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A Fake End to Fake News

By Diane Farsetta, PR Watch. Posted October 25, 2005.


An act designed to end government propaganda is altered to the PR industry's approval.
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"Myself and others felt violated by the first bill," said Doug Simon, the founder, president and CEO of D S Simon Productions, a major producer of the faux television news reports known as video news releases (VNRs).

Simon was referring to the Truth in Broadcasting Act (S 967). In its original incarnation, this bill would have required a "conspicuous" disclosure to accompany any government-produced or -funded prepackaged VNR or the radio equivalent, an audio news release (ANR).

For VNRs, the Act rightly mandated "continuous" on-screen notification of the material's source, such as the words "Produced by the U.S. Government." Moreover, the Act made it illegal to remove the disclosure.

That Act was considered by the Senate Commerce Committee on October 20. What the committee passed, however, was significantly different. Even the name had changed, to the "Prepackaged News Story Announcement Act."

And now, Doug Simon likes it.

"Clearly when they initially brought the legislation, they didn't have a full understanding of our industry," Simon told O'Dwyer's PR Daily. Broadcasting & Cable reported that he was "pleased" by the changes.

Barbara Cochran, the president of the Radio-Television News Directors Association, had joined Simon in testifying against the original Act, back in May. Considering the revised measure, she remarked, "Our arguments seemed to be persuasive."

What changes were made and why do they have "industry officials who have resisted the labeling" now "hailing the bill as a victory," as TV Week wrote?

First, the revised Act drops the continuous on-screen notification requirement for VNRs. Second, it calls for "clear notification within the text or audio of the prepackaged news story," without specifying the minimum requirements for audience disclosure. Most troubling, it allows that disclosure to be removed altogether, following rules that the Act requires the Federal Communications Commission to develop.

According to to TV Week, Cochran summarized the effect of these changes as: "The bill clears the way for TV news operations to continue using snippets of government-produced VNRs for [video footage] in their own stories, as they do currently, leaving the issue of how to identify the material up to station news personnel." The problem is that nondisclosure -- that's covert propaganda -- is currently the norm.

Much of the industry's opposition to the original Act was presented in terms of newsroom independence. "Let's not limit the rights of stations," Simon urged. But what about the right of viewers or listeners to know the source of the material those newsrooms broadcast? Is disclosure less important when a report on something as controversial as war in Iraq or Afghanistan or reconstruction in the Gulf states post-Katrina contains 75 percent government-supplied footage? What about if it's 50 percent?

There's one more potential problem, and it could be a big one. The TV Week story claimed, "The approved bill also makes clear that the labeling requirements apply only when broadcasters and cable TV operators opt to air 'prepackaged news stories' in their entirety."

Presumably, they're referring to the Act's definition of a "prepackaged news story" as a "complete, ready-to-use audio or video news segment" (emphasis added). That's the same language as in the original measure. But whether that means there are absolutely no disclosure requirements if anything less than a full VNR or ANR package is broadcast is unclear, at least to me.

If TV Week's right, though, the revised Act has no teeth, nails or protection for news audiences. For resource-strapped newsrooms, avoiding admitting that the report on the government you just broadcast actually came from the government would be as simple as shaving off a single sound bite.

But even with all these caveats, the fact that the revised Act did make it out of the Senate Commerce Committee is a step, however small, in the right direction. The legislative process is far from over, and the Act's language can be strengthened as easily as it was weakened -- if concerned citizens get involved.

According to observers of the committee meeting, the Act's main sponsors, Senators Lautenberg and Kerry, "tried to make it much stronger," but did not have the support of their colleagues. That can change if enough U.S. residents call or write their two Senators and Representative, to demand clear, conspicuous disclosure accompanying all video or audio footage coming from the government. In the case of VNRs, that must be a continuous, on-screen notification. For ANRs, that must be an announcement, prior to and/or following the provided audio.

The fight is far from over -- in fact, it just got more important. Get active and stay tuned.

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Diane Farsetta is senior researcher at the Center for Media and Democracy.

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AndieGee
Posted by: Andie927 on Oct 25, 2005 11:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for the story, I've been looking for updates, since 'balanced' news coverage certainly hasn't gotten any better. I'll try more e-mails to my Senators, but I won't hold my breath! My biggest objection to 'government' produced (and influenced) news, is that it's our TAX dollars that are being used to put out MIS(spun, self-serving)-information. Right now the government must be paying millions to tell seniors to 'sign-up' for this new drug program! Yet every senior and disabled person receiving a check, already received one if not two information booklets. The problem is what is and isn't cover by which drug company at what cost is so confussing, and would take a fortune teller to predict future needs, most people don't know what to do and are afraid of making the wrong choice and being 'stuck' with it for years to come, if they make no choice they get penalized! So who are these commercials paid for by us really out to impress?

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» RE: AndieGee Posted by: cstriker
» RE: AndieGee Posted by: Fade
Go Ahead, Gov't, Covertly MisInform Me!!
Posted by: decembrist on Oct 26, 2005 1:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And FOX, OVERTLY MisInform Me!

As American citizens, we are expected not to realize that PR is an industry run by elite to shape public opinion - to paraphrase the industry's founder. Public Relations is taught alongside Journalism in our Universities... and the lines between the two are increasingly blurry.

What is worse is that high school students polled last year believed the government SHOULD be able to censor the media. Who knows if they'll get smarter in college... what with the Academic Bill of Rights, PR classes and other such bullsh*t.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

agitator church and state
Posted by: eileenflmng on Oct 26, 2005 6:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The WAKE UP call has been sounded and "The problem is that nondisclosure -- that's covert propaganda -- is currently the norm........the Act's language can be strengthened as easily as it was weakened -- if concerned citizens get involved."

That is always the bottom line in preserving democracy:
we the people must be actively involved.

May you all DO SOMETHING: click the links in the Op/Ed and follow through.

www.wearewideawake.org

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No Clear Understanding...Right?
Posted by: cstriker on Oct 26, 2005 6:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Clearly when they initially brought the legislation, they didn't have a full understanding of our industry," Simon told O'Dwyer's PR Daily. Broadcasting & Cable reported that he was "pleased" by the changes.

Yeah, they didn't get the need for this industry to be able to disseminate falsehood, commonly called propaganda. You can't snow the public with requirements for source information.

But even with all these caveats, the fact that the revised Act did make it out of the Senate Commerce Committee is a step, however small, in the right direction. The legislative process is far from over, and the Act's language can be strengthened as easily as it was weakened -- if concerned citizens get involved.

"..., however small,..."? This is unacceptable. This is not even a minor step in the right direction. It still allows the trend of deception to continue on fettered. All they have to do is clip 1 second off and it isn't being aired "in their entirety."

"More crap from the bogus Captain" - George Carlin on airline pilots

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The US government endorses misleading news.
Posted by: jreinhart1 on Oct 26, 2005 7:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is a fact that the government has stated that they have the right to misinform people when it is in our best interests. The news media is flooded with fluff from Aruba and Michael Jackson as well as spin such as "criminalization of government" and misinformation regarding buzzwords such as what terms NAZI or fascism really mean. This is not going to go away until the news is separated from the major corporations that have interests from the K street lobbyists representing the true owners of the media that meet with the legislators to keep real news away from the consumer news.

It probably doesn't help that those people that report the news and the this nation's congressmen, senators and administration are all part of an elite cocktail group. The people presenting the news have no interest in hurting their "friends".

Regulation of media, power companies ... was made for a reason, that of being corruption. Given to their own instincts, corporations act as sociopaths for the greatest profit for the least amount of effort. That is the nature of the corporation as a person. While keeping them competitive, it undermines freedom of the press.

To turn this around, all news media will have to be returned to the legislation of fourty years ago and revert from being a conglomerate owned by many interests that own many stations to one that is owned of and by itself with no intervention by prying corporate special interests such as ABC, NBC and CBS used to be, as well as radio and newspapers. In addition, no one owner can own media across boundaries and limits made on local media ownership.

If we, the people cannot do this, we might just as well send the Statue of Liberty back to France and understand that we will be looking forward to a future where we acknowledge that we gave away our Constitution and Bill of Rights for a Military/police surveillance plutocracy. When I read 1984 and Animal Farm in school 35 years ago, we were all told that this could happen here. Orwell's vision of this future is growing fast.

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» And Strangely, Posted by: Artkansas
» thanks for the great comment Posted by: cobrajet
Prepackaged news stories??????
Posted by: Lizmv on Oct 26, 2005 8:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What is a prepackaged news story??????????? Does that mean they make it up and then hope it comes true?

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Useless government strikes again......
Posted by: Smiggsy on Oct 26, 2005 8:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well this just proves that the US federal legislature is a pathetic stupid weak excuse for corrupt rich fat ass nancy-boys to swan about pretending to be decent patriotic representatives of the people.

But you already knew that........

Do these politicians know no bounds to their obvious contempt for their electorate. Their inempt ability to impress any measure of human decency is truly appalling.

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Court TV Katrina Propaganda
Posted by: Linda on Oct 30, 2005 2:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Court TV is running promo for a new "covert propaganda" story which starts on Tues. Nov. 1st, at 10 pm ET. They're calling it "AFTER KATRINA". Court TV was granted exclusive access (by whom??) to, the promo. says, "The New Orleans Police Dept's battle to control the chaos in N. O. & save their city..." (footage of black Katrina victims committing"chaos" to pound home the obvious prop. message).

If Katrina victims haven't suffered enuf, now they have the indignity of being exploited for a COURT TV super-hyped "COPS" type show about them? How LOW will the corp. media go to exploit/make big bucks? First, they exploit our Soldiers fighting in Iraq (including Playstation's "Wargame" rated MA videogame, originally made for the Military supposedly, paid for with TAXPAYER $$$, Fox News. TV shows, movies, etc)?

They don't even wait until the damn "war on terror" in Iraq is "over" to make "fictionalized" entertainment! But they don't or won't show the real carnage, the real horror, the real coffins of our brave soldiers coming home? Or their funerals?

How LOW will they go in continuing to exploit our nation's working poor, black & white & hispanic, in our cities like New Orleans --- or Toledo, OH --- for the corp. media's "COPS" type shows & movies? THIS is true crime!

I turned to Court TV only to see if there was anything on the Libby/Karl Rove "Leak" investigation/indictment. I get this garbage! Can any readers of this blog help "DIG UP THE DIRT" on how & why & when, & esp. WHO, granted Court TV access for this Katrina story they are going to run this week? Esp., was Bush admin. behind it?

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