This past Friday beheld the start of the third National Conference over Media Reform in Memphis. Bill Moyers was one of the main speakers, and being Moyers, he let the media establishment have it point blank:
Veteran journalist Bill Moyers on Friday challenged 3,000 progressive activists and communicators to take back the telling of America’s story at the National Conference of Media Reform in Memphis. He put his finger squarely on the deep vein of discontent with the way mainstream media is ill-serving American democracy.
Moyers, who is president of the Schumann Center for Media and Democracy, went through a sordid litany of corporate media malfeasance, from the lackluster and largely non-skeptical reporting of the Bush administration’s launch of the war in Iraq to the lack of attention paid to a domestic landscape of increasing economic disparity and racial segregation. Virtually uncontrolled media consolidation over the past decade, he said, has meant a loss of independent journalism and created “more narrowness and homogenization in content and perspective, so that what we see on our couch is overwhelmingly the view from the top.”
It is in this environment that the Bush administration can, for example, can “turn the escalation of a failed war and call it a surge, as if it were a current of electricity through a wire instead of blood spurting from the ruptured veins of a soldier,” Moyers said.
On the domestic front, “the question of whether or not our economic system is truly just is off the table for investigation and discussion, so that alternative ideas, alternative critiques, alternative visions never get a hearing,” he said.
“It is clear what we have to do. We have to tell the story ourselves,” he said.
One thing I noticed much further down in the article (the last paragraph, in fact) was a reference to Sidney Lumet's Network, possibly one of the best movies ever made about the broadcast television industry:
The intense interest in this conference is a reflection of the thousands of Howard Beales on the left who are as mad as hell and are not going to take dumbed-down, homogenized, corporatized, power-subservient media any more.
Everyone remembers Howard Beale telling people to stick their heads out their windows and scream their ire at the world, possibly because that scene happens early in the movie. Nobody remembers that by the end of the film, Howard has become "the only prime time anchorman to ever have been killed over lousy ratings." So my meager advice to those who would defend the world from the main stream media might be this: the machine is plenty bigger than you, has no morals whatsoever and has an enormous head start. In other words, both strive for change and watch your back. Always.
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