Mainstream media is letting the country down in a big way, by abandoning their traditional roles of truth-tellers in favor of exhibiting favoritism. And I don’t mean leaning one way or another in editorials; I mean writing most stories (outside the sports page) with bias, either cheerleading or condemning as their side would have it.
The most obvious symptom is the sanewashing of TFG, whose
daily ravings get reformatted by news editors into something that might make
sense. Offensive or off-putting material is ignored or translated, leaving
readers and viewers with a vastly different view from what was actually said.
Just over the weekend, TFG decided to make the late Arnie
Palmer’s dick into headline news. Sure, we’ve all heard about it not, but not
until after the New York Times posted about the appearance and cleaned up the
reference, before indirectly mentioning the reference, before the leaked word
of mouth eventually caused them to report on what was said. In other words, they
had to be dragged into doing their jobs.
This is going on with multiple media outlets day after
day. If any one of these word salad ramblings had come from the President or
Vice President, it would have been the top story for several news cycles. But
because A) they want a horserace and B) the ownership and publishers want their
thumb on the scale for the Republicans (which benefits their massive corporate
operations) they reshape the news to deprive independent and undecided people
of information that may influence them to vote Democratic.
I have another example from the front page of Saturday’s Baltimore Sun. While it’s not focusing on the presidential race, it’s taking shots at the sitting Democratic governor, Wes Moore and it uses many of the same biased techniques we find in the presidential coverage.
You know it’s going to be a hit piece when Fox 45 appears
in the byline. They’re a local Fox affiliate that specializes in ambush TV
journalism, popping up out of nowhere to pepper local pols with questions while
on their way to their cars and then running the most flustered responses.
The point of the article is that Governor Moore is out
campaigning while juvenile crime happens.
This is a classic construction, “How can they do ‘this’ while ‘this other thing’ is happening? The details don’t matter, you can
fill in the blanks. It’s like, “How can
we send money to Ukraine while there are homeless veterans? or How can you talk
about mass transit when housing prices are so high?” The answer is usually,
“We can do two things at once,” but
that seems to be beyond the reach of these “content providers.”
No public official actively works on a single problem
24/7/365. And solving “youth crime” is like solving homelessness or poverty. It
ain’t happening by anyone any time soon. And it’s not like there wasn’t youth
crime during the previous (Republican) administration. Youth crime doesn’t get
solved until there are enough other ways to make enough money to compete
with gang or drug life. These guys aren’t going to start working at Arby’s or
picking crabs down on the shore, so any solution would need to be massive and
grassroots, just like the kind of proposal Republicans always shoot down as too
expensive. But that former governor is running for Senator so they want to
dirty up his Democratic successor.
So it goes on to say that the Governor’s Administration “broke
its silence” on the issue. Watch out for that phrase wherever you see it. That
is almost always a false construction. Breaking one’s silence assumes there is
an actual, willful silence to begin with, which is different than merely not
having said anything yet. I’m just “breaking my silence” on youth crime today. Did
I have a silence before? Nope, I just haven’t talked about it yet. If anyone
would have asked earlier, I’d have been happy to discuss it. It’s hardly a groundbreaking
event.
So, where is
the Administration’s statement? We don’t know yet. Next, they go to some critic
who wants to add his own two cents. This guy, they breathlessly point out,
is a Democrat who wants to speak negatively on the subject. All the complaining and snide
inferences are on the front page column. The Governor’s actual statement is
buried on the last page of the front section, after the furniture ads.
This is what the media has come to. As a former J-school
student, I’m pained by what passes for news coverage today. Unfortunately, I don’t
see it improving in the near or distant future. Like almost every other commodity in the 2000s, the news is monetized to the max. There is no point if it doesn’t make money or accumulate power. And with the continued contraction of
every industry into no more than several major players, all the news will be bent,
folded, spindled, and mutilated to convince you that what’s best for the
biggest corporations just happens to be the same as what’s best for you.
It’s just that they’ll be raking in the money and we won’t.
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