[B] All the news that's fit to make [/B]

Pure

Fiel a Verdad
Joined
Dec 20, 2001
Posts
15,135
There have been a few threads about Americans attitudes, be it to health insurance, border crossing, rights of accused, death penalty, etc.
So I'm cross posting this, since it helps explain the matter. I.e., Consider the 'diet' of media coverage to which citizens are exposed.

Under Bush, a New Age of Prepackaged Television News

By DAVID BARSTOW and ROBIN STEIN
New York Times, March 13, 2005

Under the Bush administration, the federal government has aggressively used a well-established tool of public relations: the prepackaged, ready-to-serve news report that major corporations have long distributed to TV stations to pitch everything from headache remedies to auto insurance. In all, at least 20 federal agencies, including the Defense Department and the Census Bureau, have made and distributed hundreds of television news segments in the past four years, records and interviews show. Many were subsequently broadcast on local stations across the country without any acknowledgement of the government's role in their production.This winter, Washington

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Not long ago, Ms. Ryan was a much sought-after "reporter" for news segments produced by the federal government. A journalist at ABC and PBS who became a public relations consultant, Ms. Ryan worked on about a dozen reports for seven federal agencies in 2003 and early 2004. Her segments for the Department of Health and Human Services and the Office of National Drug Control Policy were a subject of the accountability office's recent inquiries.

The G.A.O. concluded that the two agencies "designed and executed" their segments "to be indistinguishable from news stories produced by private sector television news organizations." A significant part of that execution, the office found, was Ms. Ryan's expert narration, including her typical sign-off - "In Washington, I'm Karen Ryan reporting" - delivered in a tone and cadence familiar to television reporters everywhere. Last March, when The New York Times first described her role in a segment about new prescription drug benefits for Medicare patients, reaction was harsh. In Cleveland, The Plain Dealer ran an editorial under the headline "Karen Ryan, You're a Phony,"

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Ms. Ryan, 48, describes herself as not especially political, and certainly no Bush die-hard. She had hoped for a long career in journalism. But over time, she said, she grew dismayed by what she saw as the decline of television news - too many cut corners, too many ratings stunts.In the end, she said, the jump to video news releases from journalism was not as far as one might expect. "It's almost the same thing," she said.

There are differences, though. When she went to interview Tommy G. Thompson, then the health and human services secretary, about the new Medicare drug benefit, it was not the usual reporter-source exchange. First, she said, he already knew the questions, and she was there mostly to help him give better, snappier answers. And second, she said, everyone involved is aware of a segment's potential political benefits.Her Medicare report, for example, was distributed in January 2004, not long before Mr. Bush hit the campaign trail and cited the drug benefit as one of his major accomplishments.

The script suggested that local anchors lead into the report with this line: "In December, President Bush signed into law the first-ever prescription drug benefit for people with Medicare." In the segment, Mr. Bush is shown signing the legislation as Ms. Ryan describes the new benefits and reports that "all people with Medicare will be able to get coverage that will lower their prescription drug spending." The segment made no mention of the many critics who decry the law as an expensive gift to the pharmaceutical industry. The G.A.O. found that the segment was "not strictly factual," that it contained "notable omissions" and that it amounted to "a favorable report" about a controversial program.

---
Afghanistan to Memphis: An Agency's Report Ends Up on the Air

On Sept. 11, 2002, WHBQ, the Fox affiliate in Memphis, marked the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks with an uplifting report on how assistance from the United States was helping to liberate the women of Afghanistan.Tish Clark, a reporter for WHBQ, described how Afghan women, once barred from schools and jobs, were at last emerging from their burkas, taking up jobs as seamstresses and bakers, sending daughters off to new schools, receiving decent medical care for the first time and even participating in a fledgling democracy.

Her segment included an interview with an Afghan teacher who recounted how the Taliban only allowed boys to attend school. An Afghan doctor described how the Taliban refused to let male physicians treat women.In short, Ms. Clark's report seemed to corroborate, however modestly, a central argument of the Bush foreign policy, that forceful American intervention abroad was spreading freedom, improving lives and winning friends.

What the people of Memphis were not told, though, was that the interviews used by WHBQ were actually conducted by State Department contractors. The contractors also selected the quotes used from those interviews and shot the video that went with the narration. They also wrote the narration, much of which Ms. Clark repeated with only minor changes. As it happens, the viewers of WHBQ were not the only ones in the dark. Ms. Clark, now Tish Clark Dunning, said in an interview that she, too, had no idea the report originated at the State Department. "If that's true, I'm very shocked that anyone would false report on anything like that," she said.

How a television reporter in Memphis unwittingly came to narrate a segment by the State Department reveals much about the extent to which government-produced news accounts have seeped into the broader new media landscape.The explanation begins inside the White House, where the president's communications advisers devised a strategy after Sept. 11, 2001, to encourage supportive news coverage of the fight against terrorism. The idea, they explained to reporters at the time, was to counter charges of American imperialism by generating accounts that emphasized American efforts to liberate and rebuild Afghanistan and Iraq.

[end excerpts]
 
J

Surely control and/ or subversion of the media is the first duty of an elected party. With any luck the 'party' will control certain media aspects prior to election, though this may not help them if they are as hopelessly incompentent and divided as the British Conservative Party.

Elected politicians impose 'nation state morality' and use the media to support and promote the ideology of the elected. When the elected win in a close call, and the electorate turnout is 60% you have 'nation state morality' imposed by a party elected by less than - say 20% of the population (total as opposed to eligible/registered voters).

Why is this allowed to happen?

One answer, but not the only answer, is a wariness, post WW2, of 'Hero' figures. Hero's - charismatic figures able to sway hearts and souls - are thin on the ground, often have controversial pasts unable to withstand today's public scrutiny, and are widely regarded with suspician. It is difficult to imagine another Hero arising to take power in any 'western' country and we do our level best to undermine and destroy 'hero' status in the less developed world.

Manipulating the media to drive the Political message is an easier, safer, cost effective and largely deniable method of manipulating public perception, with the added benefit that it cements the relationship between corporate and political spheres of influence since someone (business) has to stump up the ante. An example would be the recent elections in Saudi Arabia - the ones hailed as a break through and leading Saudia Arabia into the democratic family of nations. The ones where women were denied a vote and the men elected have no say in how the country is ruled. And what did you see on the news channels? Saudi Arabia becomes enters into an age of democracy.

When you rule and claim to speak for the moral majority, it's the message that gets repeated and the air time - no one sits in the back room asking how the fuck 20% of the population is a majority.
 
I think the figure has settled down to 46% now, but some of the polls before the election showed as many as 70% of people who still believed al Qaeda to be connected to the Saddam Hussein government, despite how utterly the fiction had been discredited.

The invented news to which the article refers is merely the tip of the iceberg. Our news media self-censors. The news has always done this; it is not a new thing. Exceptions are generally not any more honest, just partisan in the other direction.

But the usual news outlets always support the power. Whichever power is in the ascendant at the time. There are mechanisms of coercion available to power. They can refuse to allow your reporter access to them as sources, bar you reporter from news conferences which your competitors may attend, and so on. But those measures are seldom needed. News organizations know where the bread is buttered.

Press releases from the government are simply run verbatim, as if they were the news story, nowadays. I don't know why the government bothers to manufacture the false news stories listed in the article when their releases pass unquestioned so often without any special arrangement being made.

Even when an opposition view is presented, it will be mentioned side-by-side with the outright lie. This is referred to as fair reportage of different points of view: the lie and the evidence that it is a falsehood are given equal weight, without comment.

Check out FAIR, Fainess and Accuracy in Reporting. They have a syndicated radio show called CounterSpin and a Web presence. They lay bare the mechanisms of propaganda day after day.
 
Public attitudes, I've found, are very rarely sourced from 'the public' and more often than not are political biases rather than attitudes.

When a news report tells everyone what everyone else is thinking, it's 10/1 that it's what the editor wants them to think.

As an example over here there has been a great kerfuffle about the Euro and its adoption. TheEarl (I'm pretty sure) is quite certain that the vast majority of British people wish to retain our own currency. I'm from a completely different background to him and I have yet to meet a single person that could give a toss either way. Yet the media happily report that everyone is against it.

Americans, it seems to me, are the victims of their own publicity.
 
gauchecritic said:
Public attitudes, I've found, are very rarely sourced from 'the public' and more often than not are political biases rather than attitudes.

When a news report tells everyone what everyone else is thinking, it's 10/1 that it's what the editor wants them to think.

As an example over here there has been a great kerfuffle about the Euro and its adoption. TheEarl (I'm pretty sure) is quite certain that the vast majority of British people wish to retain our own currency. I'm from a completely different background to him and I have yet to meet a single person that could give a toss either way. Yet the media happily report that everyone is against it.

Americans, it seems to me, are the victims of their own publicity.

Co-opting the news for th epuposes of the state is old hat. Has been for many years. Propaganda, has evolved and matured, but in essense, it remains what Geobbles said, the art of convincing someone of something so throughly that they do not even question it any longer.

If we have a problem here, it's that the vast majority, don't care enough to look deeper. The lack of concrn for events outside their own live prompts many to accept ignorance happily. If you don't know there are people being murdered in Sudan, you don't loose sleep over it.

Lying, distoring the facts, omiting pertinent facts, telling half truths, it comes from both sides, wheter you dived along liberal/conservative lines or Dem/Gop, or red state blue state, it's the same spin game, the results more indicative of the prationer's art than the truth of any position. Blogers, are now making a killing dispoiling people of the veil. Dan Rather, paid the price for what can only be charitably called faulty methodology. It's getting harder, for those who wish to distort the truth, to do so with impunity, since there are now groups dedicated to showing them up when they lie.

For all that, the blogers, the pundits, the articles, etc. None makes a difference, if no one is listening or cares. One of our founding fathers made an extremely astute observation.

He said he was against democracy, because the people weren't concerned with democracy. The farmer worried about his crops, the merchant his ships, the preacher his flock. Their concern for goernment, went only so far as to ensure they could grow thier crops, trade or prostelitize. They would not notice their government had fallen into the hands of a tyrant, until it was too late.

It still holds true. The average voter worries about the rent, utilites, car payments, his 401K, the kids getting to band camp on time. The events acoss the street are of negligible concern, those across the stae, even les so, across teh country? Barely a blip on the radar and across the globe?
 
No comments to add, other than this excerpt of the 2004 freedom of the press ranking, compiled yearly by an international organization called Reporters Without Borders, that keeps a daily tally of attacks on press freedom as they occur throughout the world. This does not include instances of voluntary foldings "due to the political climate", only factual, proven cases of censorship, coercion, and direct attacks to journalists' personal life and/or freedoms on the part of the State.

[tr][td][/td][td]Country[/td][td]Note[/td][/tr][tr][td]1 [/td][td]Denmark [/td][td]0,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Finland [/td][td]0,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Iceland [/td][td]0,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Ireland [/td][td]0,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Netherlands [/td][td]0,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Norway [/td][td]0,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Slovakia [/td][td]0,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Switzerland [/td][td]0,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]9 [/td][td]New Zealand [/td][td]0,67[/td][/tr][tr][td]10 [/td][td]Latvia [/td][td]1,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]11 [/td][td]Estonia [/td][td]2,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Germany [/td][td]2,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Sweden [/td][td]2,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Trinidad and Tobago [/td][td]2,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]15 [/td][td]Slovenia [/td][td]2,25[/td][/tr][tr][td]16 [/td][td]Lithuania [/td][td]3,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]17 [/td][td]Austria [/td][td]3,25[/td][/tr][tr][td]18 [/td][td]Canada [/td][td]3,33[/td][/tr][tr][td]19 [/td][td]Czech Republic [/td][td]3,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]France [/td][td]3,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]21 [/td][td]Bosnia and Herzegovina [/td][td]3,67[/td][/tr][tr][td]22 [/td][td]Belgium [/td][td]4,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]United States of America
(American territory)
[/td][td]4,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]24 [/td][td]Jamaica [/td][td]4,17[/td][/tr][tr][td]25 [/td][td]Portugal [/td][td]4,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]26 [/td][td]South Africa [/td][td]5,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]27 [/td][td]Benin [/td][td]5,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]28 [/td][td]El Salvador [/td][td]6,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Hungary [/td][td]6,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]United Kingdom [/td][td]6,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]31 [/td][td]Dominican Republic [/td][td]6,75[/td][/tr][tr][td]32 [/td][td]Poland [/td][td]6,83[/td][/tr][tr][td]33 [/td][td]Greece [/td][td]7,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]34 [/td][td]Hong-Kong [/td][td]7,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]35 [/td][td]Costa Rica [/td][td]7,63[/td][/tr][tr][td]36 [/td][td]Bulgaria [/td][td]8,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Israel (Israeli territory) [/td][td]8,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]38 [/td][td]Cape Verde [/td][td]8,75[/td][/tr][tr][td]39 [/td][td]Italy [/td][td]9,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Spain [/td][td]9,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]41 [/td][td]Australia [/td][td]9,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]42 [/td][td]Chile [/td][td]10,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Japan [/td][td]10,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Namibia [/td][td]10,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Uruguay [/td][td]10,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]46 [/td][td]Mauritius [/td][td]10,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Paraguay [/td][td]10,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]48 [/td][td]South Korea [/td][td]11,13[/td][/tr][tr][td]49 [/td][td]Macedonia [/td][td]11,25[/td][/tr][tr][td]50 [/td][td]Albania [/td][td]11,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]- [/td][td]Botswana [/td][td]11,50[/td][/tr][tr][td]... [/td][td][/td][td][/td][/tr][tr][td]108 [/td][td]United States of America
(in Iraq)
[/td][td]36,00[/td][/tr][tr][td]... [/td][td][/td][td][/td][/tr]
 
gauchecritic said:
Public attitudes, I've found, are very rarely sourced from 'the public' and more often than not are political biases rather than attitudes.

When a news report tells everyone what everyone else is thinking, it's 10/1 that it's what the editor wants them to think.

As an example over here there has been a great kerfuffle about the Euro and its adoption. TheEarl (I'm pretty sure) is quite certain that the vast majority of British people wish to retain our own currency. I'm from a completely different background to him and I have yet to meet a single person that could give a toss either way. Yet the media happily report that everyone is against it.

Americans, it seems to me, are the victims of their own publicity.

You are right Gauche, it is me who hates the Euro. AFAIK, a majority of British people agree with me. Unfortunately, they agree for the wrong reasons, ie the Sun told them what they should think on the matter.

The Earl
 
Ever noticed how it's always the people outside the Euro-zone that hate the euro? You never see any dissatisfaction from people who already have it.

Sort of like the red states hating gays and worrying about being bombed by terrorists. :D
 
Neon, I disagree with your take that the 'Hero' is distrusted.

If anything, the 'Hero' is revered. Have you noticed that the focus of media, especially during an election, is focused on the leader of the party rather than the party itself and its policies.

Have you noticed that most political media is straight out of Riefenstahl? That most pictures communicate nothing except how 'Leader'-like the subject is?

How much of election speech consists of blind and bland promises and ad hominem attacks on the other side?

No, the Hero is alive and well in the West.
 
Even Shrubby is made into a cult of personality. Shuddersome. Vacuous. Disturbing.
 
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