[Dialogue] Air America's ABC Blacklist: The Real Story
Harry Wainwright
h-wainwright at charter.net
Sat Nov 4 18:21:42 EST 2006
Published on Friday, November 3, 2006 by CommonDreams.org
Air America's ABC Blacklist: The Real Story
by Josh Silver and Robert W. McChesney
This week we learned that some 90 major corporations demanded that their ads
be pulled from radio stations that run Air America programming,
demonstrating the fundamental challenge facing everyone working to promote
critical journalism and a vibrant free press.
First off, let's clarify why this is taking place: The crime isn't that Air
America is partisan. All or most of these firms advertise on politically
conservative talk radio programs and/or stations. And the crime isn't even
being "liberal." Some of these advertisers have moderate or liberal
executives who donate to Democratic candidates and are far from rabid
conservatives.
So what is the problem? While "liberal" Air America clearly favors big D
Democrats, unlike virtually all other programming on commercial radio and
television, it gives airtime to reports that are critical of corporations
and the powerful politicians they keep in Washington.
This is the heart of the problem: Air America commits a crime called
journalism. Almost none of the so-called conservative radio shows or
networks do any semblance of actual reporting. They merely pontificate --
repeating talking points that seem to be emailed straight from Karl Rove's
laptop.
Air America does its share of pontificating as well, and we leave it to
others to compare its integrity to that of Limbaugh and Hannity. But we can
say that Air America journalism occasionally focuses on corporate
malfeasance. It examines closely the deeply corrupt relationship between
corporate power and government officials.
This brand of journalism is found almost nowhere else on the commercial
dial. It is brandished as "liberal" because it does not practice journalism
as stenography to those in power. This is the same reason that Bill Moyers
doesn't have any of these 90 firms lining up to underwrite his PBS
reporting.
So what should we learn from this episode?
1) Commercial media are highly concentrated and corporate advertisers have
massive budgets, giving their programming decisions profound implications.
According to its own Web site, ABC Radio has more than 4,400 affiliate radio
stations reaching nearly 105 million people nationwide. Monopoly media power
translates into significant political power and that is dangerous. This is a
big deal.
2) Media are concentrated in the hands of massive corporations who are only
concerned with profits. Anything that reduces or threatens those profits is
eliminated: Investigative journalism because it's too expensive; government
accountability because it pisses off politicians and regulators who dole out
billion-dollar policy favors like media "deregulation"; corporate
accountability because it angers corporations like the long list that pulled
Air America funding. Good journalism can be bad for business.
3) Note the presence of the U.S. Post Office and U.S. Navy on the list of
advertisers who have blackballed Air America. It is an outrage that public
monies are being deployed to push the ideological agenda of the Bush
Administration, or any other administration for that matter. This is one
more example of the corruption of governance in Washington, where big money
and political power are picking over the bones of democracy.
What's left? Timid, lapdog journalism that fills our TV screens and radio
dials. A newspaper market dominated by a handful of massive firms that
suffer the same symptoms. Cheap to produce reality shows, celebrity fluff,
regurgitated press releases, spin assessing other spin, and
entertainment-as-news that titillates but rarely informs.
Obviously we have to stop the corruption in Washington that allows this
"business as usual." But there are three specific and crucial areas that
demand our attention:
First, we must stop further media consolidation. This episode vividly
illustrates the peril of monopoly media power. Bush's man at the Federal
Communications Commission is actively moving to lift some of the last
remaining ownership limits. The dream scenario for Big Media: eliminate
ownership rules so one company can own all the media in a town, and have one
newsroom serve all outlets. Heaven for the conglomerate; hell for everyone
else. Public backlash stopped a similar move in 2003, and the battle is
being fought again at www.stopbigmedia.com.
Second, we must understand that virtually all media - TV, radio, phone -
will soon be delivered digitally through the Internet. With increasing
speeds, every Web site holds the revolutionary potential to become a TV or
radio network, breaking the corporate bottleneck on media access and
distribution. But today, cable and phone companies are mounting a full-court
press in Washington to privatize the Internet, and make them the gatekeepers
to all media - by removing the long-standing principle of "Net Neutrality"
on the Internet. Fortunately, public backlash is winning the day (so far),
buoyed by the SavetheInternet.com Coalition at www.savetheinternet.com.
Third, noncommercial media, including PBS, NPR and community broadcasters,
must be well funded and insulated from political pressure. The United States
has the lowest per capita funding of public broadcasting in the
industrialized world. Our dysfunctional system has the president appointing
partisan operatives to the board that funds PBS and NPR programs. Once
again, the public must be engaged, and the public broadcasting system must
be overhauled and reinvigorated.
Critical journalism is bad business for media corporations and their
advertisers. It is time to engage the public and demand a media system that
will inform and protect America, rather than one that is, in the words of
Jon Stewart, "hurting us."
Josh Silver and Robert W. McChesney are co-founders of the nonpartisan media
reform organization Free Press <http://www.freepress.net> .
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