Guest guest Posted September 28, 2004 Report Share Posted September 28, 2004 http://web.takebackthemedia.com/geeklog/public_html/article.php?story=2004091607\ 0023934 Cable news is useless. TURN IT OFF. Thursday, September 16 2004 @ 07:00 AM GMT Contributed by: Stranger Media WatcherWell, here we are. We're a little less than two months out from Election Day, and the corporate media is filling people's heads with misinformation and worthless, trivial matters that aren't worth the time spent thinking about them. Rather than talking about the fact that Bush plans to cut funding for Homeland Security if he's returned to office or talking about how Iraq is circling the drain at this very moment as a result of the Bush administration's utter incompetence, CNN and the rest give 5 hurricane reports an hour, when they're not (still!) talking about Laci Peterson or Martha Stewart. The Republican party and corporate media have snuggled in together for the duration of the campaign. You could see it in the saturation coverage that the cable nets gave to the fatally flawed polls that Time and Newsweek reported in the days after the RNC convention in New York, which gave Bush an 11-point lead that was simply never there. You could see it in the wall-to-wall coverage they gave to the Swift Boat Liars for Bush - nearly two weeks' worth of repeating charges that were shaky to begin with and stood up to about five minutes of scrutiny. You can see it in the debacle surrounding CBS' 60 Minutes II report on Bush's desertion from the Texas Air National Guard. Somehow, after claims of forgery were made, the story for the cable nets became the forged documents rather than the legitimiate and explosive story they contained. To this day, rumors run rampant and charges are hurled that somehow the Democrats and the Kerry campaign are behind the memos, and nary a word is whispered about the fact that Bush disobeyed a direct order from a superior officer, was busted down to flying trainer aircraft, and ultimately grounded from pilot duties. Nothing is said about the numerous gaps in Bush's record, which move him past AWOL status and firmly into deserter territory. These are facts - but for some reason, the cable news networks are more interested in talking about IBM Selectric typewriters and proportional spacing. That the cable news nets have taken leave from the facts in order to prop up the Bush administration is, in the 3 years after the September 11 attacks, a given. Every utterance by Bush is given equal weight and treated like the Sermon on the Mount, while Kerry's blistering attacks on Bush and Cheney get mere seconds of coverage. The shrieking-head programs on Fox and MSNBC now don't even bother with the true liberal viewpoint, content with instead having a conservative and a certified right-wing loon provide the 'debate' - which in most instances consists of debating whether George W. Bush is great or really, really great. This web site is edging up on being two years old, and we've always advocated taking back the media through action alerts and other ways of letting corporate media know we're watching them. Well, the realization has dawned that the media may just be too far gone to get a handle on at tis point, and the only thing that will reverse the media's slide into terminal mediocrity is putting John Kerry into the White House and hoping like hell that he installs a bulldog as chairman of the FCC. It's going to take a lot of legislation and maybe even prosecution to return the media to a form which will guarantee even minimal levels of fairness and balance. The Fairness Doctrine must be brought back in order to afford a public platform that disseminates more than GOP talking points, and the Justice Department may have to 'Ma Bell' the media conglomerates in order to return media outlets back to local, community-oriented programming. It's going to take a lot of heavy lifting, a lot of subpoenas, maybe some invocation of RICO statutes. There is the distinct possibility that only a part of what needs to be done will be accomplished in John Kerry's first term, and it may even take longer than two terms to get the media's house in order. And that means that there's only one short-term course of action that will make any difference. Turn it off. Turn it all off. Let's face facts here. Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity are not going to change the formula which has given them whatever success they have on TV (and even their 'success' must be measured carefully - on O'Reilly's best day, he still gets his ass kicked by reruns of cop shows on the commercial networks). They will continue their incessant liberal-bashing, because it's a formula that works. And CNN will continue trying to peel off some of Fox' audience, blissfully ignorant of the fact that Fox viewers still call them the 'Clinton News Network.' And MSNBC will present White House shills all day long (with the notable exception of Keith Olbermann's excellent 'Countdown'), and they'll accept their puny audiences and toe the Bush line. So let them. Kerry/Edwards have all but shut out the cable news reporters, instead giving press availability to local media outlets. They're adapting a strategy that was cooked up by the White House when they 'moved past the filter' to take their spin on the Iraq war to regional and local media outlets (they've abandoned the concept, probably realizing that there's no way to spin Iraq positively at this point). The result is that they're building their constituency from the ground up, without the help of the cable networks. And we should follow their lead. CNN and MSNBC can't draw flies, and Fox is only #1 because they attract slightly less horrible ratings numbers. When we turn them all off, we could starve them. Their viewership numbers at this point are so horrible, that even losing a couple of thousand people could wipe them off the ratings charts altogether. We can do this. If the cable networks will not present the least bit of balance in their coverage, all we have to do is shut them off and we can make them cease to exist as far as the Neilsens are concerned. I was going to close with a rant on just turning off your TV, but someone already said it better back in the day when George W. Bush was still getting smashed and doing lines down in Texas. Paddy Chayevsky's character Howard Beale says it all in the brilliant Network: We deal in illusions, man. None of it is true! But you people sit there day after day, night after night, all ages, colors, creeds - we're all you know. You're beginning to believe the illusions we're spinning here. You're beginning to think that the tube is reality and that your own lives are unreal. You do whatever the tube tells you. You dress like the tube, you eat like the tube, you raise your children like the tube. You even think like the tube. This is mass madness. You maniacs. In God's name, you people are the real thing. We are the illusion. So turn off your television sets. Turn them off now. Turn them off right now. Turn them off and leave them off. Turn them off right in the middle of this sentence I am speaking to you now. Turn them off! " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 29, 2004 Report Share Posted September 29, 2004 You can turn cable and conventional TV media off, but that doesn't stop their influence over the nation, over the voter. Media bias, in fact, worsens when Progressives stop watching, because there is little or no opposition from viewers that are either already firm conservatives, or are centrists or very mildly liberal. Media are already passionately biased in Bush's favor. We can't stand watching this crap. But we also can't delude ourselves about the consequences of our abandonment of major media. They go on, ever more powerfully deciding political contests, and shaping the minds of millions of our countrymen and voters. We pay the price for our inaction. Dems simply don't know how to fight. If you remember your childhood, you remember that every school had its share of bullies. How did we deal with the bully? We " avoided " him; which is why the tendency to be a bully worsened in those individuals. They saw people cower in fear, and avoid them. This is what we're doing with media. Media are the big corporate bosses in society. The solution is staring us in the face, but we'd rather spend our time at phone banks, " getting out the vote, " and putting signs on our cars, etc. But Republicans are busy exercising ever more control over media, because they know that the power, the influence, the spin, is in media. The real solution for Dems, is to rise up in popular revolt against media bias. Not sheepishly waiting for them to give us a voice. But revolting openly, in huge numbers, demanding an equal opportunity to give the voter our propaganda, in contradistinction to Bush's. Nothing else will do, and there's almost no chance we'll do it. JP - " califpacific " <califpacific Tuesday, September 28, 2004 4:40 AM Cable news is useless. TURN IT OFF. > http://web.takebackthemedia.com/geeklog/public_html/article.php?story=2004091607\ 0023934 > > Cable news is useless. TURN IT OFF. > > Thursday, September 16 2004 @ 07:00 AM GMT > Contributed by: Stranger > > Media WatcherWell, here we are. We're a little less than two months > out from Election Day, and the corporate media is filling people's > heads with misinformation and worthless, trivial matters that aren't > worth the time spent thinking about them. Rather than talking about > the fact that Bush plans to cut funding for Homeland Security if he's > returned to office or talking about how Iraq is circling the drain at > this very moment as a result of the Bush administration's utter > incompetence, CNN and the rest give 5 hurricane reports an hour, when > they're not (still!) talking about Laci Peterson or Martha Stewart. > > The Republican party and corporate media have snuggled in together for > the duration of the campaign. You could see it in the saturation > coverage that the cable nets gave to the fatally flawed polls that > Time and Newsweek reported in the days after the RNC convention in New > York, which gave Bush an 11-point lead that was simply never there. > You could see it in the wall-to-wall coverage they gave to the Swift > Boat Liars for Bush - nearly two weeks' worth of repeating charges > that were shaky to begin with and stood up to about five minutes of > scrutiny. > > You can see it in the debacle surrounding CBS' 60 Minutes II report on > Bush's desertion from the Texas Air National Guard. Somehow, after > claims of forgery were made, the story for the cable nets became the > forged documents rather than the legitimiate and explosive story they > contained. To this day, rumors run rampant and charges are hurled that > somehow the Democrats and the Kerry campaign are behind the memos, and > nary a word is whispered about the fact that Bush disobeyed a direct > order from a superior officer, was busted down to flying trainer > aircraft, and ultimately grounded from pilot duties. Nothing is said > about the numerous gaps in Bush's record, which move him past AWOL > status and firmly into deserter territory. These are facts - but for > some reason, the cable news networks are more interested in talking > about IBM Selectric typewriters and proportional spacing. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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