advertising. Why should
U.S. taxpayers subsidize the delivery of ANY ads? Their proposal does
put a tepid limit on subsidies to "ad-supported" news --only ones which
have 50% or less ads. We are already paying for ads in the cost of
promoted goods. The postal service is burdened with the weight of the
ads sent as catalogues and all the other junk mail that has flourished
with "bulk" rate subsidies. Junk mail is just that-- the "bulk" of
postal business today.
I'm
surprised that these media reformers have undertaken such a rush to
resuscitate their own often blasted past targets. They agonize that
without newspapers, "Politicians and administrators will work
increasingly without independent scrutiny and without public
accountability." They admit that the U.S. press has sadly missed that
sort of independent scrutiny for decades, but there is a lingering
belief that journalism (with a capital J!) is usually "on the case."
How does New York Times' war-monger Judith Miller fits into that
ideal? Certainly it wasn't just "bad apple" Miller who lead the war
chorus. The Times wasn't "reporting" about Iraq prior to the
invasion, but actively orchestrating the battle cries--as they were
soon to follow with their treatment of the Iran "threat".
Where are the Nichols and McChesney of their New Press 2005 book, Tragedy and Farce: how the American media sell wars, spin elections, and destroy democracy? One
longs for a systemic critique, not a band-aid and a pat. They have
good impulses, but they are compromised and essentially brought down by
their allegiance to established professional hierarchies and by their
inability to acknowledge (even their own!) critique of corporate
media. There is no recognition of the on-going process of
"manufacturing consent", so brilliantly laid out by Herman and
Chomsky. Instead there is almost an apology-- similar to the Times' own mea culpa vis a vis Judith Miller. Nichols and McChesney say: "The news media blew the coverage of the Iraq invasion". "They missed the
past decade of corporate scandals." (My emphases) It's as though
these are just some mistakes--aberrations that could be rectified by
some additional resources and a few more good reporters. They call for
the system to create "far superior" journalism. There is an abiding
faith in the system itself.
Journalism Education
The Nation article
proposes that there be subsidies for journalism education. Why feather
the nests of the mainstream journalism schools? An interesting survey
would be to find out how many of the winners of, for example, the Polk
Journalism Awards, have actually attended those stodgy bureaucrat
factories. The heroic journalists who come to mind didn't hatch in
those halls. Amy Goodman studied anthropology. Seymour Hersh and Studs
Turkel went to law school. Naomi Klein attended the London School of
Economics. Robert Fisk was a literature major. Even deceased
mainstream ABC anchor Peter Jennings didn't attend journalism school.
He never even finished a BA, saying he "lasted about 10 minutes" in
college. Polk award winner Jeremy Scahill cut his teeth at the
Catholic Worker. Scahill once said that journalism schools produce
only lemmings. His solution is to declare journalism a trade and
insure that young people learn out in the field, apprenticing as he did
with Amy Goodman. He claims to have learned more from his work
cataloging Amy's piles of news clippings than he would in any college
classroom.
The
U.S. junior high schools and high schools don't need journalism
classes, but courses that encourage young people to take an interest in
history, economics, political science and yes, literature. In terms of
the media, U.S. schools need CRITICAL media education, so that students
learn to critique not only the New York Post, but The Nation and Hulu and the twittering prose of Face Book. Scandinavia has a long tradition of requiring media analysis even in primary schools. "Tell me kids, why is Teletubbies sponsored by Kelloggs?" Our high school students, many of whom are members of My Space, need to be taught to understand how data mining works. Those cute Face Book questionnaires and attitude surveys are conceived by marketers who are building profiles, for their next round of "push" ads.
Public, Educational and Government Access
McChesney
and Nichols suggest that there be government support for school
newspapers and low power radio. Great. There are high schools where
radio and internet reporting is happening right now. Students and
community organizations have had access to technical and training
support for coverage of local (and national) issues in the often
dismissed world of PEG channels. PEG (Public, Government and
Educational) access in many communities are required by local
governments as a payment for use of the local "right of way." This has
resulted in media centers in several thousand municipalities where
communities can have access to cameras, computers and channels, all
maintained by the cable operator. PEG has done admirable work in a
providing opportunities for gaining technical proficiency, moreover, in
providing an authentic "public sphere" for creating and exchanging
information and opinion. The impressive PEG infrastructure is
currently threatened by the heavily funded lobbying of ATT and
Verizon. These corporations are seeking to get state legislatures to
enact laws which gut the local regulations that require cable
corporations to provide access. McChesney and Nichols' Free Press has
not foregrounded this battle, preferring to highlight the sexier
struggle for "net neutrality". However, recently after a bit of
prodding, Free Press helped by urging their list serve members to make
FCC comments in support of PEG. This is part of an inquiry by the FCC
into how cable corporations have been "slamming" access channels by
moving them into hard to find digital "closets" not easily accessible
to channel switching remotes. .
The
struggle for an open internet can’t be limited to "neutrality". Sure,
the preferential use of speed and access by internet providers should
not be allowed, but as technology enables telecommunication companies
to pursue video distribution, we are moving closer to the convergence
of these technologies, as any owner of an I-phone can attest. That
means that the battles for PEG and the net all have the same
protagonists, and all of these companies should be required to provide
space and resources for the public. Enacting regulations which require
support for public communication across all platforms should be part
and parcel of the internet governance fight. Our airwaves and our
"rights of way" enable these technologies and there has to be a public
"pay back." Timber cutting and resource mining in national forests must
compensate the public. Why not "rent" for our sky?
Nichols
and McChesney speak of the need to protect public media from
government interference, but PEG activists and administrators have
developed concrete examples of how public media can be shielded from
government and corporate interference. Many of the cable franchises
now in place are far more effective than the "safeguards" at PBS, CPB
and NPR. In terms of media regulation, PEG is a pretty good model,
although in many cities and towns PEG is underfunded and neglected.
However, in those cities where PEG has flourished with comprehensive
contracts with the cable corporations, such as Tucson, Cambridge,
Burlington, Portland and many, many more, public communication via
access channels provides many of the things right now that Nichols and
McChesney want "public broadcasting" to do in the future.
"Quality"
The Nation article
has confusing proscriptions for a future "public media". McChesney and
Nichols state: "Only government can implement policies and subsidies to
provide an institutional framework for quality journalism. We
understand that this is a controversial position." But then they go on
to say they don't endorse "government support". They then argue for
expanding funding for public broadcasting, and argue that in their
proposed future, "no state or region would be without quality local,
state, and national or international journalism." They do not outline
how the programming would be protected from government (and corporate)
interference, nor do they define what "quality" is, any more than they
delineate the "vibrant democracy" that they say was the goal of
Jefferson and Madison. That the views of women and non-landholders
weren't part of that "vibrant" consensus in our early Republic is not
mentioned in McChesney and Nichols' enthusiastic statements about the
press.
That quest for "quality" is one of the ruses which mainstream journalism, from the NYTimes to
public broadcasting, has used to maintain their status quo. The
position is succinctly put in the quote by James Carey in the
McChesney/Nichols article. Carey asks for "journalists to be restored
to their proper [sic!] role as orchestrators of the conversation of a
democratic culture." Is "orchestration" what we need for a "vibrant
democracy"? A different critic, Communication Professor Herbert
Schiller, in the first Paper Tiger TV program (critiquing The New York Times in 1981) saw that role as being "the steering mechanism of the ruling class."
Public Broadcasting
Nichols
and McChesney are right that this is an opportune time to re-think the
structures of U.S. media, and public broadcasting is a good place to
start, but there are other more general problems than the need for
multi-year consistent funding. Pouring money into the "public
broadcasting" that now exists will only strengthen the elitism that has
evolved from these convoluted, bureaucratic structures. The whole
structure of PBS and CPB is designed to squelch any "vibrant
democracy." While Nichols and McChesney warn about government
involvement, they don't mention the gorilla in the room-- transnational
agribusiness and the oil and insurance corporations. The subservient
accommodation by PBS to corporate interests was recently clarified in
the treatment given a Front Line program on health care which was initiated by Washinton Post reporter
T.R. Reid, entitled "Health Care Around America". Although originally
designed to critique profit-oriented health care insurance, PBS
officials demanded major changes and any reference to profit oriented
insurance being a "problem" was deleted. The script was changed to
actually promote the insurance companies, much to the dismay of Mr.
Reid, who tried, unsuccessfully, to have his name and his interviews
taken off the show. The whole thrust of the program became
diametrically contrary to the original intention of the correspondent.
This is just par for the PBS course. Corporate funding (though only a
fraction of the whole budget) is the power component not only for
specific program selection, but for the operation of the whole system,
and when the views expressed are in opposition to the corporate
mind-set, those views are censored, not the corporation.
The
boards of directors of the public television channels across the
country are self-perpetuating elite representatives of corporate and
mainstream interests. For a brief time in the 1970s there was a
movement to have elected boards.
Rather
than change the make-up of the powerful who run these channels, the
response to local and national activism was to set up "advisory boards"
of "community" members. Most of those advisory boards have long since
disbanded, realizing early on that they functioned only as public
relations props and that they had no real clout to effect programming
direction or station management. A new reassessment would have to take
on the democratic restructuring of public television. Serious
democratizing of the public broadcasting system must be a prerequisite
for receiving any funding from Congress, or from any sort of fee based
mechanism such as that which is the basis of the BBC.
Reconfiguring
the funding in ways that are independent of party politics and
corporate PR could help to make our public media true expressions of
the lively issues and arts that exist in our country. Funding for
public media can have strong prerequisites-- ones that foster
independence, creativity and promote collaborations. The example of
ITVS-- the Independent Television Service, founded by the lobbying
efforts of independent producers in the 70s and 80s, has pioneered
various ways (with a small budget) to support serious creative
programming on public television. Democracy Now! is an example
of new journalism that uses a hybrid mix of everything including
camcorder/internet activists and cell phones to provide a daily program
of hard hitting investigation and commentary by historians, lawyers,
politicians, artists and those directly effected by wars and
injustice. On no other outlet do we hear so often from the victims of
global warring (and global warming). Because of the burgeoning "do it
yourself" media sphere, there is great potential for cooperation
between the many sectors of public expression: public television,
public access, community radio, ipods, community projections and the
internet. Each of these entities has infrastructure that can expand
and develop with creative interchange that is open to sharing.
'The division between "professionals" and "amateurs" is exploited by such programs as the popular American Idol,
in which a few talented "amateurs" vie for a "starring role." But the
whole notion of "professional" media is constantly challenged by the
millions of YouTube posters, eye-witness news gatherers,
hip-hop DJs and the whole world of bloggers. The explosion of popular
video and audio creation, combined with supportive infrastructure for
distribution and exchange of this material can herald an era of public
art and dialogue not seen since the WPA.
Communities of Location and Interest
Just
as local food has become a rallying cry, local information, as Nichols
and McChesney note, is what we want. Local media was consistently the
overwhelming demand at the many community hearings that the FCC
conducted over the past few years. In part, this was a tremendous
reaction to the deregulation of radio and the swift consolidation of
hundreds of broadcasting outlets. Let's hope that era of Clear Channel
gobbling up local radio stations is over. The need for "local" is
great in both the commercial and public arena in both television and
radio. One has to look far and wide to find a public TV station (or
even an NPR station) that does any local news. In the Northeast, WAMC
FM out of Albany, NY has gobbled up local frequencies and is heard from
Vermont to Connecticut, from Plattsburgh to Utica, from Pennsylvania to
New Hampshire. Instead of local information this "mega channel"
provides a hodge podge of "regional" programs squeezed in between the
franchised NPR programs and their endless pitching for money.
I
can recall when local radio would broadcast the menu for school
lunches. Reviving that practice might improve the diet for a
generation of youngsters. Parents might be scandalized if they could
listen to the listing of catsup and potato chip meals that dominate
school cafeterias. Local farmers can provide schools and colleges with
fruits and veggies that are healthy and don't require carbon-spewing
cross-country/world shipping. In a similar mode, local independent
producers, youth, professors, musicians, elders, activists and
immigrants can provide information, history, entertainment and art that
is relevant and "home grown." At the same time we can exchange with
international colleagues and friends. When information can travel
freely (and neutrally!), community can be defined by interest and
passion, and not limited by geography.
*
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