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« As BlackBerry service goes down, confidence is shaken and many questions on reliability surface | Main | The World Bank and Paul Wolfowitz: Should he stay or should he go? »

April 20, 2007

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WithClue

Broken News!

Sex sells: 24/7 Anna Nicole
Race controversy sells: 24/7 Imus
Sex and Race sell: 24/7 Duke three
Sensationalism sells: Jerry Springer, Bill O'Reily and their respective progeny.
Crisis sells: 9/11, Iraq, Iran, VA Tech. etc.

The common denominator? $$$$$$

The news used to be a loss leader in network programming. That is, the costs associated with journalism, investigative reporting and appropriate copy were higher than the revenue generated by the news program. Network news departments once operated independently of network entertainment programming. Now? The "News" serves one and only one purpose--revenue. News is now Katie Couric "infotainment." In 1986 Reagan began the decline by eliminating the “fairness doctrine” and Clinton 1997 drove the stake into News’ heart by installing the “telecommunications act.”

"The very DNA behind broadcast media organizations has created this destruction and it will only get worse." I agree with your premise Ed but I disagree your purported nexus of the problem. Corporate interests and commerce and not controversy have engendered the current crisis.

Steve Zweig

I think that the media is more a mirror than a lantern; it reflects what people want to see, rather than shedding its own light.

Media companies, whether broadcast, print, or internet, make money by giving people what they want. The reading/viewing/surfing public wants to read about Anna Nicole Smith, tempest-in-teapots involving overpaid celebrities, sex scandels, and tragegies. If the public didn't watch this fare, then media couldn't sell advertising on it and wouldn't show it.

There's a reason that public TV begs for handouts to keep running while celebrity gossip can be found 24/7 on TV and the web and at the supermarket checkout aisle.

Is it the job of the media to try to force people to pay attention to serious discussions of meaningful issues? Or like any other for-profit business, whether it's making clothes or hamburgers or serving up the nightly news, do they just try to give people what they manifestly want and will pay for?

Don't blame the mirror because the reflection is ugly.

Trish

Amen. This type of media coverage has actually just been pissing me off lately. I really couldn't care less and I'm tired of the media creating what they want people to think. I have never listened to NPR in my life - but with a 50 minute one way commute each day it has become a bit of a guiding light and even then they did focus a bit too much on Imus.

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