COMMENTS: 41
Why the Press Is on Suicide Watch
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IF you wanted to pick the moment when the American news business went on suicide watch, it was almost exactly three years ago. That’s when Stephen Colbert, appearing at the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner, delivered a monologue accusing his hosts of being stenographers who had, in essence, let the Bush White House get away with murder (or at least the war in Iraq). To prove the point, the partying journalists in the Washington Hilton ballroom could be seen (courtesy of C-Span) fawning over government potentates -- in some cases the very “sources” who had fed all those fictional sightings of Saddam Hussein’s W.M.D.
Colbert’s routine did not kill. The Washington Post reported that it “fell flat.” The Times initially did not even mention it. But to the Beltway’s bafflement, Colbert’s riff went viral overnight, ultimately to have a marathon run as the most popular video on iTunes. The cultural disconnect between the journalism establishment and the public it aspires to serve could not have been more vividly dramatized.
The bad news about the news business has accelerated ever since. Newspaper circulations and revenues are in free fall. Legendary brands from The Los Angeles Times to The Philadelphia Inquirer are teetering. The New York Times Company threatened to close The Boston Globe if its employees didn’t make substantial sacrifices in salaries and benefits. Other papers have died. The reporting ranks on network and local news alike are shriveling. You know it’s bad when the Senate is moved, as it was last week, to weigh in with hearings on “The Future of Journalism.”
Not all is bleak on the Titanic, however. The White House correspondents’ bacchanal was on tap for this weekend. And this time no one could accuse the revelers of failing to get down with the Colbert-iTunes-Facebook young folk: hip big-time journalists now stroke their fans with 140-character messages on Twitter. Or did. No sooner did boldface Washington media personalities ostentatiously embrace Twitter than Nielsen reported that more than 60 percent of Twitter users abandon it after a single month.
The causes of journalism’s downfall — some self-inflicted, some beyond anyone’s control (a worldwide economic meltdown) — are well known. To time-travel back to the dawn of the technological strand of the disaster, search YouTube for “1981 primitive Internet report on KRON.” What you’ll find is a 28-year-old local television news piece from San Francisco about a “far-fetched,” pre-Web experiment by the city’s two papers, The Chronicle and The Examiner, to distribute their wares to readers with home computers via primitive phone modems. Though there were at most 3,000 people in the Bay Area with PCs then, some 500 mailed in coupons for the service to The Chronicle alone. But, as the anchorwoman assures us at the end, with a two-hour download time (at $5 an hour), “the new telepaper won’t be much competition for the 20-cent street edition.”
The rest is irreversible history. This far-fetched newspaper experiment soon faded, even in San Francisco, the gateway to Silicon Valley. Today The Examiner, once the flagship of William Randolph Hearst’s grand journalistic empire, exists in name only, as a flimsy giveaway. The Chronicle is under threat of closure.
But this self-destructive retreat from innovation is hardly novel in the history of American communications. In the last transformative tech revolution before the Internet — television’s emergence in the late 1940s — the pattern was remarkably similar. The entertainment industry referred to TV as “the monster,” and by 1951, the editor of the industry’s trade paper, Variety, was fearful that the monster would “eventually swallow up practically all of show business.” Movies had killed vaudeville a generation earlier. This new household appliance threatened to strangle radio, movies, the Broadway theater, nightclubs and the circus. And newspapers too: “NBC’s New ‘Today’ Attacked by Papers as Competition” screamed a front-page Variety headline in 1952.
The vulnerable establishments in all these fields went nuts. Most movie studios pushed back against the future by refusing to sell their old movies to television or allow their stars to appear on it. Few seized the opportunity to produce programs for the new medium. Instead, some moguls tried to compete by exhibiting sports events by closed-circuit in networks of movie houses. In 1952-53, Cinerama, 3-D and Cinemascope were all heavily promoted to try to retain movie audiences. None of these desperate rear-guard actions could slow the video revolution. Movie newsreels, movie palaces, radio comedy and drama, and afternoon newspapers, among other staples of the American cultural diet, were all doomed.
And yet in 2009, Hollywood movie studios, radio and the Broadway theater, though smaller and much changed, are not dead. They learned to adapt and to collaborate with the monster.
In the Internet era, many sectors of American media have been re-enacting their at first complacent and finally panicked behavior of 60 years ago. Few in the entertainment business saw the digital cancer spreading through their old business models until well after file-sharing, via Napster, had started decimating the music industry. It’s not only journalism that is now struggling to plot a path to survival. But, with all due respect to show business, it’s only journalism that’s essential to a functioning democracy. And it’s not just because — as we keep being tediously reminded — Thomas Jefferson said so.
Yes, journalists have made tons of mistakes and always will. But without their enterprise, to take a few representative recent examples, we would not have known about the wretched conditions for our veterans at Walter Reed, the government’s warrantless wiretapping, the scams at Enron or steroids in baseball.
Such news gathering is not to be confused with opinion writing or bloviating — including that practiced here. Opinions can be stimulating and, for the audiences at Fox News and MSNBC, cathartic. We can spend hours surfing the posts of bloggers we like or despise, some of them gems, even as we might be moved to write our own blogs about local restaurants or the government documents we obsessively study online.
But opinions, however insightful or provocative and whether expressed online or in print or in prime time, are cheap. Reporting the news can be expensive. Some of it — monitoring the local school board, say — can and is being done by voluntary “citizen journalists” with time on their hands, integrity and a Web site. But we can’t have serious opinions about America’s role in combating the Taliban in Pakistan unless brave and knowledgeable correspondents (with security to protect them) tell us in real time what is actually going on there. We can’t know what is happening behind closed doors at corrupt, hard-to-penetrate institutions in Washington or Wall Street unless teams of reporters armed with the appropriate technical expertise and assiduously developed contacts are digging night and day. Those reporters have to eat and pay rent, whether they work for print, a TV network, a Web operation or some new bottom-up news organism we can’t yet imagine.
It’s immaterial whether we find the fruits of their labors on paper, a laptop screen, a BlackBerry, a Kindle or podcast. But someone — and certainly not the government, with all its conflicted interests — must pay for this content and make every effort to police its fairness and accuracy. If we lose the last major news-gathering operations still standing, there will be no news on Google News unless Google shells out to replace them. It won’t.
One of the freshest commentators on Internet culture, Clay Shirky, has written, correctly, that nobody really knows what form journalism will take in the evolving post-newspaper era. Looking back to the unpredictable social and cultural upheavals brought about by Gutenberg’s invention of movable type, he writes, “We’re collectively living through 1500, when it’s easier to see what’s broken than what will replace it.” So who will do the heavy journalistic lifting? “Whatever works.” Every experiment must be tried, professional and amateur, whether by institutions like The Times or “some 19-year-old kid few of us have heard of.”
What can’t be reinvented is the wheel of commerce. Just because information wants to be free on the Internet doesn’t mean it can always be free. Web advertising will never be profitable enough to support ambitious news gathering. If a public that thinks nothing of spending money on texting or pornography doesn’t foot the bill for such reportage, it won’t happen.
That’s why the debate among journalists about possible forms of payment (subscriptions, NPR-style donations, iTunes-style micropayments, foundation grants) is inside baseball. So is the acrimonious sniping between old media and new. The real question is for the public, not journalists: Does it want to pony up for news, whatever the media that prevail?
It’s all a matter of priorities. Not long ago, we laughed at the idea of pay TV. Free television was considered an inalienable American right (as long as it was paid for by advertisers). Then cable and satellite became the national standard.
By all means let’s mock the old mainstream media as they preen and party on in a Washington ballroom. Let’s deplore the tabloid journalism that, like the cockroach, will always be with us. But if a comprehensive array of real news is to be part of the picture as well, the time will soon arrive for us to put up or shut up. Whatever shape journalism ultimately takes in America, make no mistake that in the end we will get what we pay for.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: weathered on May 13, 2009 2:47 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As long as the NYTimes continues to act as a publicist/pr firm and not a courageous conveyor of balanced reporting it'll be marginalized and will have no one to blame but themselves.
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» RE: Adhere to integrity and report the truth.
Posted by: Caleb Darkstar
» Who is going to protect the bloggers when the government comes knocking, claiming treason?
Posted by: cvstoner
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Perry Logan on May 13, 2009 2:59 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our now-dying system of local newspapers owes its existence to the government. The early newspapers were given free postage, which made their growth possible.
So we owe our once-flourishing free press to government subsidies.
Then, just a few years back, these great newspapers all got corporatized. Now they're all dead.
Do the math.
Xe Technology: We Mean No Harm to Your Planet
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» Postal rates have changed
Posted by: chaoslegs
Comments are closed-
Posted by: StillStanding on May 13, 2009 4:24 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's ironic that Frank Rich works for the NY Times, considering that Judith Miller once worked there, uncritically "reporting" the Pentagon's Iraq pronouncements. The Times deserves to fall, as does WaPo, because they have actively contributed to propping up one of history's most corrupt governments.
Meanwhile, new media sources have arisen that have made the MSM irrelevant. Even Alternet, with its center-left content, is far more informative than the dinosaurs of journalism.
I say good riddance!
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» Even Alternet... uses content from the dinosaurs of journalism
Posted by: leighsure
» RE: ven Alternet... uses content from the dinosaurs of journalism
Posted by: StillStanding
Comments are closed-
Posted by: pfgetty on May 13, 2009 4:41 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Colbert said that one reason newspapers are failing is because they only present what the government wants them to present........as we saw with WMD. That issue, WMD, and how it was handled by the press was a disgusting display showing just how corruptible our press has become. Our press needs to fail and wither.
But just as disgusting is the media's handling of the facts of 9/11. We were told a story by the government that is so ridiculous and full of holes, but the media INCLUDING ALTERNET, will not touch any of it.
Piles of evidence proving that our government was complicit in 9/11. Overwhelming evidence that the official story is a lie.
But Alternet and the nation's newspapers will not touch the issue.
I want to know why. I'd like to know why Alternet would present an article telling us that the media is failing because it will not tackle real stories that aren't handfed by the government, and yet this is just what Alternet is doing with 9/11.
What is it? What keeps all of the media away from investigating the gigantic holes in the story of 9/11? Is it threats from the government? Pressures from certain groups? Is Alternet associated with a group that would be harmed by the exposure to the truth of 9/11?
It has got to be one of those three. Maybe loss of funding is the pressure. It would be interesting to see just where Alternet gets its funding.
Can you tell us, Alternet, where you get a lot of your funding. I sent a donation before I realized that you were part of a conspiracy to keep the public from the truth on 9/11. You MUST be getting some funding from groups. Are these groups related to big oil companies, weapons companies? Are they related to either Christian or Jewish Zionist groups? All of these groups might be hurt if the real story of 9/11 were presented and finally realized by the American people.
Alternet has the reputation of presenting articles that dig into the corruption and lies of our government and big interest groups.
But in the 9/11 controversy, it is completely silent.
There IS a reason. Some group is either pressuring Alternet, or Alternet IS part of one of those groups. And it is a group that would be hurt if the truth of 9/11 ever came out.
Does ANYBODY know anything about this? We need to get to the core of this. Alternet is defrauding its readers for an agenda of a special interest group. There is no other reason Alternet would avoid bringing to us information about the biggest story in history.
Can you give us any information, Alternet?
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» How the HELL does this article relate to 911 "truth"? Idiot.
Posted by: GuitarBill
» GuitarBill?
Posted by: linecrosser
» Nice straw man argument. I never said I support the government's version
Posted by: GuitarBill
» Don't lecture me about "ethics" and "morality"--you damned fool.
Posted by: GuitarBill
» Read article posted by P. Escobar
Posted by: sumwoman
» I'd rather ask Silverstein
Posted by: weathered
» Right, weathered, tell us how Silverstein conspired with the NYFD Commander to demolish WTC7
Posted by: GuitarBill
» What do neo-Nazi Eric Hufschmid and Mohamed Atta have in common?
Posted by: GuitarBill
» RE: What do neo-Nazi Eric Hufschmid and Mohamed Atta have in common?
Posted by: gimmie shelter
» Sorry I can't think of an insult stupid enough for you.
Posted by: GuitarBill
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Caleb Darkstar on May 13, 2009 4:51 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This of course, would require them to practice balanced and factual reporting and display a certain level of journalistic integrity. Instead they compete with internet smear sites for sensationalism.
Its hard to compete with someone who leaves no name, proves no facts, and bears no repercussions for thier lack of truthful content.
The paper industry will have to find integrity to survive. That is. people will have to believe that the content within the pages is as real and as tangible as the paper they are holding.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: Getting back to "Real Journalism" is the only hope for them
Posted by: VZEQICVA
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Posted by: PaulK on May 13, 2009 5:36 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The paper charges outrageous prices for obituaries now. They've hollowed out most of their news to national rip-and-read coverage. Meanwhile, for sale ads are free and get results on Craigslist.
Our local monopoly "paper of record" is dying. It very well may be dead before the end of 2009. The editorial page has been pretty Nazi for quite a few years, making them pretty unreadable. I won't miss that part too much.
The best local TV news channel has also pretty much been hollowed out this year. It's turning into national rip-and-read, always about terribly gory and depraved sexual assaults and murders in some place that I've not been. Most of the radio channels have also been bought up by arch-conservative monopolists. They outright lie a lot these days. Barack Obama is a Muslim?
I shall have to get by on internet video clips for my news. Local internet coverage will just have to develop itself.
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Posted by: FLYING DOOFUS on May 13, 2009 6:59 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Who cares about the sloppy news media? ???????????
Posted by: VZEQICVA
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Posted by: grindermonkey on May 13, 2009 7:04 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: jaylindberg@hotmail.com on May 13, 2009 7:38 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Newspapers make more money withholding the truth than exposing it because the criminals and the thieves that control this country simply buys their silence. It really is that simple.
Have you ever wondered why you cannot get an honest story on the Drug war in the newspapers?
Your newspapers signed editorial policies with the ONDCP (Office of national Drug Control Policy). That decision is connected to several billion dollars in advertising deals controlled by the government. That model is duplicated every day with government entities, corporate powers and wealthy / influential individuals.
The newspapers are taking a dive because we cannot trust them. We cannot trust them because they have lied to us consistently and they have lied to us consistently because they were paid to do it.
Here is an old activist assessment. If the government didn't lie to us, we would never hear from them.
Jay Lindberg
Author of "Drug War Economics". If you would like a copy send me your e-mail address and I will send it to you as a PDF file. It is free.
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Posted by: VZEQICVA on May 13, 2009 8:12 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Barny Frank syndrome
Posted by: SeattlePackedSnowandCollidedCars
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Posted by: Outspokengrandmother on May 13, 2009 8:21 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Ordinary people need brains
Posted by: sumwoman
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Posted by: SeattlePackedSnowandCollidedCars on May 13, 2009 9:11 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes Stagflation is a very very bad thing right now but if all hell breaks lose, you'll be able to afford a newspaper and some more koolaid to sip on while you are clipping coupons to save a few bucks at Whole Foods... only a matter of time before you get to shopping at Aldis as you bitterly find out there is a different taste vs store brand fruit loops and and Kellogg's.
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Posted by: willymack on May 13, 2009 10:13 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: ReallyBearish on May 13, 2009 11:32 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Right now stock short sellers are out of control. Brokerage houses list more shares owned by their clients then were authorized to be issued by the companies in question. Some companies have double the number of shares held by stock owners than the company authorized. These are most likely the result of naked short selling. What major papers are covering this story, or any of a host of other major problems with Wall Street?
Newspapers deserve to go out of business.
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» RE: The internet is a better source of news
Posted by: YogiBear
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Posted by: chomsky on May 13, 2009 12:11 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: madmac10 on May 13, 2009 1:34 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anyone remember what Picasso said? "A true artist [journalist] will paint [write] in the dust with his tongue." Does anyone here read Danny Schechter's News Dissector? Now there is a true journalist--one who can stand with I.F. Stone and Edward R. Murrow.
Perhaps the fact that many of these institutions' assets were so heavily leveraged in credit default swaps came as something of a surprise. Perhaps too, it was a bit of quick improvisation to blame the collapse on the internet. Too bad General Motors cannot deflect the issue so well.
If only Rupert Murdoch had never come along; then perhaps I'd jump on board with the rabble who are now clamoring for a government bailout of newspapers. If only David Geffen wasn't considering buying interest in the New York Times. If only Free Press hadn't prescribed a congressional "R&D Fund" and "Federal Writers Project." Tell me, who would you trust in government to oversee all this, after all that has happened to us?
I think I can safely avoid the loony conspiracist label with all this speculation. I seriously believe that, aside from the serendipitous collapse of the economy, all this talk is part of some orwellian plan. Even so, I honestly suggest that Americans start THINKING FOR YOURSELVES instead--because I swear, there's no one more trustworthy than the one behind your eyes.
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Posted by: Nuuon on May 13, 2009 4:17 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The big fat arrogant big press is on the verge of collapsing. What a damn shame. . .
You know the big press I'm talking about:
1) The one that only cares about missing children when they are blond and blue-eyed.
2) The one that only features stories on the trials of tribulations of particular white soldiers at war (apparently, "only whites are brave heroes who are risking their lives").
3) The one that only cares about crime victims when they live in suburban white communities or urban "upper-crust stylish" white communities.
4) The one that apparently believes that all blacks are poor and/or criminal.
5) The one that is STILL treating black reporters like mere tokens.
6) The one that let Bush get away with all those lies on the road to war in Iraq and Afghanistan.
7) The one that didn't commit even a single reporter to do a REAL investigation of what REALLY happened on 9/11.
8) The one that is pro-business and anti-union.
9) The one that employs all of those goddamn racist sports reporters.
10) The one that employs all those right-wing and pseudo liberal "opinion makers."
11) The one that is responsible for so much deforestation.
12) The one that consolidated itself into a massive mega-corporation owned by the super-rich: too unwieldy to function without mega-bucks.
Yeah, THAT press.
I don't give a f*ck about THAT big press!
I stopped buying that big press 25 years ago, and the rest of America is finally catching up (Stopped reading them every day-- only used them for research: If I couldn't get it for free in a library, or later, on the net, I did without it).
May THAT big press rot in peace and never return.
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Posted by: gimmie shelter on May 13, 2009 4:26 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: gimmie shelter on May 13, 2009 6:49 PM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: mmckinl on May 13, 2009 11:46 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree with most of the other posters ...
The Newspapers have become corporate cheerleaders and news censors for their corporate owners ...
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Posted by: Suzon on May 14, 2009 3:30 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Chomsky explains that newspapers are in the business of selling readers to advertisers. Advertisers are other corporations like banks, insurance companies, car manufacturers, etc. Newspapers which would tell the truth about the interests and machinations of the corporate world--how likely would they get the advertisement revenue?
The corporation is a monarchist anti-democratic institution which is the enemy of the people. It is the means by which the richest become richer still at the expense of ordinary people and the planet. Because of corporate donations we have what Palast termed the best democracy that money can buy.
Generally speaking, what's good for the New York Times is not good for the country.
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Posted by: weathered on May 13, 2009 2:47 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As long as the NYTimes continues to act as a publicist/pr firm and not a courageous conveyor of balanced reporting it'll be marginalized and will have no one to blame but themselves.
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» RE: Adhere to integrity and report the truth.
Posted by: Caleb Darkstar
» Who is going to protect the bloggers when the government comes knocking, claiming treason?
Posted by: cvstoner
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Perry Logan on May 13, 2009 2:59 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our now-dying system of local newspapers owes its existence to the government. The early newspapers were given free postage, which made their growth possible.
So we owe our once-flourishing free press to government subsidies.
Then, just a few years back, these great newspapers all got corporatized. Now they're all dead.
Do the math.
Xe Technology: We Mean No Harm to Your Planet
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» Postal rates have changed
Posted by: chaoslegs
Comments are closed-
Posted by: StillStanding on May 13, 2009 4:24 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's ironic that Frank Rich works for the NY Times, considering that Judith Miller once worked there, uncritically "reporting" the Pentagon's Iraq pronouncements. The Times deserves to fall, as does WaPo, because they have actively contributed to propping up one of history's most corrupt governments.
Meanwhile, new media sources have arisen that have made the MSM irrelevant. Even Alternet, with its center-left content, is far more informative than the dinosaurs of journalism.
I say good riddance!
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» Even Alternet... uses content from the dinosaurs of journalism
Posted by: leighsure
» RE: ven Alternet... uses content from the dinosaurs of journalism
Posted by: StillStanding
Comments are closed-
Posted by: pfgetty on May 13, 2009 4:41 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Colbert said that one reason newspapers are failing is because they only present what the government wants them to present........as we saw with WMD. That issue, WMD, and how it was handled by the press was a disgusting display showing just how corruptible our press has become. Our press needs to fail and wither.
But just as disgusting is the media's handling of the facts of 9/11. We were told a story by the government that is so ridiculous and full of holes, but the media INCLUDING ALTERNET, will not touch any of it.
Piles of evidence proving that our government was complicit in 9/11. Overwhelming evidence that the official story is a lie.
But Alternet and the nation's newspapers will not touch the issue.
I want to know why. I'd like to know why Alternet would present an article telling us that the media is failing because it will not tackle real stories that aren't handfed by the government, and yet this is just what Alternet is doing with 9/11.
What is it? What keeps all of the media away from investigating the gigantic holes in the story of 9/11? Is it threats from the government? Pressures from certain groups? Is Alternet associated with a group that would be harmed by the exposure to the truth of 9/11?
It has got to be one of those three. Maybe loss of funding is the pressure. It would be interesting to see just where Alternet gets its funding.
Can you tell us, Alternet, where you get a lot of your funding. I sent a donation before I realized that you were part of a conspiracy to keep the public from the truth on 9/11. You MUST be getting some funding from groups. Are these groups related to big oil companies, weapons companies? Are they related to either Christian or Jewish Zionist groups? All of these groups might be hurt if the real story of 9/11 were presented and finally realized by the American people.
Alternet has the reputation of presenting articles that dig into the corruption and lies of our government and big interest groups.
But in the 9/11 controversy, it is completely silent.
There IS a reason. Some group is either pressuring Alternet, or Alternet IS part of one of those groups. And it is a group that would be hurt if the truth of 9/11 ever came out.
Does ANYBODY know anything about this? We need to get to the core of this. Alternet is defrauding its readers for an agenda of a special interest group. There is no other reason Alternet would avoid bringing to us information about the biggest story in history.
Can you give us any information, Alternet?
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» How the HELL does this article relate to 911 "truth"? Idiot.
Posted by: GuitarBill
» GuitarBill?
Posted by: linecrosser
» Nice straw man argument. I never said I support the government's version
Posted by: GuitarBill
» Don't lecture me about "ethics" and "morality"--you damned fool.
Posted by: GuitarBill
» Read article posted by P. Escobar
Posted by: sumwoman
» I'd rather ask Silverstein
Posted by: weathered
» Right, weathered, tell us how Silverstein conspired with the NYFD Commander to demolish WTC7
Posted by: GuitarBill
» What do neo-Nazi Eric Hufschmid and Mohamed Atta have in common?
Posted by: GuitarBill
» RE: What do neo-Nazi Eric Hufschmid and Mohamed Atta have in common?
Posted by: gimmie shelter
» Sorry I can't think of an insult stupid enough for you.
Posted by: GuitarBill
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Caleb Darkstar on May 13, 2009 4:51 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This of course, would require them to practice balanced and factual reporting and display a certain level of journalistic integrity. Instead they compete with internet smear sites for sensationalism.
Its hard to compete with someone who leaves no name, proves no facts, and bears no repercussions for thier lack of truthful content.
The paper industry will have to find integrity to survive. That is. people will have to believe that the content within the pages is as real and as tangible as the paper they are holding.
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» RE: Getting back to "Real Journalism" is the only hope for them
Posted by: VZEQICVA
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Posted by: PaulK on May 13, 2009 5:36 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The paper charges outrageous prices for obituaries now. They've hollowed out most of their news to national rip-and-read coverage. Meanwhile, for sale ads are free and get results on Craigslist.
Our local monopoly "paper of record" is dying. It very well may be dead before the end of 2009. The editorial page has been pretty Nazi for quite a few years, making them pretty unreadable. I won't miss that part too much.
The best local TV news channel has also pretty much been hollowed out this year. It's turning into national rip-and-read, always about terribly gory and depraved sexual assaults and murders in some place that I've not been. Most of the radio channels have also been bought up by arch-conservative monopolists. They outright lie a lot these days. Barack Obama is a Muslim?
I shall have to get by on internet video clips for my news. Local internet coverage will just have to develop itself.
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Posted by: FLYING DOOFUS on May 13, 2009 6:59 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Who cares about the sloppy news media? ???????????
Posted by: VZEQICVA
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Posted by: grindermonkey on May 13, 2009 7:04 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: jaylindberg@hotmail.com on May 13, 2009 7:38 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Newspapers make more money withholding the truth than exposing it because the criminals and the thieves that control this country simply buys their silence. It really is that simple.
Have you ever wondered why you cannot get an honest story on the Drug war in the newspapers?
Your newspapers signed editorial policies with the ONDCP (Office of national Drug Control Policy). That decision is connected to several billion dollars in advertising deals controlled by the government. That model is duplicated every day with government entities, corporate powers and wealthy / influential individuals.
The newspapers are taking a dive because we cannot trust them. We cannot trust them because they have lied to us consistently and they have lied to us consistently because they were paid to do it.
Here is an old activist assessment. If the government didn't lie to us, we would never hear from them.
Jay Lindberg
Author of "Drug War Economics". If you would like a copy send me your e-mail address and I will send it to you as a PDF file. It is free.
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Posted by: VZEQICVA on May 13, 2009 8:12 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Barny Frank syndrome
Posted by: SeattlePackedSnowandCollidedCars
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Posted by: Outspokengrandmother on May 13, 2009 8:21 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Ordinary people need brains
Posted by: sumwoman
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Posted by: SeattlePackedSnowandCollidedCars on May 13, 2009 9:11 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes Stagflation is a very very bad thing right now but if all hell breaks lose, you'll be able to afford a newspaper and some more koolaid to sip on while you are clipping coupons to save a few bucks at Whole Foods... only a matter of time before you get to shopping at Aldis as you bitterly find out there is a different taste vs store brand fruit loops and and Kellogg's.
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Posted by: willymack on May 13, 2009 10:13 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: ReallyBearish on May 13, 2009 11:32 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Right now stock short sellers are out of control. Brokerage houses list more shares owned by their clients then were authorized to be issued by the companies in question. Some companies have double the number of shares held by stock owners than the company authorized. These are most likely the result of naked short selling. What major papers are covering this story, or any of a host of other major problems with Wall Street?
Newspapers deserve to go out of business.
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» RE: The internet is a better source of news
Posted by: YogiBear
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Posted by: chomsky on May 13, 2009 12:11 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: madmac10 on May 13, 2009 1:34 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anyone remember what Picasso said? "A true artist [journalist] will paint [write] in the dust with his tongue." Does anyone here read Danny Schechter's News Dissector? Now there is a true journalist--one who can stand with I.F. Stone and Edward R. Murrow.
Perhaps the fact that many of these institutions' assets were so heavily leveraged in credit default swaps came as something of a surprise. Perhaps too, it was a bit of quick improvisation to blame the collapse on the internet. Too bad General Motors cannot deflect the issue so well.
If only Rupert Murdoch had never come along; then perhaps I'd jump on board with the rabble who are now clamoring for a government bailout of newspapers. If only David Geffen wasn't considering buying interest in the New York Times. If only Free Press hadn't prescribed a congressional "R&D Fund" and "Federal Writers Project." Tell me, who would you trust in government to oversee all this, after all that has happened to us?
I think I can safely avoid the loony conspiracist label with all this speculation. I seriously believe that, aside from the serendipitous collapse of the economy, all this talk is part of some orwellian plan. Even so, I honestly suggest that Americans start THINKING FOR YOURSELVES instead--because I swear, there's no one more trustworthy than the one behind your eyes.
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Posted by: Nuuon on May 13, 2009 4:17 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The big fat arrogant big press is on the verge of collapsing. What a damn shame. . .
You know the big press I'm talking about:
1) The one that only cares about missing children when they are blond and blue-eyed.
2) The one that only features stories on the trials of tribulations of particular white soldiers at war (apparently, "only whites are brave heroes who are risking their lives").
3) The one that only cares about crime victims when they live in suburban white communities or urban "upper-crust stylish" white communities.
4) The one that apparently believes that all blacks are poor and/or criminal.
5) The one that is STILL treating black reporters like mere tokens.
6) The one that let Bush get away with all those lies on the road to war in Iraq and Afghanistan.
7) The one that didn't commit even a single reporter to do a REAL investigation of what REALLY happened on 9/11.
8) The one that is pro-business and anti-union.
9) The one that employs all of those goddamn racist sports reporters.
10) The one that employs all those right-wing and pseudo liberal "opinion makers."
11) The one that is responsible for so much deforestation.
12) The one that consolidated itself into a massive mega-corporation owned by the super-rich: too unwieldy to function without mega-bucks.
Yeah, THAT press.
I don't give a f*ck about THAT big press!
I stopped buying that big press 25 years ago, and the rest of America is finally catching up (Stopped reading them every day-- only used them for research: If I couldn't get it for free in a library, or later, on the net, I did without it).
May THAT big press rot in peace and never return.
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Posted by: gimmie shelter on May 13, 2009 4:26 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: gimmie shelter on May 13, 2009 6:49 PM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: mmckinl on May 13, 2009 11:46 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree with most of the other posters ...
The Newspapers have become corporate cheerleaders and news censors for their corporate owners ...
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Posted by: Suzon on May 14, 2009 3:30 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Chomsky explains that newspapers are in the business of selling readers to advertisers. Advertisers are other corporations like banks, insurance companies, car manufacturers, etc. Newspapers which would tell the truth about the interests and machinations of the corporate world--how likely would they get the advertisement revenue?
The corporation is a monarchist anti-democratic institution which is the enemy of the people. It is the means by which the richest become richer still at the expense of ordinary people and the planet. Because of corporate donations we have what Palast termed the best democracy that money can buy.
Generally speaking, what's good for the New York Times is not good for the country.
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