(A public lecture given at the Community College of Baltimore County, MD - April 10, 2008)
In
its recently released annual report on ‘The State of the American
News Media’, the Pew Foundation’s Project for Excellence in Journalism
concluded that in 2008, the media will be more troubled than it
was a year ago.
The
effects of the current economic recession and the unavoidable
transitions and adaptations to the digital revolution are inflicting
enormous pressures on the media industry, pressures that are re-shaping
the contours of journalism and challenging the profession’s ethical
foundation.
Every
day now we hear about corporate downsizing in the media business,
employee layoffs, flat wages, stagnant share prices of publicly-traded
media companies, mega-mergers, declining advertising revenues,
re-direction of media advertising from “old” to “new media”, falling
circulation numbers - younger audiences moving away from newspapers
and television to the Internet; plagiarism, sensationalism, misinformation,
disinformation and numerous other ethical flaws.
We
read the results of public opinion polls which indicate the media’s
sinking credibility in the eyes of the American public - approval
ratings in the low 20s, lower even than our discredited Congress,
whose ratings are themselves, pretty abysmal in the eyes of the
American people.
As
the media industry struggles economically, the ethical standards
of the journalism profession become more and more compromised,
to the point where our industry is today confronted with a profound
ethical deficit and a serious moral crisis.
What
do news people see as their basic challenge? Somehow they must
reinvent their profession and their business model at the same
time they are cutting back on their reporting and resources. To
a degree, journalism’s problems are oversupply - too many news
organizations doing the same thing. The evidence is mounting that
the news industry must become more aggressive about developing
a new economic model for the digital era.
If
one believes, however, that the economics of news are now broken,
with further declines ahead, then it seems inevitable that the
investment in newsrooms will continue to shrink and the quality
of journalism in America will decline further. One thing seems
clear, however: If news companies do not assert their own vision
over those of their corporate owners and investors, including
making a case and taking risks, their future will be defined by
those less invested in and passionate about news and more concerned
with the bottom line, with the quarterly financial report. Mass
media is an institution with a social mission which at times conflicts
with the business imperative of making a profit.
2007
became a year notable for the narrowness of the news agenda, defined
almost as much by what wasn’t covered as by what was. I believe
that this narrow vision of what constitutes news that the general
public needs and wants is a major ethical challenge for the profession
of journalism moving forward.
In
my opinion, news is not a corporate product. It was not invented
in a laboratory or an R&D department. Neither is it a commodity
to be bought and sold or an asset to be speculated on in the capital
markets. News evolved out of popular sentiment, out of political
movement and out of a human instinct for knowledge and awareness.
And its greatest leaps forward came from risk-takers who were
often discounted because their vision broke with convention, and
because their tastes ran in sometimes contradictory directions,
the likes of Ted Turner, or Joseph Pulitzer, or Adolph Ochs or
Amy Goodman at Democracy Now.
The
answers, we continue to suspect, will be in the journalism, too,
not only in the business strategies that fund it. If the past
tells us anything, it’s that the two sides, business and editorial,
cannot flourish unless they move together, unless they are able
to balance their dual missions.
Studying
the media coverage of the presidential campaign is itself a test
case for where/how/when do the professional, moral and social
responsibilities of journalists intersect?
Depending
on your political perspective and personal preference you can
variously describe the media’s coverage of the 2008 presidential
campaign to date - as fair, unfair, inaccurate, incomplete, pathetic,
outlandish - what’s “fair game” for one is foul play for another;
is the media “in the tank” for this or that candidate; is Chelsea
Clinton being treated to a different standard by the press who
collectively agreed not to question her even though she is a smart
and articulate 28-year-old campaign surrogate for her mother Hillary?
A
week or so ago I caught Ted Turner’s interview with Charlie Rose
on PBS and I was struck at how Turner, the founder and creator
of CNN, arguably the world’s most famous name in television news,
was bemoaning what the network that he started has morphed into
30 years later. He claimed it has become unrecognizable to him.
He cited CNN’s proclivity for putting pretty faces in front of
the cameras to the detriment of seasoned journalists. He decried
the shallow analysis, and surface coverage of major stories, the
proliferation of noise that passes for commentary, thanks to the
talking heads from the chattering classes. Turner said that it
pains him to see how much CNN has changed from his original vision
of the network.
Writing
recently in the New York Times Op-Ed page a former CNN employee
said, “When I joined CNN in 1989, I was ecstatic. To be part of
an organization that could spend 24 hours a day covering important
issues around the world was a dream come true. While the vision
didn’t always comport with reality, it matched up much of the
time. As time went by and competition emerged, we all know what
happened. Ratings began to drive agendas and heat over light became
the norm. In recent years, the lip gloss quotient (it works for
both genders) has become more important than IQ. The definition
of fair and balanced has nothing to do with truth and is satisfied
if voices from the far left and right are encouraged to spew their
dogma in angry debate. The anchors are there to simply fuel the
fire with no duty to steer guests to substantive conversation,
much less to insist on facts over fatuous rhetoric”.
Unfortunately,
most people still get their daily dose of political news from
the cable networks like CNN, MSNBC, Fox and others. Watching their
favored channels, they absorb material that usually comports with
their established world-view. Opposing positions are presented
as fodder for their gladiators to shoot down or lampoon by the
force of personality alone, or, regardless of the content, as
demonstrating equilibrium in the discussion.
Unquestionably,
we are in one of the most critical presidential races in our lifetimes.
The issues are monumental; a collapsing economy, the never-ending
war in Iraq, global climate change. Yet we watch as the
networks loop Rev. Wright sound bites (with not a single one offering
up the easily accessed sermons in long form so viewers can form
a reasoned opinion about the man and his agenda), or maybe they
debate the phrase ‘a typical white person’ ad nauseam. I have
no problem with folks who challenge Barack Obama on his association
with the minister, but as with most stories, a few phrases from
Wright’s career do nothing to inform people about the man or his
mission. It is the duty of the media to offer the big picture
on this (and so many other stories) so viewers can make a reasoned
decision, but unless I’ve missed it, no news organization has
tried. The purveyors of news must bravely offer information that
may challenge the audience despite the backlash from time to time.
The
press knows how influential it is in shaping attitudes and opinions.
However, the mind-numbing drivel most of us subject ourselves
to serves only to polarize and solidify preconceived positions;
so much so, that when actual facts slip into discussion, they
are dismissed as mere partisan ammunition. There are exceptions
to this rule, but that equation should be reversed.
In
my personal view, the mainstream media’s unbalanced and sensationalized
coverage of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright episode was unethical and
unprofessional - all but ignoring similar inflammatory remarks
by right-wing preachers who have endorsed and are actively campaigning
for John McCain.
On
this issue, Fox News has certainly been the most egregious perpetrator
of biased and one-sided coverage in this campaign so far.
Sensational
or “yellow” journalism as it used to be called several years ago
is alive and well in 2008, case in point, - the obsession with
the cult of celebrity, the fixation on all things Paris Hilton,
Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, just to name a few. I would posit
that this type of journalism is inherently unethical. But the
sad irony of tabloid journalism (whether print or broadcast) is
that while totally devoid of ethics it is the most profitable
form of media today. So, unfortunately, it will persist for years
to come. The paparazzi are not going to fade away into the sunset.
The
era of reporters operating in multimedia has finally arrived and
I, for one, am ecstatic about its potential.
The
top news Web sites have 30 times the traffic of the top political
and public affairs Web sites. More people read the New York
Times and the Washington Post online than read the
print editions of both newspapers.
To
protect themselves, some of the best-known bloggers are already
forming associations, with ethics codes, standards of conduct
and more.
While
journalists are becoming more serious about the Web, no clear
models of how to do journalism online really exist yet, and some
qualities are still only marginally explored. Our content study
this year was a close examination of some three dozen Web sites
from a range of media. Our goal was to assess the state of journalism
online at the beginning of 2007. What we found was that the root
media no longer strictly define a site’s character. The Web sites
of the Washington Post and the New York Times, for
instance, are more dissimilar than the papers are in print. The
Post, by our count, was beginning to have more in common
with some sites from other media. The field is still highly experimental,
with an array of options, but it can be hard to discern what one
site offers, in contrast to another. And some of the Web’s potential
abilities seem less developed than others. Sites have done more,
for instance, to exploit immediacy, but they have done less to
exploit the potential for depth, even though neither space nor
number of available Web pages is a serious concern.
So,
will multimedia journalism help or hinder the practice of ethics
in our profession? The jury is still out on this question, but
here, I’d like to express some optimism - the unlimited space
of Web pages, the inherent democratic and interactive nature of
Internet publishing, the ability to get news on demand, the power
to report and interpret to the world one’s own reality and the
realities of one’s community integrated with text, audio and video
images - all provides a foundation for the building of new, more
inclusive, diverse and ethical forms of journalism.
To
be sure, the Internet has become a kind of wild west of publishing
where professional rules and standards of excellence are often
ignored; a place where truth and factual accuracy are gleefully
sacrificed on the altar of sensationalism. But when compared with
traditional media, the legal and economic barriers to entry are
low for Internet publishers. While, undoubtedly, there’s tons
of mindless drivel on the Web, the Internet also makes it possible
to produce and distribute high quality journalism at a low cost.
This is especially advantageous to minority publishers and to
producers of alternative and unconventional content, most of which
will never see the light of day in mainstream media. In short,
the Internet is a great free speech platform, a living testimony
to the vigorous exercise of our first amendment rights.
As
a member of the Society of Professional Journalists, I believe
that public enlightenment is the forerunner of justice and the
foundation of democracy. The duty of the journalist is to further
those ends by seeking truth and providing a fair and comprehensive
account of events and issues. Conscientious journalists from all
media and specialties strive to serve the public with thoroughness
and honesty. Professional integrity is the cornerstone of a journalist’s
credibility.
Journalists
often face ethical dilemmas when covering humanitarian catastrophes
such as Hurricane Katrina’s devastation of the Gulf
Coast region in 2005 or the ongoing civil
war in the Congo
that has taken more lives than any war since World War 11, or
the horrific genocide in Darfur.
On
the one hand their editors expect them to cover these human tragedies
with objectivity and professional detachment but on the other
hand they can’t avoid being overwhelmed by the enormity of the
assignment. So they are challenged to conduct themselves as professional
i.e. “impartial” reporters without being indifferent to the human
suffering all around them.
Such
situations can be life changing and career altering experiences
for even the most celebrated reporters, case in point being Anderson
Cooper of CNN who could not hide his human emotions when covering
Hurricane Katrina. At times he cried for the suffering victims
and at times he railed against the incompetence of the Federal
government and the racial insensitivity of our national political
leaders. Cooper even wrote a book about his Katrina experiences.
Most
journalists, at least those with warm hearts and caring souls,
are first and foremost flesh and blood human beings, not machines,
not drive-by or fly-over observers immune from being emotionally
affected by humanitarian disasters.
In
fact, some of the finest journalism has been produced by reporters
who became embedded with their subjects, who crusaded for the
exploited and the oppressed and who advocated for the poor and
the powerless.
In
a seminal speech last year at the National Conference for Media
Reform, the great journalist Bill Moyers, host of a weekly PBS
program and the former press secretary to President Lyndon Johnson
said,
“Today,
America
is socially divided and politically benighted. Inequality and
poverty grow steadily along with risk and debt. Too many working
families cannot make ends meet with two people working, let alone
if one stays home to care for children or aging parents. Young
people without privilege and wealth struggle to get a footing.
Seniors enjoy less security for a lifetime's work. We are racially
segregated today in every meaningful sense, except for the letter
of the law. And the survivors of segregation and immigration toil
for pennies on the dollar, compared to those they serve.
What
kind of economy do we seek, and what kind of nation do we wish
to be? Do we want to be a country in which the rich get richer
and the poor get poorer, or do we want a country committed to
an economy that provides for the common good, offers upward mobility,
supports a middle-class standard of living, and provides generous
opportunities for all?
And
today, two basic pillars of American society, shared economic
prosperity and a public sector capable of serving the common good,
are crumbling. The third pillar of American democracy, an independent
press, is under sustained attack, and the channels of information
are choked”.
Moyers
went on to say that a few huge corporations now dominate the media
landscape in America. Almost all the networks carried by most
cable systems are owned by one of the major media conglomerates.
Two-thirds of today's newspapers are monopolies.
As
ownership gets more and more concentrated, fewer and fewer independent
sources of information have survived in the marketplace; and those
few significant alternatives that do survive, such as PBS and
NPR, are undergoing financial and political pressure to reduce
critical news content and to shift their focus in a mainstream
direction, which means being more attentive to establishment views
than to the bleak realities of powerlessness that shape the lives
of ordinary people.
What
does today's media system mean for the notion of an informed public
cherished by democratic theory? Quite literally, it means that
virtually everything the average person sees or hears, outside
of his or her own personal communications, is determined by the
interests of private, unaccountable executives and investors whose
primary goal is increasing profits and raising the share prices.
More insidiously, this small group of elites determines what ordinary
people do not see or hear. In-depth coverage of anything, let
alone the problems real people face day-to-day, is as scarce as
sex, violence and voyeurism are pervasive.
This
is censorship of knowledge by monopolization of the means of information.
In its current form, which Moyers describes as “oligopoly,” media
growth has one clear consequence. There is more information and
easier access to it, but it's more narrow and homogenous in content
and perspective.
Old
media acquire new media and vice versa. Rupert Murdoch, forever
savvy about the next key outlet that will attract eyeballs, purchased
MySpace, spending nearly $600 million, so he could, in the language
of Wall Street, monetize those eyeballs. Goggle became a partner
in Time Warner, investing $1 billion in its AOL online service.
And now Goggle has bought YouTube, so it would have a better vehicle
for delivering interactive ads for Madison Avenue. Viacom, Microsoft,
large ad agencies, and others have been buying up key media properties,
many of them the leading online sites.
It's
what happens when an interlocking media system filters through
commercial values or ideology, the information and moral viewpoints
people consume in their daily lives. And by no stretch of the
imagination can we say today that the dominant institutions of
our media are guardians of democracy.
Despite
the profusion of new information platforms on cable, on the Internet,
on radio, blogs, podcasts, You Tube and MySpace, among others,
the resources for solid, original journalistic work, both investigative
and interpretative, are contracting, rather than expanding.
But
while media organizations supply a lot of news and commentary,
they tell us almost nothing about who really wags the system and
how. The talking heads on television chatter on endlessly in self-absorbed
narcissism, informing without educating.
As
Moyers says, “We have reached the stage when the Poo-Bahs of punditry
have only to declare that “the world is flat,” for everyone to
agree it is, without going to the edge and looking over themselves.”
I
think what's happened is not indifference or laziness or incompetence,
but the fact that most journalists on the plantation have so internalized
conventional wisdom that they simply accept that the system is
working as it should.
Similarly,
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. And these are but a few of the realities that are obscured.
What about this growing inequality? What about the re-segregation
of our public schools? What about the devastating onward march
of environmental deregulation? All of these are examples of what
happens when independent sources of knowledge and analysis are
so few and far between on the plantation.
So
if we need to know what is happening, and Big Media won't tell
us; if we need to know why it matters, and Big Media won't tell
us; if we need to know what to do about it, and Big Media won't
tell us, it's clear what we have to do. We have to tell the story
ourselves.
The
greatest challenge to the plantation mentality of the media giants
is the innovation and expression made possible by the digital
revolution. As a former newspaper editor, I may still prefer the
newspaper for its investigative journalism and in-depth analysis,
but also as a former Web publisher I also recognize that we now
have it in our means to tell a different story from Big Media,
our story.
The
Internet, cell phones and digital cameras that can transmit images
over the Internet makes possible a nation of story tellers, every
citizen a Tom Paine.
The
media system we have been living under for a long time now was
created behind closed doors where the power-brokers met to divvy
up the spoils.
Powerful
forces are at work now, determined to create our media future
for the benefit of the modern plantation: investors, advertisers,
corporate owners and the parasites that depend on their indulgence,
including many in the governing class.
In
a few years, virtually all media will be delivered by high speed
broadband. And without equality of access, the Net can become
just like cable television where the provider decides what you
see and what you pay.
We
will likely see more consolidation of ownership with newspapers,
TV stations, and major online properties in fewer hands. So, we
have to find other ways to ensure the public has access to diverse,
independent, and credible sources of information.
It
means bringing broadband service to those many millions of Americans
too poor to participate so far in the digital revolution. It means
ownership and participation for people of color and women. It
means strengthening the ethnic media in this country.
We've
got to get alternative content out there to people, or this country
is going to die of too many lies.
Since
the presidential race is on everyone’s mind these days, I’d like
to conclude by citing the views expressed recently in a New York
Times op-ed piece written by author Neal Gabler on the media’s
relationship with John McCain. He argues that while the media
has been sharply critical of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama,
they have, for the most part, given John McCain a free pass. I
agree with Gabler.
“It
is certainly no secret that Senator John McCain, the presumptive
Republican presidential nominee, is a darling of the news media,”
wrote Gabler. “Reporters routinely attach “maverick,” “straight
talker” and “patriot” to him like Homeric epithets. They downplay
his frequent gaffes, give short shrift to his appalling ignorance
of the political and social dynamics in Iraq
and under-report his numerous flip flops on the issues.
Joan
Didion, the well-known writer and public intellectual, once described
a presidential campaign as a closed system staged by the candidates
for the news media - one in which the media judged a candidate
essentially by how well he or she manipulated them, and one in
which the electorate were bystanders.
In
exposing his two-way relationship with the press this way, McCain
reveals the absurdity of the political process as a big game.
He also reveals his own gleeful cynicism about it.
In
covering McCain, the media is reacting to something deeper than
politics. They are reacting to his vision of how the world operates
and to his attitude about it, something it is easy to suspect
he acquired while a prisoner of war. But being a Vietnam War hero
and a prisoner of war some 40 years ago is not the same as having
the experience, understanding and sensitivity of the multicultural
world we live in and the leadership responsibilities of a US President in such a complex and dynamic world.
McCain is still stuck in the mindset of the cold war and of an
imperial era that has long exited the stage of history.
Though
Mr. McCain can be the most self-deprecating of candidates (yet
another reason the news media love him), his vision of the process
also betrays an obvious superiority - one the mainstream political
news media, a group of liberal cosmologists, have long shared.
If in the past he flattered the press by posing as its friend,
he is now flattering it by posing as its conspirator, a secret
sharer of its cynicism. He is the guy who “gets it.” He sees what
the press sees. Michael Scherer, a blogger for Time, called
him the “coolest kid in school.”
Yet
the reporters, so quick in general to jump on hypocrisy, seem
to find his insincerity a virtue. It also suggests that seducing
the press with ironic detachment, the press's soft spot, may be
the best political strategy of all- one that Mr. McCain may walk
on water right into the White House on January 20, 2009.
Finally,
all of its flaws and shortcomings notwithstanding, the journalism
profession today remains critical to the health and vibrancy of
American democracy and to the smooth functioning of an open, free,
just, informed and transparent society. Those
of us who love journalism and practice its craft have both a moral
and a professional obligation to make it better. If the prognosticators
have already concluded that 2008 will be a “troubled” year for
media in America, let’s work hard to prove them wrong in
2009 and beyond.
BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, Don Rojas, is the communications
and publications manager of Senior Service America Inc. Before
joining Senior Service America, Mr. Rojas was the Media
Manager for Oxfam America,
an international humanitarian and development agency. He is a
former director of communications for the NAACP and for
three years, was the general manager of WBAI - Pacifica Radio.
Don Rojas is also the founder and former CEO of The Black
World Today and the former executive editor and assistant to
the publisher of the New York Amsterdam News. He has been
a consultant to several media organizations, labor unions and
the National Council of Churches, where he managed the
NCC’s multi-million dollar Burned Churches Fund. Click here
to contact Mr. Rojas.