Trackback This Post | Subscribe to the comments through RSS Feed
While Reverend Wright was speaking to the National Press Club yesterday morning alarms were going off right outside my window. Literally, sirens wailing on the street below my apartment, stuck in traffic, not able to move. I thought to myself, “how appropriate.” Here we go, one week before the Indiana primaries, and we’re stuck in another (news) media feeding frenzy about the life and times of Reverend Jeremiah Wright.
It is not so much that I wish Reverend Wright would have stayed away until, at the very minimum, after the primary season was over (I do), but that I wish we had a media that was capable of covering this and other stories with some element of intelligent and reasonable analysis and discourse (we don’t).
We are, as a nation, worse-off because of it.
I spend a lot of time watching cable news these evenings. I am my own self-appointed watchdog and, sitting on my sofa, I do watch, and am appalled, by the extraordinary misinterpretations, and deliberate falsehoods, that are allowed to fill the airwaves night after night after night. Whether it’s “bittergate,” (last week I watched as Chris Matthews described Barack Obama as “making fun” of blue collar workers) or Jeremiah Wright (Chris Matthews, (again) last night, describing Wright as Obama’s “surrogate,” and going on to describe Obama and Wright as the Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde of the same person, “birds of a feather,” he continued). C’mon now? Seriously?!
There are very few journalists on cable news anymore. I see a lot of pundits putting forward disingenuous arguments — i.e. arguments they know to be false, in an effort to support their candidate. It is like what Jon Stewart said, oh so long ago now, on Crossfire, it’s all about political hackery, with partisan pundits believing that the end justifies the means … and any means will do. Jon Stewart said it back then, and it is still true today, “It’s not so much that it’s bad, as it’s hurting America.”
It’s true. It is.
We all know far too well how the media played right in to the Pentagon’s hands in the lead up to the Iraq War. I worked at CNN in the run up to that war. I booked folks like General Shepperd (that’s “shepperd” with two “p’s” and an “e” — get it right for the chyron!), and Kenneth Pollack (author of The Threatening Storm: The Case for Invading Iraq), time after time after time. I read Judy Miller in the New York Times (and Tom Friedman too). We all did. And we all lived through the hand-wringing when it became clear that the press had gotten it wrong. “Has the press learned its lesson?” you may ask. (Not if you take the White House Correspondents’ dinner at face value).
The press corp is like a flock of sheep. One guy says something, and everyone else has to follow. In this Democratic presidential campaign, the guy is in fact a gal called Hillary Clinton who is better than anyone I know at controlling the message, steering the debate, shepherding the sheep. How did Pennsylvania become such a phenomenal victory for her, when she was supposed to win all along and in the end managed to pull off a single-digit victory (and yes, it was a single digit victory — who rounds 9.3% up to 10%?). How does Barack Obama have such a problem with working class and lower-income voters when he has been making ground with working class voters and lower-income voters ever since Iowa? How is it possible that the guy who just finished paying off his student loans a few years ago is the one who is being described as elite?
I don’t know that I offer any solutions — any way to smarten the dialogue. I think we did well in the days after the ABC debate. (Thank you Daily Kos, Huffington Post, MoveOn). The outrage was vocal and I think the folks over there at ABC got the message. I also note a certain hopeful glimmer among some of the pundits out there — we’re being encouraged to listen to the whole speech, look past the soundbite, all good things. New voices are being included in the debate. Rachel Maddow for example, one of the smartest voices out there, (full disclosure, we used to work together), Lawrence O’Donnell, (the only one trying to make any sense when Reverend Wright first re-emerged last week but getting shouted down by the jackals dying to tear both Wright & Obama apart), and David Gergen, (a fair voice over at CNN).
For Reverend Wright, maybe it was his ego that made him decide that now is the time to get out there and make his splash. The cynic in me thinks Rev. Wright picked this moment deliberately. He knows that once the nomination process is over, we won’t be so interested. The generous spirit in me thinks that, once again, he has misjudged the (news) media in this country, he’s given them too much credit. Whatever his reasoning, one thing is for sure. His words will be sliced and diced beyond recognition by pundits aiming to score political points — not against him, not against the Black Church, but against the man he purports to support: the junior Senator from Illinois: Barack Obama.
The media would be hurting America, one more time.
– by Lucy Carrigan
Popularity: 1% [?]
I would agree with you. I saw Rev. Wright on Bill Moyers and he seemed like an OK guy. But he has found his temporary fame and is enjoying it at a high price to someone he supposedly likes. Barack Obama. For someone so critical of some of the ways of this country he certainly doesn’t add much class. He gets far too muich attention.
There is now little doubt that the corporate media are now embarked on a campaign of their own to Swift Boat Obama. The lame excuse that the National Press Club innocently wanted to have Reverend Wright “explain himself”, holds water like a sieve. They, in fact, have sought (successfully) to revive the furor they themselves and their colleagues created over the Reverend’s controversial comments, hoping to distract and diminish the OBAMA campaign.
Given the failing fortunes of the corporate media in the marketplace, they desperately need a neocon, Cheney/Bush style, corporate favoring administration in DC after the November election, so McCain is their man.
What we may well expect to see next is their attempt to destroy of the Obama campaign, then do an Al Gore on the Clinton candidacy during the general election, and insert all the skullduggery they can to help their man MCCain gain the Wthite House.
So now Obama really has THREE opponents: Clinton’s faltering campaign, McCain’s hapless, flip-flopping, pandering, ill-informed, loopy efforts at running for the office, and the sneaky, unscrupulous, perfidious corporate media.
Here we go loop de loop. Rev. Wright obvious to me that He has His own Agenda, and Legacy to protect. Obama, not wishing to, but the media had to lay Obama out on the Sacraficial table and once again slaughter the lamb of Democracy. Most of the nation doesn’t know left and right hemisphere thinking, most people do not know sociological studies done in the 50’s and sixties. Most people have little knowledge of anthropology, and how different people developed in different parts of the world. Most people don’t know that the bricks and mortar of the DNA is food, but the environment is the architecture that frames and shapes the brain, and influences how we make decisions. Neuroscience is far from public knowledge. The Rev. was Animated, humorous, and good research, excellent public speaking. After all, only he who handles his ideas lightly is master of his ideas, and only he who is master of his ideas is not enslaved by them. Seriousness, after all, is only a sign of effort, and effort is a sign of imperfect mastery. He is serious because he has not come to feel at home with his ideas. Simplicity of thought and ease of expression are to be found only in the words of the old Masters.Simplicity persupposes digestion and also maturity. There is no longer a sense of effort, and truth becomes simple to understand and it’s formulation natural. All forms of pose, sham, learned nonsense, academic stupidity and social humbug are politely but effectively shown the door. NOW sometimes the media prefers to act dumb, unknowing, to protect their comfort zone, not having to change, a been there done that attitude. The glass is full no room for new ideas or educated researched opinions, the inconvenient truth, the residew left behind, the rope hanging from the tree. Everyone waiting to see who will step in their own ,you know what. Shame on the media for trying to influence, Walter Cronkite never did that. Told it like it is not how He wished it to be. John Steward said it best, Öbama is talking to America as if they were adult’s”. America please grow up We have little time to do this, or start learning MING! And shedding light on others faults, only doubles your own, the Buddha Thankyou.Peter Most people would say no that’s a bunch of bull, hippy talk says the redneck. It’s time to make a decision, Good Luck.
Written by veteran media critic and Emmy winner Rory O'Connor, Shock Jocks features unsparing profiles of the ten worst conservative radio talkers in America, including Michael Savage, Bill O' Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Don Imus and the rest.

FREE TRIAL SUBSCRIPTION
This quarterly journal highlights trends in the coverage of current issues and includes research about the effects of media coverage on business, politics, society and the economy. International Issue: Yearly subscription only 90$ including VAT!