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Media Alliance Blog : Displaying 141-160 of 180


Free The Radio Spectrum

Posted by James Losey and Sascha Meinrath on
Open Technology Initiative/New America Fdn

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the government entity that manages the commercial and public radio spectrum in the United States, has proposed making 500 megahertz of spectrum available for broadband within the next 10 years of which 300 MHz between 225 MHz and 3.7 GHz will likely be made available for mobile use within five years. The extra bandwidth, recaptured from broadcasters after the digital television transition, is certainly needed, given that AT&T reports that its mobile broadband traffic has increased 5000 percent over the last three years and that other carriers have also seen significant growth. However, under the current approach to allocating spectrum, this 500 MHz will do little to ease the looming spectrum crunch.

It’s time to rethink the way we allocate spectrum. Under current regulations, spectrum real estate is valuable but exclusive. In the past, that exclusivity was the only way to prevent multiple users from interfering with each other. But advances in radio technology means that today such exclusivity is no longer necessary; instead, it creates false scarcity. So we must change our decades-old approach to managing the public airwaves.

When the FCC began allocating spectrum in the 1930s, radios required wide swaths of spectrum to communicate. Without single players occupying designated bands, a cacophony of interference would have destroyed audio fidelity and later, with television, picture quality.

Today radios that can share spectrum make such protections from interference unnecessary. Just as car drivers can change lanes to avoid congestion, these "smart radios," also called "cognitive radios," are transceivers that listen to available frequencies and communicate over any channels that are currently unused. These radios not only shift frequencies but can also be programmed with the necessary protocols for use in different bands, such as for speaking the "language" of various blocks of spectrum used for Wi-Fi, television, or cellphones. This means that vast swaths of spectrum no longer need be locked into single use, or left unused, as a hedge against interference.

Unfortunately, the FCC’s policies still assume the use of antiquated technology, and therefore that license holders must maintain absolute control of spectrum space at all times. These regulations must be updated to reflect the technological realities of smart radios.

Wi-Fi serves as a striking example of what is possible. A relatively narrow piece of the airwaves that’s open for unlicensed access, Wi-Fi has enabled home networking, roaming connectivity in hotels, cafes, and airplanes, and community broadband networks around the world. The explosion of communications in Wi-Fi’s 2.4 and 5 gigahertz frequencies has led to a host of new services and applications. However, these frequencies have trouble with walls, hills, and long distances. To support next-generation networking, a logical next step would be to allow technology developers access to a bigger and better swath of unlicensed wireless spectrum through the use of smart radios.

Policy allowing these new radios, tagged Opportunistic Spectrum Access (OSA), would give birth to a new generation of connectivity. With smart radios, unlicensed devices could share the same bandwidth as licensed users, finding unused frequencies in real time and filling in during the milliseconds when licensed users are not using their bands. In essence, they would work the same way as today’s iTrip or many home wireless phones, which scan a number of different channels and choose the one with the least interference.

Developers working on smart radio devices are excited about the possibilities of OSA. The technology allows for more affordable broadband for rural populations where low population density has deterred private infrastructure investment. It would mean more affordable and robust networking over longer ranges than today’s Wi-Fi, helping municipalities working to update aging communications systems and public safety officials working in both urban and remote areas. Similarly, OSA could increase opportunities for wireless Internet service providers and networking in businesses, universities, and cities. Successful community wireless networks including Urbana-Champaign, Illinois; Athens, Greece; and Dharamsala, India, could be expanded over greater distances.

The great benefit of OSA is the ability to open more access to spectrum while avoiding the challenges of moving current users to other bands. For example, smart radio device developers could access unused frequencies in the so-called white spaces of broadcast television. These white spaces, created when the FCC allocated spectrum to television broadcasters, are empty channels that were left unoccupied to prevent interference. In many rural areas, as much as 80 percent of this television spectrum is currently unused.

Today companies like Spectrum Bridge and Shared Spectrum Co. are already building next-generation networks using OSA. Spectrum Bridge has built a prototype network using TV frequencies in Claudville, Va. And Shared Spectrum has developed OSA technologies for use in battlefield communications, using these devices’ frequency-hopping capabilities to help avoid jamming efforts by hostile forces.

The FCC recognizes that this spectrum could be made available. In 2008 it issued an order authorizing the use of "White Space Devices (WSDs) that can detect TV signals at levels that are 1/1000th the signal power a television needs to display a picture, scan for interference, and move their bandwidth accordingly, avoiding interference with television broadcasts." To date, however, rollout of such products has stalled because the FCC has not followed through with necessary supplemental rulings, such as creating the required geolocational database of spectrum assignments to help identify which frequencies are in use in each area. Meanwhile, as a part of the national broadband plan, the FCC has committed to repurposing TV bands for exclusive use.

Potential spectrum also exists outside the television bands. Most spectrum allocations, such as the 270 000 held by government agencies alone, are woefully underutilized. Based on the best available data, collected in 2004 as part of a National Science Foundation research project, less than 10 percent of our current spectrum is used at any given point in time (including in major cities).

If the FCC continues the current policies of restricting spectrum use to exclusive entities and the highest bidders, they will continue choking what FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski has called "the oxygen of mobile broadband service." By adopting OSA policies, the FCC will allow expansive access to spectrum without disrupting existing users. Current license holders could preserve priority use in their assigned bands, but secondary users could communally use the 90 percent of spectrum that is typically not in active use.

At this point, implementing OSA is a policy consideration, not a technological challenge. In the National Broadband Plan released by the FCC in March, the commission recommends expeditiously completing the regulations related to TV white spaces. In our view, these rulings must be expanded to include a greater spread of underused spectrum. Spectrum will always be a finite resource, but policy needs to evolve alongside the technology to increase the efficiency and number of devices that can take advantage of this public resource.

About the Authors

James Losey is a program associate with the New America Foundation’s Open Technology Initiative. Most recently he has published articles in Slate as well as resources on federal broadband stimulus opportunities and analyses of the National Broadband Plan.

Sascha Meinrath is the director of the New America Foundation’s Open Technology Initiative and has been described as a community Internet pioneer and an entrepreneurial visionary. He is a well-known expert on community wireless networks, municipal broadband, and telecommunications policy and was the 2009 recipient of the Public Knowledge IP3 Award for excellence in public interest advocacy.

Media Alliance Statement on SF Public Access Shutdown

Posted by on

This is a statement expressing our concern about the planned shutdown and rearrangement of public access television services in the City and County of San Francisco.

While we understand that statewide franchising has greatly reduced the available resources for operating public, educational and governmental (PEG) channels and that sustainability moving forward must be considered;

We are not convinced the current plans being developed by the new operator (The Bay Area Video Coalition) are an appropriate use of public resources and monies.

I – A $375,000 one-time financial contribution from Comcast was negotiated by Supervisor Mirkarimi to support PEG operations in 2010. What is the planned dispensation of these funds?

II– The projected use of public funds to demolish the existing studio are a waste of scarce public resources, which should be 100% dedicated to supporting existing public media infrastructure.

III- The current landlord at 1720 Market Street has expressed willingness to cut the facility rent by at least 45% (to under $10,000 month) for a multi-year occupancy. With funds clearly available to sustain the facility through 2010 and a community of dedicated volunteers, why the precipitous action to dismantle it less than 5 years after it was built out?

IV – The projected satellite facilities at community groups shift training and service burdens from a centralized licensed operator to already-stressed organizations who may well lack the staff time and technical expertise to serve the clients who will use them.

V – The projected relocation of primary studio facilities to 2727 Mariposa Street from 1720 Market Street provides inferior transportation access and inferior disability access, as anyone who has negotiated the 16 Fillmore line via wheelchair can attest

VI – From our public statement at the time of the contract award by the San Francisco Department of Technology:

* Training for potential producers from the local community must be held no less than monthly, open to all, and walk-in studio access must be provided on a consistent schedule

We are entirely unclear as to whether this standard of service will be met at the BAVC office. We do not believe it is negotiable for competent execution of a public access contract.

We want to state as we did in our earlier statement, the core values that are informing this statement:

* Public access content is supposed to originate in and meet the needs of local publics as determined by citizen-producers. The role of the public access operator is to provide training and technology resources to enable local content..

* Cable franchise owners derive massive benefit from using a public utility. Switching the public access funding model largely to user fees and philanthropy shifts the funding base from one of guaranteed corporate responsibility onto access users and public philanthropy.

***
On the matter of the Indybay posting on the Media News program (a 20-minute interview show that broadcasts twice a month – which began in July of 2009).

Media Alliance did not authorize, vet or have any foreknowledge of the post that appeared on December 14, 2009.

What we state for the record is that after issuing a press release announcing that some producers were to picket, MA participated in a conference call with BAVC at their request.

We were asked what role the fact that we had a program on the channel played in our action in issuing the release.

We stated MA has been advocating for San Francisco public access television for many years, including a leadership role in the 2003-2004 cable franchise renewal negotiations and that the program played no role.

The conversation was somewhat unpleasant, but MA does not believe the show was or is in any jeopardy.

Broadband in Yo' Face

Posted by on

Network Neutrality and Racial Justice

Posted by on

The Dangers of Blogging

Posted by on
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2009/11/20091111171831357111.html

Intrigued by an alert sent to us by Xalid Aghliyev at the Media Rights Institute in Azerbajian, we looked a little deeper and found this cautionary tale from Central Asia.

Reported by Al-Jazeera

An Azerbaijan court has jailed two opposition bloggers who posted a video on the internet of the president dressed as a donkey conducting a news conference.

Adnan Hajizade, 26, and Emin Milli, 30 were sentenced to two years and two and a half years in prison respectively on Wednesday after being convicted of hooliganism for a scuffle at a restaurant in Baku, the capital, Isakhan Ashurov, their lawyer, said.

The pair have been in custody since the incident in July, which they said was an unprovoked attack on them.

They assert that they were then arrested for political reasons due to their criticism of the oil-rich Caspian Sea government.

"This sentence is unjust and illegal," Ashurov said. "We plan to appeal the conviction and if we find no justice in Azerbaijan's judicial system, we will appeal to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg."

"There can be no greater honor than to be imprisoned for your ideals," Milli proclaimed after being sentenced.

Officials have said that the conviction is not related to the pair's criticism of the government.

Some human rights advocates have said that the prosecution is an attempt to silence criticism of the government.

"The court's ruling is political. It is aimed at intimidating new media on the internet and preventing the distribution of alternative opinions," Emin Huseynov, director of the Baku-based Institute for Reporter Freedom and Safety, said.

Ilham Aliyev, the president, succeeded his father six years ago.

Basta Dobbs Campaign

Posted by on October 12th, 2009
http://www.bastadobbs.com

Update: According to current reports: Dobbs is on his way out of CNN, possibly over to Fox News Channel. Lou Dobbs' brand of journalism is dangerous to Latinos in America -- and it's time to fight back.

On September 15th, the CNN anchor broadcast his radio show from the conference of anti-immigrant hate group FAIR, the Federation for American Immigration Reform. Founded by a white nationalist, FAIR was linked earlier this year to vigilantes in Arizona who brutally murdered 9-year-old Brisenia Flores and her father in their home.

The appearance at FAIR is just the latest example of Dobbs using his status as a CNN anchor to spread fear about Latinos and immigrants. It's time we said Basta, Enough is enough. Presente.org and dozens of partners across the country are demanding that CNN drop Dobbs from its network.

Dobbs' network CNN, calls itself "The Most Trusted Name in News." But Dobbs has shown that the only thing he can be trusted to do is spread dangerous, false myths about immigrants, give airtime to extremists, and use dehumanizing and disrespectful language towards immigrant communities.

For Dobbs, immigrants are “invaders” who threaten the health and safety of this country. He has blamed Latino immigrants for an alleged leprosy epidemic that was widely debunked, and insinuated high crime rates by falsely claiming illegal aliens make up a third of the prison population. Dobbs also regularly hosts extremist guests like FAIR, the Minutemen, and Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio, who he called “a model for the whole country".

The Dobbs threat to Latinos is real. Here is how Mark Potok of the Southern Poverty Law Center described it:

“How dangerous is Lou Dobbs? The rise in hate crimes against Latinos coincides almost exactly with the time Dobbs has been propagating false conspiracy theories about Latinos on the air. He’s not urging people to go hurt and kill - but that is the effect of what he does.”

CNN should not provide Lou Dobbs a platform to spew hate thinly disguised as "news," and our community has the power to stop them.

More at: http://bastadobbs.com/action

A Rebirth of Cinema in Cambodia

Posted by on
Camerado Productions

From Cambofest 2009 - More links and pictures at http://cambofest.blogspot.com.  Coming in June 2010: Bangkok IndieFest!

*** CAMBOFEST: Film and Video Festival of Cambodia 2009 Awards *** from CFEST on Vimeo.

On ACORN and Double Standards

Posted by Phavia Kujichagulia on

The current ACORN scandal once again proves that independent analysis and honest journalism often takes a backseat to propaganda, bias and overt
double standards.

ACORN’s Chief Executive Officer, Bertha Lewis, hit the nail on the head when she stated that the current salvo against the organization stems from its
39-year history of "going after the rich and powerful". Needless to say, few
people are willing to acknowledge the role classism and racism play in
mainstream America. Radical conservatives work to maintain the economic and racial divides ripping the nation apart while an underpaid and under-resourced nonprofit sector tries to salve the wounds. Some Americans don’t seem to want liberty and justice for all, but just for a chosen few – often wealthy, white, heterosexual males.

Any person or group that threatens centuries of institutionalized, preferential
treatment can become a focal point of attack. This is the case with ACORN. It campaigns nationally for living wages, immigration justice, better public
schools, affordable housing, improved health care and community reinvestment, and fights against forced foreclosures and predatory lending practices,

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that predatory lending practices,
regressive taxation, a non-livable minimum wage, racial profiling, decaying
public schools and other economically discriminatory practices make life
harder for a lot of people.

Although Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae may not have been designed to increase homelessness, countless families of meager to moderate means lost their homes and savings thanks to gross misconduct by these agencies. But where was the call for an immediate end to government funding of these agencies? There wasn't one. If fact, exactly the opposite occurred. The government took billions of dollars from public funds to salvage two agencies that directly increased homelessness and poverty levels across the country.

Meanwhile, ACORN has faced accusations of mismanagement, and it has been quickly suggested that all government aid to the organization should be
eliminated. Banks, mortgage companies and car companies continue to be
rewarded for their mismanagement, while advocacy agencies are being
de-funded and put out of business. That’s a double standard.


While ACORN was working to keep families in their homes, Freddie Mac, Fanny Mae and unscrupulous banks were doing everything possible to profit from putting families out of their homes. While ACORN was working to eliminate regressive taxation, a thin sliver of affluent families and corporations had their tax burdens minimized. While ACORN was working to protect existing communities and schools, real estate speculators were busy destroying lower-income neighborhoods for a wave of condo redevelopment (in buildings often standing empty to this day).

Thinking people don’t want left-wing rhetoric or right-wing propaganda, just
the truth about what makes the people who live in this country healthier, safer, happier, better educated and more productive – and what doesn’t.
More and more people are getting their news from alternative sources
because they want more than passive coverage of distorted attacks on people
and organizations trying to make things better for many Americans who are
suffering.

ACORN isn’t the first victim of these attacks and won’t be the last. But the
lack of a vigorous response to this so-called scandal has been an affront to
accurate journalism and journalists everywhere.


Phavia Kujichagulia is the author of “Recognizing & Resolving Racism: A Resource and Reference Guide for Humane Beings”.

Landmark Finnish Law Makes Broadband Access a Legal Right

Posted by on October 8th, 2009
Huffington Post

Finland has just passed a law making access to broadband a legal right for Finnish citizens.

When the law goes into effect in July 2010, every person in Finland, which has a population of around 5.3 million, will have the guaranteed right to a one-megabit broadband connection, says the Ministry of Transport and Communications (via Finland's YLE).

Finland is reportedly the first country in the world to enact a law that makes broadband access a right.

And the government isn't about to stop there. YLE reports.

The government had already decided to make a 100 Mb broadband connection a legal right by the end of 2015. On Wednesday, the Ministry announced the new goal as an intermediary step. Some variation will be allowed, if connectivity can be arranged through mobile phone networks

Wikipedia notes that in June 2007, the country had about 1.52 million broadband Internet connections (or around 287 per 1,000 residents, according to the Finnish Communications Regulatory Authority). No word yet on how Finland's government plans to make up for the difference.


No Working Class People in Journalism

Posted by on October 7th, 2009
http://prorev.com/2009/10/british-study-shoes-disappearance-of.html

Working Class Studies - A report by the British Cabinet Office offers stark evidence of the disappearance of the working class from the journalism profession, and the study offers some relevant observations for American media as well. The report, Unleashing Aspirations, notes, among other things, that journalists born since 1970 predominantly come from middle class to upper middle class backgrounds. And journalism ranks third in the list of the most socially exclusive professions, just behind doctors and lawyers.

Between the 1958 and the 1970 birth cohorts, the biggest decline in social mobility occurred in the professions of journalism and accountancy. For example, journalists and broadcasters born in 1958 typically grew up in families with an income of around 6% above that of the average family; but this rose to 42% for the generation of journalists and broadcasters born in 1970.

The National Union of Journalists told the panel compiling the report that a 2002 Journalism Training Forum poll showed that fewer than 10 per cent of new journalists came from a working-class background and only three per cent came from homes headed by semi-skilled or unskilled workers.

One of the many troubling findings of the report, and the one most readily applicable to the profession here in the US, is that a prerequisite for entrance into a career in journalism is at least one internship experience, and that many, if not most, are unpaid. . . .

SSRC Study on Barriers to Broadband Adoption in Low-Income Communities

Posted by Tracy Rosenberg on
Social Science Research Council

This study draws on some 170 interviews of non-adopters, community access providers, and other intermediaries conducted across the US in late 2009 and early 2010 and identifies a range of factors that make broadband services hard to acquire and even harder to maintain in such communities.


NY Post Fires Editor Critical of Racist Obama Cartoon

Posted by Sam Stein on September 30th, 2009
Huffington Post

Sandra Guzman was quietly dismissed from her position as associate editor
last week for reasons that are being hotly debated by personnel inside the
company. An official statement from the New York Post, provided to the
Huffington Post, said that her job was terminated once the paper ended the
section she was editing.

"Sandra is no longer with The Post because the monthly in-paper insert,
Tempo, of which she was the editor, has been discontinued."

Employees at the paper -- which is one of media mogul's Rupert Murdoch's
crown jewels -- said the firing, which took place last Tuesday, seemed
retributive.

Guzman was the most high-profile Post employee to publicly speak out
against a cartoon that likened the author of the stimulus bill (whom
nearly everyone associated with President Barack Obama) with a rabid
primate. Drawn by famed cartoonist Sean Delonas, the illustration pictured
two befuddled policeman -- having just shot the chimp twice in the chest --
saying: "They'll have to find someone else to write the next stimulus
bill."

"I neither commissioned or approved it," Guzman wrote to a list of
journalist colleagues shortly thereafter. "I saw it in the paper yesterday
with the rest of the world. And, I have raised my objections to
management."

The remark from Guzman was a rare instance of dissension within the halls
of the paper making its way into the public domain. And sources at the
Post now say it cost her a job.

"I think ever since then, she has been on their shit list and they were
trying to look for a reason to get rid of her," said a Post employee who
was granted anonymity in exchange for speaking freely. The problem at the
Post is a revenue problem, the employee said. "My whole thing is, she is
not in charge of advertising. She is an associate editor. Whoever is in
accounting or advertising should have been held accountable."

Another longtime employee at the paper said Guzman had a sense that she
could lose her job over her remarks. "But it doesn't make it any less
painful."

"The irony there is that the newspaper isn't making money," said a
longtime employee at the paper. "They haven't for a while... There was
definitely room to keep her here without firing her. She could have been
offered another position."

Suzi Halpin, a spokesperson for the Post who works at Rubenstein
Communications, Inc., dismissed any allegations that Guzman's cartoon
criticism played a role in her dismissal.

"The statement from the paper explains the reason why Sandra is no longer
there," she said.

Post employees said that Guzman's firing also raised questions about
minority representation in top management. Guzman had been, until Tuesday,
the only woman of color on the paper's management staff. And according to
one of the longtime Post employees, there has been only one African-
American editor at the paper in the last decade.

"The hiring practices are really bad and have been for most of the time
I've been here," said the employee. "Since I've been here there have been
as many black editors as there have been black presidents of the United
States.."

Guzman's firing came shortly after Murdoch is said to have held a meeting
of leaders from a variety of ethnic communities to discuss ways to make
his various companies -- including The Post -- more diverse.

Guzman did not return a request for comment.

E-Waste: What to do with that old TV or Computer

Posted by on

Recycling resources in the East Bay that are responsible and community-oriented. For analog TV's, old computers ... and more.


Better than Anything on TV

Posted by on

We knew the day was coming when we'd watch TV on our computers. And here we are. Three terrific documentaries available free and online. Enjoy!

Money Talks

"Exposes shady drug industry practices. Important for anyone who wants to understand how corporations are controlling their health" (Heather Gehlert, Alternet.

"Should be required viewing" (Meghann Matwichuk, American Library Assn)

Hummingbird

"Inspiring in it's message of hope amid horrific conditions" (East Bay News RI)

"Harrowing and heartbreaking" (Video Librarian)

Free For All

"Goddam brilliant" (Greg Palast)

"The doc is engrossing, even enraging"(Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times)


Media Alliance 2008-2009

Posted by Tracy Rosenberg on July 8th, 2009

Media Alliance is a 32 year-old media resource and advocacy center for media workers, non-profit organizations, and social justice activists. Our mission: justice, excellence, accountability, and diversity, in all aspects of the media to advance peace, justice, and social responsibility.

Here are some of our accomplishments in the last year:

  • Set up "Raising our Voices," a media lab and media advocacy training program for community leaders and activists, @ East Side Arts Alliance in the San Antonio/Fruitvale area of East Oakland. Planning Phase 2, including a satellite operation in the Filipino community in SF's SOMA
  • Set up a digital television assistance center in East Oakland. Assisted 1400 people. 52 on-site demonstrations and information sessions for community centers, senior and assisted living facilities. Secured media via press conferences, 35+ distinct press stories/comments on the impact of the digital transition, in all major Bay Area networks. Solicited corporate donations of free converter boxes for people living in multi-family residences, illegal apartments and non-fixed addresses.
  • Upgraded our Web-site. Circulated the e-mail Media News (news and commentary from the media reform and media justice movements) to 10,000 people. Advertised 1500 jobs.
  • Ran 22 training workshops in media skills -- editing, feature-writing, op-ed development, strategic communications, interview skills, pitching to the media, and grant-writing --for Bay Area nonprofits.
  • Established a Bay Area media justice hub, including partnerships with First Voice, Poor Magazine, Women of Color Resource Center, EBASE, Centro Legal, Mujeres Unidas, among others.
  • Helped lead two national coalitions. Executive Director Tracy Rosenberg is on the Board of the Media and Democracy Coalition (MADCO), and Program Director, Eloise Lee, is on the Steering Committee of the Media Action Grassroots Network (Mag-Net).
  • Released: "A National Broadband Policy for the 21st Century: Thoughts from the Grassroots," based on responses from participants at grassroots meetings we have convened and attended, plus our own research. Now being used in the development of a Grassroots Internet policy paper by the Media and Democracy Coalition (MADCO).
  • Participated in local media worker's struggle at KPFA - recognition granted to the unpaid worker's bargaining unit/organization in April 2009, after losing this right in 2007. Coordinated benefit with former SF poet laureate devorah major for Nadra Foster, who was "banned and arrested" in Jan of 2009.
  • As Charter member of the Save Our Station Coalition, we testified on the steps of San Francisco City Hall, and lobbied Board of Supervisors. We secured the 1.15% operations fee, and forced one-year Comcast donation of $375,000to prevent imminent public access shutdown in SF.
  • Litigant in several important court cases -- Media Alliance and UCC vs. Zell-Tribune, (waiver to cross-ownership rules); Media Alliance, Benton Foundation, NOW, Common Cause and UCC vs. FCC (female and minority ownership); and Council Tree Communications vs. FCC (spectrum auctions) and Prometheus, UCC, Free Press and Media Alliance vs. FCC (media ownership).
  • Partnered with Urban Habitat to gather Oscar-Grant related art, murals, poetry, music, Photography and videos.
  • Planning a regular 30-minute public access TV version to ramp up public education efforts in July of 2009.

For more information, or to join us:
Contact Media Alliance
1904 Franklin Street # 500
Oakland CA 94612
www.media-alliance.org
510-832-9000

The History of Media Alliance - Excerpted from "Remaking Media: The Struggle to Democratize Public Communication".

Posted by Bob Hackett (Author) and Bill Carroll (Author) on May 27th, 2009
REMAKING MEDIA: THE STRUGGLE TO DEMOCRATIZE PUBLIC COMMUNICATION

Buy the book. 

In its 7 January 2002 cover story on media reform, the respected progressive periodical The Nation recognized Media Alliance in San Francisco (now Oakland) as one of several 'crucial organizations' for building media democracy in the US.

The seed from which this non-profit media advocacy group sprouted was the post-Watergate generation of journalists, against the backdrop of a high tide of liberal reformism in American politics. The tumult of the Vietnam war era had receded following the withdrawal of US troops, but the movements which it had engendered were impacting the State machinery. Lawmakers and courts were moving forward on environmental protection, reproductive rights, women's equality and other issues. Buoyed by the liberal zeitgeist but frustrated by the conservative disposition of mainstream media, about 50 journalists began meeting in 1975-6 to socialize and discuss media and political issues.  Larry Bensky describes his fellow founding members as journalists, especially freelancers, but also many employed in both corporate and alternative media, people dissatisfied with corporate media coverage of events in the Bay Area (like the Vietnam war and the anti-war movement), and hoping to change that.

After months of debate, the Alliance adopted a mandate to 'support, in all ways necessary, media workers faced with attacks on their human, constitutional, and professional rights and obligations' (Wolschon 1996).

By contrast with its more recent history, the original Media Alliance began as an
organization of 'insiders', albeit marginalized ones – people involved in news production - but hardly at its apex. Moreover, while critical of the performance of the corporate media, it was then the Alliance's main field of action – something potentially reformable, and from within. A not unusual view at the time; after all, hadn't Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the Washington Post's celebrated investigative journalists, brought down the corrupt presidency of Richard Nixon?

As a geographical and cultural context, the vibrancy and creativity of the San Francisco Bay area has been fertile ground for movements and media activism. The Bay Area's assets include its rich cultural diversity, with large populations of Asian, Latin American and African as well as European descent, and its large and politically active gay community. (Gays have unquestionably contributed to the city's diversity and social liberalism, but relatively little directly to media activism. Tracy Rosenberg, now the MA Director, suggests that gays' economic and political success in the city grants them access to dominant media not available to other minorities; and moreover, their main battles are in the legal and political rather than media fields, over such issues as property rights, same-sex marriage, and employment discrimination.)

Notwithstanding the conservatism of city authorities in some respects (vis-à-vis
the homeless, for example: Edmondson 2000), the city is known for its relatively strong popular traditions of labor militancy, progressive politics, and cultural innovation. Venues like City Lights Bookstore still manifest the heritage of both the 1950s Beatnik poets, and the youthful counterculture's 'summer of love' a decade later. 'That whole people's cultural movement is still really strong here', contends Dorothy Kidd of the University of San Francisco, and in addition, the city is near the Hollywood 'dream  machines', with an infrastructure for film and video production. Moreover, she points out, nearby Silicon Valley has brought expertise and capital to build the computer, software and multi-media industries. (Among its many effects, the dot.com boom during the 1990s fueled enrolment in the Media Alliance's computing skills courses, which in turn helped cross-subsidize its advocacy work.) These rich media production capacities and oppositional popular traditions – the first and second 'circles' in the potential constituency for media democratization – have combined to increase awareness of, and activism against, the commercial media's 'blockade' of the distribution of diverse and progressive media. The density of media-savvy advocacy groups by the 1990s in the Bay Area has provided a fertile organizational ecology for networking. And the reputed mediocrity of the San Francisco daily papers (the Chronicle has nothing like the stature of the New York or Los Angeles Times), contrasted with the global image of the city, provide a paradox to mobilize around.

What is impressive and distinctive about Media Alliance itself? It is not so much institutionalized and permanent successes in the media field, which few progressive advocacy groups can claim in the past generation of neoliberal hegemony. Rather, what distinguishes the Media Alliance are two characteristics.

First, its sheer longevity, its organizational growth and survival. By contrast with industry and professional associations, which by definition have an economic base for their advocacy work, public interest groups organized around political ideas have a precarious existence. Moreover, compared to their industry counterparts in the media field, public interest advocacy groups have been more prone to dying off rather than adapting their mandates or merging with other groups in response to a shifting political environment (Mueller et al. 2004: 28, 52). Bucking this dismal tradition, Media Alliance has now survived three decades. A key to its initial growth and long-term survival has been its provision of exclusive or discounted services and benefits to its members, thus minimizing the 'free rider' problem facing many public interest groups. These benefits include(d) access to health and dental insurance (a significant draw in the US, where a profit-oriented medical system leaves millions of citizens uninsured), a credit union, a job-listing service, and discounts on journalism and computer skills classes and computer rentals.

With such incentives, membership  reached about 4,000 at one point in the
1990s; member fees, along with course tuition, enabled MA to generate 75 to 85 per cent of its half-million dollar average annual budget internally, with the rest deriving from external project grants and donations. (In the late 1990s, member- ship was restructured to distinguish between a basic category, and those paying more for access to MA's benefits and services.) In effect, that benefit-driven internal revenue stream has reduced MA's vulnerability to the vagaries of founda-tion funding, and has cross-subsidized MA's political work, enough to hire a staff of ten (four of them part-time) as of 2001, headed by an executive director accountable to a Board – a standard pattern for US non-profit advocacy groups, with the commendable (and, as became clear in 1996, fateful) exception that the Board is elected by the membership.

MA's second notable achievement is its linkage of different constituencies and tasks in concrete steps towards media democratization.  Over the years, it has provided a social as well as a political outlet for journalists; it has enjoyed the support both of freelance journalists and those employed by media corporations; it has combined training for the media with critique of the media; in later years, it has coalesced different ethnic communities in common cause; and it has worked in different venues and with a range of tactics, from nonviolent civil disobedience to interventions at policy hearings. It does not fit easily inside the strategic quadrants that we identified in Table 3.2. At the same time, as we shall see, there are still limits to how far such boundary-crossing can go.

The MA's roots in the muckraking, you-can-beat-city-hall optimism of 1970s
journalism are evident in the pages of MediaFile, the newsletter which MA has produced with only occasional interruptions since 1978. Its headlines in the first fifteen years read much like a progressive journalism review: political and ethical issues facing journalism (censorship, source confidentiality); critical analyses of corporate media coverage of city and state politics, of minority rights, of movements and their issues (nuclear disarmament and Central America in the 1980s, the 1991 Gulf War); occasional surveys of local, minority, independent, alternative, movement, gay, and ethnic media, ranging from the laudatory to the sympathetically critical; some attention to regulatory and legislative issues affecting news media (freedom of information versus national security, deregulation of radio and cable, even Unesco's NWICO debate); profiles of the winners of the annual Media Alliance Meritorious Achievement (MAMA) awards; financial, legal and techno-logical developments affecting Bay Area journalists and their rights, particularly freelancers, along with occasional professional advice.

The Alliance's campaigns during the 1980s were, for the most part, activities that progressive-minded journalists could endorse without compromising their occupational self-image as independent truth-seekers. During its very first year, MA voted overwhelmingly to support Newspaper Guild and Typographical Union workers, striking at the weekly  San Francisco Bay Guardian for guarantees against job losses due to the use of freelance material. Guardian editor and publisher Bruce Brugmann defeated the strike, but the solidarity effort defined MA as a political entity, united MA members, and attracted many of the strikers to its ranks (Wolschon 1996). (Interestingly, Brugmann and MA became allies vis-à-vis the corporate dailies in later years.) In 1994, MA staff, board and members again walked picket lines, this time in active support of striking workers at the two San Francisco dailies. As if to balance the ledger between freelancers and employees, MA successfully negotiated a contract with Pacific News Service in 1978, setting fees and freelance rights for PNS contributors – reputedly the first such agreement between a freelance group and a news organization.

In 1979, MA united in a long, hard legal battle on behalf of two of its own. As a
result of their 1976 investigative articles on a 1972 Chinatown murder, freelancer Lowell Bergman and Examiner reporter Raul Ramirez were sued for $30 million by a former district attorney  and two police detectives.  The  Examiner refused to provide the pair with legal counsel. MA members responded  with a defence committee which raised $60,000 in legal fees until the pair's exoneration in California Supreme Court in 1986. Commented Ramirez of the ordeal, 'Individuals are powerless; you have no idea how energizing, inspiring and encouraging it was to have a group of people standing behind you' (Wolschon 1996).

By contrast with such solidarity, a 1981 controversy over the journalistic ethics of MediaFile itself foreshadowed how bitter internal disputes could become. In a debate over a story on prisoners' rights, a letter to MediaFile by the story's two authors betrayed confidential, and potentially life-threatening, information that had been supplied to them by a source. The source, Eve Pell, happened to be then-president of the MA board. MediaFile readers responded with a stream of letters, some questioning the editor's judgement in publishing the exchange, culminating in his resignation and an apology from MA staff. MA's executive director later commented that the controversy was 'a shock', a case of 'devour [ing] your young' (Wolschon 1996).

Nevertheless, during the 1980s, a burgeoning Media Alliance moved quarters to historic Fort Mason overlooking the Bay, created internal committees, launched its JobFile system and computer classes, and published a directory of local news media, a valuable tool for community and advocacy groups. It initiated the annual MAMA awards, intended to recognize both social responsibility and outstanding achievement in Bay Area journalism. While they drained MA's resources until their abandonment after 1994, they could be seen as a means of attracting main-stream journalists' interest, and influencing media performance. Throughout its history, the Alliance has also hosted panels and forums relevant to journalism, from skills (for example, 'Writing and editing for online publications') to the politics of media (`Smoking out the truth: The CIA, drugs, and media coverage'). Presciently, the MA helped mount a Media and Democracy conference in 1992, with keynote speaker Ralph Nader, and analyses of campaign coverage (Wolschon 1996).

During the 1980s, MA's agenda was influenced by the political ascendancy of the 'great communicator', Ronald Reagan, and much of the US media's servility to his reactionary politics "On bended knee' was how journalist/author Mark Hertsgaard (1989) described the press's relationship with the administration). One of MA's major projects during the 1980s was the Propaganda Analysis Review Project, intended as a media education tool exploring the connection between politics and the manipulation of symbols and ideas. It produced several issues of a magazine, which eventually foundered from funding and mission difficulties; some of its originators feared that an exclusive focus on right-wing propaganda made the magazine itself a propagandist tool of the Left. A second project was the Central America Committee, whose purview later expanded to Latin America and the Caribbean. It undertook critical analyses of mainstream coverage of the region, including US intervention, produced a resource guide for journalists, and attempted with some success to expand the Bay Area media's breadth of opinion and reportage on the region.

So, on the one hand, MA has served the professional and career needs of its members and tried to influence mainstream journalism. On the other hand, it has sought to promote progressive political goals, in the face of North American journalism's waning but still hegemonic 'regime of objectivity' (Hackett and Zhao 1998). Striking a balance was a constant challenge during the first two decades. To be sure, many of MA's founding members, like liberals and rationalists generally, would deny any contradiction: journalism at its best – truth-telling (in the public interest) and democratic governance are mutually supportive. Tell the truth to the people, and it shall set them free. That's the view expressed in the Bay Guardian's summary (on 13 March 1996) of MA's mission: to seek 'excellence, ethics, diversity, and accountability in all aspects of the media, in the interest of peace, justice, and social responsibility' with the goal of a 'free and unfettered flow of information and ideas in order to achieve a democratic and just society'. An unpublished statement of purpose commits MA 'to bringing about a more humane and democratic society by protecting freedom of speech and freedom of the press; by fostering genuine diversity of media voices and perspectives; by holding the media accountable for their impact on society, their hiring practices, and the integrity of their products; by working together with other groups and individuals who share our goals; and by providing services, support, and a sense of community for media workers committed to these goals'. Founding member Ken McEldowney put it simply: 'This was not an organization of dispassionate reporters who sat on the sidelines and wrote stories in the form of Journalism 101. We were concerned about the content of news' (Wolschon 1996).

Even so, MA's direct engagement  in overtly political campaigns  has been
limited by its media-oriented mandate, its concern for political independence, and its tax status as a 'charitable  organization': Section 501(c)(3) of the tax code precludes attempting to influence legislation as a 'substantial part' of its activities,or participating  at all in campaign activity for or against political candidates. Rather, MA typically analyses biases and blind spots in media coverage of political issues and progressive constituencies – Asian-Americans, gays, refugees and immi-grants, the environment, Hispanics, community youth issues. In 1991 the MA served as an information clearing house for members on events related to coverage of the Persian Gulf War. The Alliance has also partnered with community groups to conduct joint projects, typically adding the 'media piece', such as skills training and strategic communications advice. Some collaborative projects have included tours to Cuba for American journalists (with Global Exchange, a human rights organization); a summer internship  and training program  for reporters  of color (with the Independent Press Association); media training on domestic violence (with community press and legal aid associations); co-sponsorship of events with the Society for Professional Journalists, the National Writers Union, the Film Arts Foundation, the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association, and many others. By contrast, MA's links with Bay Area organized labor (apart from journalists' unions) have been minimal, other than through the efforts of individual rank-and-file activists like writer David Bacon, who served on the MA board. Somewhat by contrast with Britain and Canada, the conservatism of American labor leadership, and the lower rate of unionization in the workforce, has argu- ably impeded American media activism in general; it has certainly contributed to its distinctive form, with a greater orientation towards the countercultural Left and minority group struggles for equality. Occasionally, MA has assisted other groups, and even helped launch them, by accepting tax-deductible funds on their behalf, saving them the tedious process of acquiring 501(c)(3) tax status. (One relatively recent example is the Bay Area Independent Media Center, which was centered on local community organizing rather than a major anti-globalization action.) Such fiscal sponsorship is 'a way to make friends and alliances', explains a former MA staffer.

While turf issues are more likely to arise than with non-media community groups, MA has also partnered with other media-related advocacy groups, especially where there is a history of mutual support and complementary expertise. San Francisco's rich organizational ecology has offered many such partners. One example is We Interrupt This Message, a national media strategy and training centre, which former MA staffer Kim Deterline helped launch in 1996. Others include the Independent Press Association, Community Press Consortium, Project Censored, the Center for Improvement and Integrity of Journalism, FAIR, the Public Media Center, and alternative media like Pacific News Service and the Bay Guardian.

By the 1990s, a decade of conservative hegemony had shifted the political environment to the right. By contrast with its apparent momentum in the 1960s and early 1970s, the US Left had fragmented into factions seemingly more intent on self- expression and identity-assertion than on coalition-building and broad societal transformation (Sanbonmatsu 2004). In the media field, corporate priorities and hypercommercialism were becoming more blatant and seemingly more difficult to challenge from within newsrooms, where the public service ethos was withering (Hallin 2000; McChesney 2004: 87). The post-Watergate generation of journalists, MA's original membership base, had aged; acquiring family responsibilities and career success, they no longer needed the professional and social support of MA (including its renowned 'great parties'). Parties aside, some felt that the organization was losing the fire in its belly and its sense of purpose.

Media Alliance was ripe for renewal. Its critical juncture came in 1996 initially disguised as chaos. In the first contested board election in MA history, seven petition-nominated candidates defeated a board-nominated slate after an acrimonious campaign. Led by Van Jones, a young African-American civil rights lawyer, the reformers promised to energize the Alliance by making it more accessible to the poor and minorities, only to run into a sea of troubles once in office: sour relations between MA's still divided board and staff, a high rate of staff burnout and turnover, and 'a perilous financial situation', according to a 1998 letter from Jones to the membership. After nearly two years of 'miserable frustration and floundering', a new executive director, appointed from within the ranks, took the helm. With an activist sensibility and a consensus approach to administration, Andrea Buffa is widely credited with helping to save MA from self-destruction, and to energize and build an activist-oriented staff. According to Jones, Buffa's leadership 'completed the coup' and 'made it possible for the organization to move in a different direction'. In Jones' view, 'an old boys' club' of 1960s/70s media professionals was transformed into one reflecting MA's younger activist members and more relevant to contemporary media realities – including online and alternative media, as well as 'the monopolization of all media by corporations as a dire problem for democracy'. For Jones, the old guard had failed to grasp how corporate  media had become 'an absolute barrier to any kind of social change, whether the issue be homelessness, police issues, whatever'.

Veteran and former members we interviewed are divided on MA's new direc-
tion. For some, the outcome was a rediscovery of MA's original sense of mission. For founding member and former MediaFile editor Larry Bensky, the shift was both generational and political. It enabled MA to tap the energies of the new hip-hop protest movement, for whom diversity is a serious issue.
For others, the organization has marginalized itself, its critiques no longer to be taken seriously. An editor at the Chronicle, and one of MA's founding members, says he drifted away from the organization a few years after it was formed because it had become 'more ideologically driven than craft driven', predictably supporting every radical demand, such as the release of controversially-convicted African American death row inmate Mumia Abu Jamma1. Some of these members blame Van Jones personally for an unnecessarily confrontational transition. Even Raul Ramirez, the journalist who had benefited from MA's legal defence fund, observed in MediaFile (March/April 2001) that his colleagues think of MA as having 'drifted much farther into the political world than they feel comfortable mingling with', and that MA is no longer the 'vehicle for the internal self-examination of mainstream media'. He attributes this distance to the traditional ethos of objectivity: `Don't get involved in the story, translated into, "You're not a part of the community."' The further that MA's advocacy extended beyond safeguarding the First Amendment and journalists' rights, the more reluctant that working reporters (and still more their superiors) became to associate with MA's campaigns.

The Alliance's projects, campaigns and tactics since 1996 reflect its more activist and outsider strategy. One indicator was MA's 1996 picketing of the New York Times' San Francisco bureau, as part of a national 'Melt the Media Snow Job' campaign to protest dominant media's lack of coverage of alleged links between the CIA and the drug trade. This classic outsider tactic earned the ire of some within the media, like the San Francisco Weekly, who might otherwise be sympathetic to MA critiques. In a similar vein, MA brought together media activists from around the country to San Francisco to protest at the 2000 convention  of the National Association of Broadcasters, the powerful corporate lobby group.

In 1998, MA campaigned  to expose perceived biases in media coverage of Proposition 227, a referendum initiative to abolish bilingual education in Cali- fornia, thus restricting Spanish-speakers' access to public education in their own language. (This policy was one of the alleged violations of language rights adjudicated by the People's Communication Charter's unofficial tribunal at The Hague in 1999: Media Development 1999.) The campaign's goal was to ensure that pro-bilingual voices were not shut out in the media. Andrea Buffa recalls regretfully the difficulty MA had in persuading mainstream media, notably National Public Radio, to participate in its public panels, which NPR
 officials considered 'biased' because they reflected majority expert opinion in favour of bilingual education. (The referendum passed, but its implementation was delayed by court challenges.)

Media Alliance did not altogether abandon its links with mainstream journalists – for example, it helped organize protests when the Chronicle removed one of its few progressive columnists from the op-ed pages in the political aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. But MA's new focus had clearly become training community groups and political activists how to tell their story more effectively, whether through creating their own media or framing messages for the corporate media (though as Buffa conceded, better coverage certainly cannot be guaranteed). Critiques of corporate media coverage were still offered, but were seemingly intended less to encourage mainstream journalists to do better, and more to persuade activists to identify, and strategize against, corporate media bias. It was, however, a landmark battle within the field of alternative media that re- energized the Alliance and encouraged its activists to start redefining it as part of a broader media democracy movement. The campaign centred on resistance to the Pacifica Foundation's crackdown on KPFA in Berkeley, one of the five stations in Pacifica's radio network. We cannot elaborate here the station's half- century history as America's  first listener-supported independent station, its distinctive programming with the stated intention of supporting peace, social justice, the labor movement and the arts, and its relatively democratic, partici patory and often conflict-laden structure (see Downing et al. 2001, Chapter 21). Instead, our story begins with a decision by Pacifica's  national board, which legally owned the station and was accountable to no other body. In 1995, the board began to develop and implement a plan to transform Pacifica's program- ming and operations, for reasons not fully and publicly explained: it may have been an effort to win broader audiences for public service radio, and to address the perceived problem of 'the stranglehold of ... stick-in-the-mud local program- mers' over Pacifica's output (Downing et al. 2001: 348). Opponents, though, saw it as a kind of corporate coup; for veteran MA member and KPFA broadcaster Larry Bensky, at stake was 'the survival of a unique institution dedicated towards speaking truth to power – free speech radio, non-corporate and democratically and locally controlled'.

Whatever its motives, the board's tactical tools included secrecy, central direc- tives, gag orders, firings and lockouts of staff, and a covert contract with a union- busting organization. Not surprisingly, such tactics met with resentment and resistance within the stations – and among listeners, especially in the Bay Area, where the station had deep roots, and where the confrontation became a crisis in 1998-9. Firings, demonstrations, sit-ins, even an on-air confrontation between a talk-show host and private security guards ensued. A sympathetic student of radical media sees the conflict as another example of the Left's 'self-devouring virus', with the board and local programmers locked into position by rival messianic drives, fed by a shared conviction that Pacifica was the single beacon of light in a broadcasting wilderness. Each side saw itself as a savior and its opposite as the most infuriating and illegitimate of obstacles to survival and success. (Downing  et al. 2001: 346, 349)

For Media Alliance, however, the issue was clearcut, and it 'jumped into the leadership role in the campaign', as Andrea Buffa put it, organizing everyone from nonprofit organizations to journalist groups to local politicians in a demand that the station be reopened. We did everything. We did civil disobedience at the station, we started a campsite in front of the station, it was operating 24 hours a day. We organized activities at the station every day. MA also helped organize a march of ten to fifteen thousand people, probably one of the largest protest rallies on a media issue in American history.

By contrast with the outcome at other Pacifica stations, in Berkeley the board
eventually backed down, the station remained on the air, and the staff stayed on their jobs. One could argue that the campaign was reactive, that at best it recap- tured ground previously held and made no new inroads into the corporate media monolith. But for MediaFile editor Ben Clarke, the campaign was a victory, even if it further marginalized MA in the eyes of some mainstream journalists. It 'made people more willing to take risks to defend media democracy' as embodied in workers' rights at a free radio station; and it produced 'a distinctly more engaged staff and membership, a greater visibility and reputation in the community'.

MA's new sense of purpose was illustrated not only by the Pacifica struggle, but also by other lifeworld-based projects to claim media space for subaltern groups. A particularly important one was the Raising Our Voices programme, initiated in 1999 to challenge media myths by offering training in media skills to the victims of those myths, particularly the poor and the homeless. According to executive director Jeff Perlstein, the programme, which ran for several years, was 'a strong example of the political agency and engagement that follows from people claiming their voice'.

Notwithstanding MA's new resolve to do battle with corporate media, however, the idea of structural media reform was not yet on MA's radar screen, Andrea Buffa told us in 1998. Although  MediaFile had kept members abreast of some communications policy issues since the late 1970s, MA had little tradition of actual intervention in state policy processes. But by 2001 Buffa and MA staffers were singing a different tune, however tentatively; and by 2003 'organizing local communities around media policy' was part of MA's public mission statement (Center for International Media Action 2003: 35). By the turn of the century, something resembling a self-defined media reform movement was emerging in America. Microradio activists had succeeded in persuading the FCC to legalize hundreds  of outlets, and it took the Republicans' electoral  sweep in 2000 to quash that near-victory. More and more activists were making the connection between bad communications legislation, bad media, and bad political outcomes on other issues.

Thus, in 2001, campaigning against corporate giant Clear Channel Communi-
cation, Media Alliance explicitly framed the issue as one of media democratiza- tion. The campaign centred on the firing of David Cook (`Davey D'), a popular and respected African-American radio talk show host at KMEL in Oakland, part of the 1,200-station radio empire amassed by Clear Channel after the 1996 Tele- communications Act's passage. Davey D's microphone had often been open for social justice groups, and many of them, with little prior interest in media politics, joined MA in the campaign,  including civil rights lawyers, the Latino Issues Forum, and youth groups organizing against the city government's plans for a super-jail in the Oakland area. While the immediate goal was Cook's reinstatement, Media Alliance linked the campaign to broader issues: Clear Channel's abuse of its prominent position in Bay Area radio broadcasting, the grave implications of media deregulation and consolidation, and the culture of media silence and complicity engendered by 9/1 I (Cook was fired a week after he interviewed Barbara Lee, the only member of Congress to vote against giving the Bush administration carte blanche to invade Afghanistan and launch a 'war against terror'). MA worked against post-9/ 11 chill in other ways too: a sign-on letter campaign in support of press freedom and diversity, and communications training for anti-war campus groups and for South Asian and other minorities being victimized by media hysteria.

Another campaign, around cable franchises, further enabled Media Alliance to combine community and policy concerns in 2002. The proposed merger of two of America's largest cable companies, AT&T and Comcast, meant that the new post-merger firm would be required legally to renegotiate the contracts with each of the 2,000 municipalities where the two pre-merger companies had franchises. Two Washington DC-based public interest organizations, the Consumer Federa- tion of America and the Center for Digital Democracy,  saw in the franchise transfer an opportunity to extract concessions from the cable companies. They identified 80 affected cities for intervention, and supplied logistical and informa- tional support for local advocacy groups, thus reducing their costs of mobilization. In San Francisco, Media Alliance organized a broad coalition that included local advocacy groups and school-based community centers in eight neighborhoods. Campaign goals included discounted cable rates for seniors and low-income residents, open access to the cable infrastructure for independent service providers, and more resources and channels for community access production and programming. As Jeff Perlstein explains, the campaign strategically presented an opportunity to encourage community activists to expand their repertoire, from alternative media production  to policy intervention. It was also a chance to educate the broader public, which is aware of cable TV but generally overlooks the implications of increasing cable company control  over broadband and high-speed internet. As the MA website explains, citing the American Civil Liberties Union, in a deregulated monopoly environment, "Not only will [cable] be allowed to charge whatever toll they want, they will be able to discriminate against other ISPs ... cable companies could engage in various forms of discrimination against consumers, from reviewing e-mails to extracting marketing data to slowing down transmission speeds to Web sites that compete against cable-affiliated products. 'An ISP controlled by a politically inclined CEO or board could use the network to promote political positions ...,' the ACLU said. 'It could block or slow access to the Web sites of rival candidates, or redirect users to the preferred candidate's site.'

What did the Pacifica, Davey D and cable transfer campaigns have in common? They all challenged threats to the ability of community activists to disseminate their messages publicly . As Ben Clarke observed, that threat may be the strongest stimulant for media-related activism.

In sum, Media Alliance's project for its first two decades was system change from within the media field – reforming corporate journalism, through defending media workers' rights, critiquing `bad' journalism and celebrating the 'good', and training aspiring journalists (including those with little interest in MA's politics). Since 1996, MA has found its main constituencies amongst those marginalized within the media field and the broader field of power, communities seeking racial and economic justice and an effective public voice. MA is rooted within the lifeworld, with a focus on media production and content, but also increasingly on media policy – an environing condition of media production.

In 2002, Jeff Perlstein explained the rationale behind this shift: In order to achieve systematic change, activist organizations must be willing to do policy work, political lobbying, and broader base-building at the grassroots level, and we have to figure out what the entry points are in the local media policy that can ripple up to national media policy.

He notes that some constituencies who have been 'making their own media' or
`accessing the mainstream media' have not been previously engaged in media policy reform. Accordingly, Media Alliance has been consciously attempting to link strategies: Those two pieces (alternative media and strategic communication) are really crucial, because what that does is build an understanding on a very gut level around what we mean by changing media policy. You're making your own media, and you find out well, all the great alternative media distribution networks still aren't really getting it out there quite enough just yet. There's still this (structural) barrier ... that we're hitting.

Since 2001, the policy focus has been evident in a steady stream of MediaFile features (on FCC proposals, media concentration, telecommunications politics, postal rates for independent magazines, and much else). As it has shifted emphasis away from working with mainstream media workers and towards training the marginalized to create their own media, MA is also paying more attention to the substance and processes of government media policies, mobilizing for interventions in regulatory processes (FCC hearings, industry conventions, cable franchise negotiations) from a public interest perspective. It appears that journalism's objectivity regime may have been a greater impediment to policy engagement than younger activists' distrust of the state and electoral politics.

With varying intensity and at different times, MA has worked within all four of the sectors identified in our schema. Its history illustrates the permeability of the boundaries between the different sectors of media democratization we sketched in Chapter 3, as well as the potential for a particular vector of media democratization– from subaltern communities in the lifeworld, via alternative media or media training, to interventions in media structure and policy. It also shows the integral links between media activism's trajectory, and the energies of broader political currents, particularly those of social movements.

In the next chapter, we consider a British media advocacy group launched at about the same time as MA, one that adopted a politically radical and policy-oriented mandate from the start.

Former CBS5/CW Manager in Wright vs. CBS

Posted by Jackie Wright on May 25th, 2009
http://justiceforjackienow.blogspot.com/


San Francisco-Three time Associated Press, Emmy-nominated award winning journalist Jackie Wright faces media giant CBS in a court hearing, Thursday, August 27 in Federal Court in San Francisco. CBS Television, represented by Maureen E. McClain of Littler Mendelson, is trying to dismiss the case in which Wright alleges racism that led to her layoff in January 2007.

The public is invited to attend the hearing on Thursday, August 27 10:00 a.m. in Courtroom B, 15th Floor, 450 Golden Gate Avenue, San Francisco, California. Because media are essential to the democratic process and there is a need for fair, balanced and representative media, the public should keep its eye on  Wright’s case and others involving media.

Wright, representing herself “Forma Pauperis”, contends her dismissal from CBS 5/CW Bay Area, goes beyond her personal loss of a job. The elimination of the public affairs manager position is indicative of a trend in media where minority professionals are being disproportionately eliminated and the “public interest” is not being served. Wright spoke to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in April on this issue.

Unity Journalists and the National Association of Black Journalists issued separate news releases outlining the problem of the elimination of minority journalists from newsrooms.





Beyond The Odds

Posted by Tracy Rosenberg on May 25th, 2009
www.beyondtheodds.org

Beyond The Odds pairs Youth Speaks poets with HIV+ young people to illuminate their perspectives about living with HIV. Check them out. It's a great project.

From the Real News Network: Chuck D interviews on Hip-Hop, America and the Societal Impact of Music (Part 1)

Posted by Chuck D on May 15th, 2009
The Real News Network

From the Real News Network: Chuck D and Run DMC on Hip-Hop, America and the Societal Impact of Music (Part 1) - Video



More at The Real News

D-TV Transition: Profit Ahead of Public Interest

Posted by Steve Macek and Scott Sanders on May 12th, 2009
The Register-Citizen

The much-delayed switchover to digital TV is now behind us. On June 12, all full power TV stations in the country ceased their analog broadcasts and made the final switch to a digital only format.

In the lead up to the DTV transition, the public’s attention focused almost entirely upon ways of mitigating the switchover’s effect on the elderly, the poor and non-English speakers who rely on over-the-air television far more than the general population. In response to such concerns, the federal government created a coupon program that subsidized most of the cost of digital-to-analog converter boxes, but then failed to fully fund it. When it became clear that millions of households would not be ready for DTV by the original February 17 deadline, Congress pushed back the transition date.

The extra time — together with an additional $650 million appropriated by Congress for more converter boxes and more public outreach — seems to have done the trick. Though some viewers have reported losing the signals of individual stations in certain markets, the vast majority of Americans weathered the shift to DTV without losing service or being excessively inconvenienced.

Yet, there is another problem with the DTV transition, one that has never gotten the sort of headlines that the shortage of converter box coupons did. The fact is that the shift to digital television represents a massive government giveaway to a handful of powerful media conglomerates.

The Clinton-era 1996 Telecommunications Act which mandated the change to DTV stripped away most media ownership concentration limits and gave away huge swathes — up to $90 billion worth — of publicly owned digital broadcast spectrum to incumbent TV license holders. In return for giving up a single analog channel, each of these broadcasters received up to 10 digital channels in return. For free. Only one new public service requirement was added — a modest increase in children’s programming.

To make matters worse, most digital subchannels run by the big network-affiliated stations air duplicative services such as sitcom reruns, old movies, weather, home shopping programs or cooking shows.

That is, if they run anything at all. Despite recent failures such as their flawed coverage leading up to the invasion of Iraq, none of the commercial broadcasters have announced plans we’re aware of to use the new channels to expand or improve their public affairs or news programming.

Where are the digital channels for women and people of color, and the set asides to support independent programming by and for youth and other less advantaged groups, local C-SPANs and other experimental services? Where are the new public affairs programs designed to showcase the perspectives normally marginalized on commercial TV?

Such diversity on the airwaves is needed now more than ever. People of color make up 34 percent of the U.S. population, but only around 3 percent of commercial full power TV license holders, with women holding just 5 percent.

Glen Ford, editor of the online Black Agenda Report calls the DTV transition “the biggest squandering of public broadcast resources in the history of the United States.”

Steps should be taken to ensure that corporations are not the sole beneficiaries of the digital broadcasting age. The value of the broadcast spectrum that Congress simply handed over to the big corporate media ought to be recovered through appropriate means (taxes, license fees, etc.) and used to subsidize a democratically run, decentralized public media system, the sort of media that will provide a forum for the minority and dissident viewpoints sorely missing on mainstream TV.

Many talented professional journalists are unemployed or waiting tables right now due to the deepening crisis of the corporate journalism model. We need to foster partnerships between professional and citizen journalists and public TV and radio outlets, PEG access centers, community and micro-radio stations, and other community media. Picture a local public media homepage that looks sort of like a daily newspaper but with prominent live TV and radio streams, lots of links to article and program related resources and social media, with the feel of an online public library and town commons.

And no commercial advertisements whatsoever.

A functioning fifth estate is essential to the maintenance of democracy.

We can and must fix this bad DTV deal, and create and permanently fund various new and extensively reworked public media outlets and centers.

We must collectively piece together a system with the highest measure of accountability for every community across the nation as if lives depend on it. Because they do.

Steve Macek is an associate professor of speech communication at North Central College. Scott Sanders is a longtime Chicago media and democracy advocate.

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