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Following the "real news"

Posted by Onnesha Roychoudhuri at 9:30 AM on April 25, 2006.


Have journalists become a passive audience to this president's preoccupations?

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This past Sunday, CNN anchor Paula Zahn had a brief spat with radio show host Randi Rhodes regarding the Duke rape case. The exchange raises a critical question regarding the role of media: Are we leaders, directing the spotlight where it should be, or are we followers, covering the more sensational issues that everyone else is on top of?

Here's a snippet of the CNN transcript:

RHODES: Don't get mad at me, but my listeners don't care about this. I mean, rape is unfortunate, and everybody understands it happens, and it happens all over the place. It happens to our troops. It happens in -- walking down the street.

We don't -- we're not following gossip. We're doing real news. We're -- we are focused on the fact that, on June 2, they're going to explode 700 tons of a simulated nuclear bomb in the nuclear test site in Nevada. I mean, I do, you know, real talk radio. It's -- it's entertaining, but we don't do gossip. We don't -- we don't deal...

ZAHN: This isn't gossip.

RHODES: This is gossip, Paula. This isn't...

ZAHN: This is an explosive story that has divided a community. It's issues of race....

RHODES: This is not news. It's not news.

ZAHN: ... issues of gender.

RHODES: Rape happens all the time. It happens all the time.

I bet you one out of four women watching this show right this second have a story of rape in their past. It's not anything that needs to be discussed in this -- in this -- in this manner. This one person...got raped and it's a shame.

Rhodes' point is valid -- it's hard to make news out of an issue that plagues us day in and day out -- but at the same time, it seems highly unfair to contrast a rape case with "real news." Certainly we need to pay attention to the latest wonky crusade of the Bush administration -- and it seems there is a new one every day. But at the same time, the press may be neglecting those age old "not news" issues that have plagued our country (indeed, the world) for years: poverty, education, health care, basic human rights...

You could turn the rape case into "sensational gossip" -- but at the heart of it are, as Zahn notes, critical issues of race, gender, and violence that are too often ignored by the media. The fact that, as Rhodes points out, so many women have been raped makes it even more relevant to discuss.

In the media, especially with the frenzied pace ushered in by online news and the blogosphere, there is a bias towards the "what's going to get blown up next" news. The immediate nature of online journalism lends itself to this "latest breaking news" perspective. But what falls to the wayside are the issues that consistently face Americans in their daily lives.

Yesterday, I had the privilege of interviewing journalist Robert Scheer (who just came out with a fantastic retrospective on his interviews with the presidents and presidential candidates since Nixon). I had my "real news" questions all laid out. But in the course of an hour and a half long conversation, Scheer kept returning to the economy, welfare, health care, poverty, and poor education. After decades in the news business, these were the issues that plagued him -- just as they continue to plague our country.

If the story of what happened to one person -- exemplifying what is happening all the time -- isn't news, what's the point of journalists? If we're all focusing national attention on the latest fabricated distraction (Iran, for instance), when will we ever get around to the alleged "not news"?

Digg!

Onnesha Roychoudhuri is an assistant editor at AlterNet.


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RANDI'S RIGHT!
Posted by: Mewsician on Apr 25, 2006 10:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I couldn't agree more. However tragic it is for the woman to have been subjected to such a horrible experience at Duke, the fact is that this is just another in the long line of tabloid news pieces the networks beat us all over the head with. At the ripe old age of 47, I long for the days when the news was about foreign policy, current affairs on the national scene and global conditions, with a serious journalist like Cronkite at the helm. What a tragedy that all this great technology has come to pass in the last 25 years - technology that SHOULD give us the power to be the best-informed citizens of the world in all of history - but the media instead uses it to chase down endless "blonde woman disappears in Aruba" stories. And that stupid Paula Zahn is a poster chid for the entire situation plaguing "news" today. Go Randi go.

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» RE: ANDI'S RIGHT! Posted by: Onnesha
I agree with Randi
Posted by: coyote on Apr 25, 2006 5:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While this is news, it's not the sort of story I want to hear updated hourly. There are forces at work in this nation that need to be exposed to the light of the press that are far more important to our future well being than wall to wall coverage of another Teri Schiavo, or Kobe Bryant, and yes I feel bad about the kid in Aruba and I also feel bad about all the kids who got drugged and raped in Ft. Lauderdale over spring break who didn't make the news.

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Pandora's Box
Posted by: NoPCZone on Apr 26, 2006 9:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
News, once a loss-leader for the networks and local stations, was done because it built an image and was required by the FCC. Then, somebody discovered you could make money on it-- lots of money. That fact, along with relaxed regulation and oversight changed 'news' forever. Pandora's Box was opened.

Now the executives, producers, editors and other in charge operate under a mandate to get eyeballs or else. Those eyeballs should also be young, educated and non-rural-- the edict of Madison Avenue. Age discrimination is alive and well in the advertising business. Factor in the galaxy of channels on digital cable or satellite and instead of competing for a large and diverse audience, you are chasing the same narrow demographic as everyone else.

The answer- take the low road. Everybody seems to be taking the low road. If it bleeds, it leads. If we have good video we will go with it- newsworthy or not. If it's lurid, it will hold viewers.

Think I'm off base? Take a look at the three network newscasts and tally up their ads. You will think you are at a Pharmacy Convention. GERD, Arthritis, Erectile Dysfunction, Diabetes, Allergies are all you see. Know why? Because the news audience is not the 18-34 holy grail of Madison Avenue nobody will spend a dime except to market the medicines of an aging Baby Boom Generation.

In a desperate attempt to attract the slackers the Nets are seeing younger and younger reporters (especially attractive women) , garish Fox News graphics, gaudy Entertainment Tonight-like sets, endless Fox News-like 'ducked' sounds (swoosh) under every bump, tease or graphic, shorter and shorter stories, and a greater emphasis on lifestyle and entertainment. The effect is more pronounced on the 24-Hour Pseudo-News Channels. Thank you Rupert Murdoch.

Once you go down this road it's hard to ever reverse course. If playing in the scum pond gets a bump in the ratings you will eventually be forced to wade or jump in. The fact that Les Moonves appointed the head of CBS Sports to head CBS News in a Redux of Roone at ABC and Van Gordon Sauter at CBS back in the day, ought to tell you all you need to know. Those two started the 'localization' of Network News and brought us 'moments' television- coverage to pull at your heart instead of feeding your head.

Paula Zahn doesn't see it because she is a child of it. One of the products of Roone's ABC News , she was brought to CBS to sex up their morning show. She then went to Fox News for even more fluff and then to CNN with the famous 'zipper' promo. Whatever her credentials and qualifications, it's clear she has been sought, hired and marketed for her attractiveness by no less than 4 major 'News' outlets. It has served and fed her well. She has no interest in talking about Simulated Nukes because there is always some lurid story to chase.

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Better journalism being done by comedians, 'amateur' bloggers, and even teenagers
Posted by: doinaheckuvajob on Apr 27, 2006 2:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When you have such institutional corruption as displayed by Paula Zahn, who is by no means the worst, it ends up being that comedians such as John Stewart, Stephen Colbert, Al Franken and Sam Sedar do a better job of investigative and straight up reporting of the facts. Because they're committed to higher journalistic standards.
Bloggers who want to know the facts and want to find out what is going on are not under the censorship and distraction pressures that blow-dry reporters in the MSM are.
Teenagers with integrity, curiousity and spare time can out scoop the airheads, propagandists and chatterers any day.
If it weren't for all the above, we'd be in worse shape than we are today, which is hard to imagine.

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