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http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=16077

 

Whither Democracy?

 

June 3, 2003Viewed on June 4, 2003

 

Well, wasn't that a surprise?

 

Monday morning, in perhaps the most widely and keenly anticipated decision in

its history, the Federal Communications Commission soberly considered the

desires of large corporations, on the one hand, and the requirements of a

functional democracy, on the other. Guess who won?

 

In this case, " considered " means " glanced at " -- not to be confused with a

process in which the outcome was seriously in doubt. The FCC voted 3-2 for

changes widely desired by the country's largest media conglomerates. The three

" yes " votes came from the FCC's two Bush Administration appointees, and from

Michael Powell, Colin's son, who was named FCC Chair when Bush assumed office

and who has spearheaded the drive for further deregulation.

 

The suspense in the proceedings came not from a question of whether large

networks and group owners would be newly allowed to buy each other, smaller

chains, or additional stations, or whether the same company could own broadcast

outlets and a daily newspaper in the same market, but to what extent. Would the

complete abandonment of public concerns favored by Powell and his allies be

mitigated by the unprecedented public and Congressional outcry? Would that

outcry sway the vote of one of the two Bush appointees, Republican Kevin Martin?

 

No, and no. The newspaper/broadcast crossownership ban is over, a move that by

the time you read this will already have sharply reduced media diversity in more

than one major city. Companies may also now own two network TV stations in one

market, and in larger cities, three. The one " compromise " was an easing of the

television ownership limits so that one company can own stations now reaching 45

rather than 35 percent of the country. Powell had wanted the limit abolished

entirely -- but give Time-Warner-AOL, Viacom/CBS, and Disney time to ramp up to

the 45% limit (say, three days) and further measures can and probably will be

considered.

 

Given the massive consolidation after the last big media deregulatory move --

the now-legendary Telecommunications Act of 1996, perhaps the most corporate

welfare ever ladled out by Congress at one sitting -- critics of Monday's

decision were uniformly grim. The two dissenting Democrats, FCC Commissioners

Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein, were unambiguous. Copps: " The more you dig

into this order, the worse things get. " Adelstein called the decision " likely to

damage the media landscape for decades to come. "

 

FCC Chair Powell -- continuing the Bush Administration's rhetorical tradition of

taking a policy's greatest weakness and calling it a shining strength -- praised

his own handiwork as a move that would " advance our goals of diversity and

localism. "

 

Advance it right out the door and into the dumpster. Every community in America

experienced the effects after 1996. Radio stations that once had local DJs and

news are now computer-programmed jukeboxes. Clear Channel Communications, the

most successful benefactor of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, has gone from

14 stations to over 1,200 (of 10,000 in the U.S.), with many of them strictly

satellite feeds running identical songs and DJs at the same time. The only

" localism " is when DJs pre-record their voice tracks, with a two-second station

ID that is then mixed into the generic patter. " Twenty minutes after the hour "

was never heard on radio stations until the same voice was being broadcast in

five time zones. Even in larger markets -- the kind where three or four local

jocks or talk radio hosts might be hired for the daylight hours -- the actual

programming is controlled by company HQ or a centralized consultant, and then

executed by computer. The days of a DJ picking out his or her favorite song --

or even agreeing to play yours -- are long, long gone. That's the " localism "

trend Powell has just accelerated.

 

Clear Channel, of course, has also become the poster company for the larger

downsides of media consolidation: monopolistic practices and political

censorship. Every large media company now has extensive holdings in a variety of

media genres -- from radio and TV to newspapers, magazines, the web, books,

movies, video and audio production houses, advertising agencies, concert

promotion, outdoor billboards, and so on. Clear Channel has also become one of

the country's largest billboard owners and by far its largest concert promoter,

and has used its influence to control who gets airplay at up to eight stations

in a given market and who gets access to a given city's most attractive

performance venues. It's a nasty business that strikes at cultural diversity in

the way only monopolies can.

 

Clear Channel has also figured in a number of political censorship and ethical

controversies, from its notorious list of " banned " songs in the aftermath of

9/11 (e.g., " Peace Train " ) to its recent sponsorship, in a number of cities, of

pro-war rallies intended to counter opposition to Bush's invasion of Iraq.

Monopolies can do that, especially when what they monopolize is a city's largest

platforms and soapboxes.

 

The crux of the attention and controversy, stemming from Powell's announcement

last fall that the FCC would undertake a comprehensive review of media ownership

regulations, has been the balance between corporate greed and the need,

recognized since the Founding Fathers, for a functional democracy to rest on a

well-informed citizenry. Americans, by contrast, are not well-informed about

most of the public policy matters central to our lives. The months of

non-coverage network TV has given to this decision were a perfect, ironic

example. Moreover, we've also been taught, by repeated example, not to care --

that public policy is boring, and that we can't influence it anyway. Hey, is the

ballgame on yet?

 

Since the Reagan Administration's first significant moves toward media

deregulation two decades ago, four presidencies have championed corporate greed

over these democratic necessities. Without that long-term trend, the judiciary

would not now be stacked with anti-regulatory zealots. Powell's omnibus review

was in turn justified by a little noticed D.C. federal appeals court decision --

four days before 9/11 -- that signaled its intent to strike down the newspaper

cross-ownership rule, and by extension many other limits on companies' ability

to freely buy as many media properties as they could. Such rulings, ignoring the

reality that media isn't simply another for-profit industry like widget-making,

put democracy in the same bought-and- sold category as any other tradable

commodity.

 

There is some noise in Congress about trying to rein in Monday's decision; the

FCC undoubtably will face legal challenges as well. But the damage will be done

regardless. The FCC is now free to approve sales under its own newly-promulgated

rules. If Time-Warner-AOL and Viacom decide tomorrow to buy 90% of our country's

television (with Disney and Clear Channel as minority stockholders, natch), what

court or legislator would be willing to later undo the sale?

 

It's hard to remember the last time any major public policy shift in our country

clearly served to foster democracy rather than further cripple it. The Bush

Administration has been particularly vicious in auctioning our country off to

the highest bidders -- i.e., their friends. It has also been particularly

vicious in attempting to marginalize or punish (or, at the fringes, criminalize)

democratic expressions of dissent. Imagine the gratitude, and eagerness to repay

favors, of the large corporations who have been given -- essentially for free --

our public airwaves, and who thus control the most widely seen and heard venues

for any such opposition. Imagine, down the road, what a Fearless and Beloved

Leader with the ruthlessness of Dubya and the empathy of Clinton could do with

such a capacity.

 

And then start patronizing, supporting, and creating media alternatives to the

pablum of the big companies. Popularize the notion that television and radio are

largely corporate monopolies -- not the places where a marketplace of ideas can

flourish -- and that the less TV we watch, the more we'll know about our world.

 

The alternative is an ignorant monoculture, and the ultimate perversion of

democracy. It is a media landscape with ever-fewer voices, the eerie flip side

of e pluribus unum. Out of many, one.

 

 

 

© 2003 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.

 

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Guest guest

On another list, there was a link for writing to senators &

congressman telling them to over-rule the FCC decision. I'll past

the link here:

You can take action now at:

http://causenet.commoncause.org/afr/issues/alert/?alertid=2446521

 

Within half an hour of sending off the form letter, an aide

to my congressman e-mailed me back saying: " I am opposed to the FCC

decision and will do whatever I can to overturn the decision through

action by the U.S. Congress. "

--William J. Jefferson,

Member of Congress

 

No way to know if this will work, or not, but it sure seems

to me that it is worth a shot.

 

Alobar

 

 

 

 

-

" Frank " <califpacific

<gettingwell >

Wednesday, June 04, 2003 8:21 PM

Whither Democracy?

 

 

http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=16077

 

Whither Democracy?

 

June 3, 2003Viewed on June 4, 2003

 

Well, wasn't that a surprise?

 

Monday morning, in perhaps the most widely and keenly anticipated

decision in its history, the Federal Communications Commission

soberly considered the desires of large corporations, on the one

hand, and the requirements of a functional democracy, on the other.

Guess who won?

 

In this case, " considered " means " glanced at " -- not to be confused

with a process in which the outcome was seriously in doubt. The FCC

voted 3-2 for changes widely desired by the country's largest media

conglomerates. The three " yes " votes came from the FCC's two Bush

Administration appointees, and from Michael Powell, Colin's son, who

was named FCC Chair when Bush assumed office and who has spearheaded

the drive for further deregulation.

 

The suspense in the proceedings came not from a question of whether

large networks and group owners would be newly allowed to buy each

other, smaller chains, or additional stations, or whether the same

company could own broadcast outlets and a daily newspaper in the same

market, but to what extent. Would the complete abandonment of public

concerns favored by Powell and his allies be mitigated by the

unprecedented public and Congressional outcry? Would that outcry sway

the vote of one of the two Bush appointees, Republican Kevin Martin?

 

No, and no. The newspaper/broadcast crossownership ban is over, a

move that by the time you read this will already have sharply reduced

media diversity in more than one major city. Companies may also now

own two network TV stations in one market, and in larger cities,

three. The one " compromise " was an easing of the television ownership

limits so that one company can own stations now reaching 45 rather

than 35 percent of the country. Powell had wanted the limit abolished

entirely -- but give Time-Warner-AOL, Viacom/CBS, and Disney time to

ramp up to the 45% limit (say, three days) and further measures can

and probably will be considered.

 

Given the massive consolidation after the last big media deregulatory

move -- the now-legendary Telecommunications Act of 1996, perhaps the

most corporate welfare ever ladled out by Congress at one sitting --

critics of Monday's decision were uniformly grim. The two dissenting

Democrats, FCC Commissioners Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein,

were unambiguous. Copps: " The more you dig into this order, the worse

things get. " Adelstein called the decision " likely to damage the

media landscape for decades to come. "

 

FCC Chair Powell -- continuing the Bush Administration's rhetorical

tradition of taking a policy's greatest weakness and calling it a

shining strength -- praised his own handiwork as a move that would

" advance our goals of diversity and localism. "

 

Advance it right out the door and into the dumpster. Every community

in America experienced the effects after 1996. Radio stations that

once had local DJs and news are now computer-programmed jukeboxes.

Clear Channel Communications, the most successful benefactor of the

Telecommunications Act of 1996, has gone from 14 stations to over

1,200 (of 10,000 in the U.S.), with many of them strictly satellite

feeds running identical songs and DJs at the same time. The only

" localism " is when DJs pre-record their voice tracks, with a

two-second station ID that is then mixed into the generic patter.

" Twenty minutes after the hour " was never heard on radio stations

until the same voice was being broadcast in five time zones. Even in

larger markets -- the kind where three or four local jocks or talk

radio hosts might be hired for the daylight hours -- the actual

programming is controlled by company HQ or a centralized consultant,

and then executed by computer. The days of a DJ picking out his or

her favorite song -- or even agreeing to play yours -- are long, long

gone. That's the " localism " trend Powell has just accelerated.

 

Clear Channel, of course, has also become the poster company for the

larger downsides of media consolidation: monopolistic practices and

political censorship. Every large media company now has extensive

holdings in a variety of media genres -- from radio and TV to

newspapers, magazines, the web, books, movies, video and audio

production houses, advertising agencies, concert promotion, outdoor

billboards, and so on. Clear Channel has also become one of the

country's largest billboard owners and by far its largest concert

promoter, and has used its influence to control who gets airplay at

up to eight stations in a given market and who gets access to a given

city's most attractive performance venues. It's a nasty business that

strikes at cultural diversity in the way only monopolies can.

 

Clear Channel has also figured in a number of political censorship

and ethical controversies, from its notorious list of " banned " songs

in the aftermath of 9/11 (e.g., " Peace Train " ) to its recent

sponsorship, in a number of cities, of pro-war rallies intended to

counter opposition to Bush's invasion of Iraq. Monopolies can do

that, especially when what they monopolize is a city's largest

platforms and soapboxes.

 

The crux of the attention and controversy, stemming from Powell's

announcement last fall that the FCC would undertake a comprehensive

review of media ownership regulations, has been the balance between

corporate greed and the need, recognized since the Founding Fathers,

for a functional democracy to rest on a well-informed citizenry.

Americans, by contrast, are not well-informed about most of the

public policy matters central to our lives. The months of

non-coverage network TV has given to this decision were a perfect,

ironic example. Moreover, we've also been taught, by repeated

example, not to care -- that public policy is boring, and that we

can't influence it anyway. Hey, is the ballgame on yet?

 

Since the Reagan Administration's first significant moves toward

media deregulation two decades ago, four presidencies have championed

corporate greed over these democratic necessities. Without that

long-term trend, the judiciary would not now be stacked with

anti-regulatory zealots. Powell's omnibus review was in turn

justified by a little noticed D.C. federal appeals court decision --

four days before 9/11 -- that signaled its intent to strike down the

newspaper cross-ownership rule, and by extension many other limits on

companies' ability to freely buy as many media properties as they

could. Such rulings, ignoring the reality that media isn't simply

another for-profit industry like widget-making, put democracy in the

same bought-and- sold category as any other tradable commodity.

 

There is some noise in Congress about trying to rein in Monday's

decision; the FCC undoubtably will face legal challenges as well. But

the damage will be done regardless. The FCC is now free to approve

sales under its own newly-promulgated rules. If Time-Warner-AOL and

Viacom decide tomorrow to buy 90% of our country's television (with

Disney and Clear Channel as minority stockholders, natch), what court

or legislator would be willing to later undo the sale?

 

It's hard to remember the last time any major public policy shift in

our country clearly served to foster democracy rather than further

cripple it. The Bush Administration has been particularly vicious in

auctioning our country off to the highest bidders -- i.e., their

friends. It has also been particularly vicious in attempting to

marginalize or punish (or, at the fringes, criminalize) democratic

expressions of dissent. Imagine the gratitude, and eagerness to repay

favors, of the large corporations who have been given -- essentially

for free -- our public airwaves, and who thus control the most widely

seen and heard venues for any such opposition. Imagine, down the

road, what a Fearless and Beloved Leader with the ruthlessness of

Dubya and the empathy of Clinton could do with such a capacity.

 

And then start patronizing, supporting, and creating media

alternatives to the pablum of the big companies. Popularize the

notion that television and radio are largely corporate monopolies --

not the places where a marketplace of ideas can flourish -- and that

the less TV we watch, the more we'll know about our world.

 

The alternative is an ignorant monoculture, and the ultimate

perversion of democracy. It is a media landscape with ever-fewer

voices, the eerie flip side of e pluribus unum. Out of many, one.

 

 

 

© 2003 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.

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