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2007 Columns
2006 Columns
2005 Columns
The many ironies of the Novak affair - 12/22/04
News in the Internet age of post-innocence - 12/13/04
The next rebirth of the media - 11/29/04
A chance to resurrect radio - 11/15/04
Election 2004 will be a media milestone - 11/1/04
The impossible job of the truth police - 10/18/04
Morning-After in America - 10/4/04
The Transparency Trap - 9/20/04
The era of negotiated news - 9/6/04
Novak-Plame: Historic chapter or a sorry footnote? - 8/23/04
What’s beneath the anti-media anger? - 8/9/04
Why Fox News matters - 7/26/04
The deep-dish world of media politics - 7/12/04
Pushing paper, counting copies - 6/28/04
Taking The Times - 5/31/04
A brave new online world of dueling icons - 5/17/04
The Newsroom War on Terror - 5/3/04
David Hockney, Fallujah and the camera’s truth - 4/19/04
When confidentiality is a con - 4/5/04
The conceptual muddle surrounding those elusive weapons - 3/22/04
Return of sex casts a long shadow over the news - 3/8/04
Playing Monopoly with Mickey on the Internet - 2/23/04
Now the BBC takes a dive for 'sexing up' Iraq reports - 2/9/04
The tough job of catching a falling star - 1/26/04
Why Michael Matters - 1/12/04
Deal makes Murdoch the mightiest media mogul - 1/8/04
2003 Columns |
Why Michael
Matters
By Edward Wasserman
Michael Jackson was an electrifying entertainer, and he continues to
fascinate, whether it’s his self-mutilation or his alleged
dalliances with the under-aged. Now he’s at the center of a nasty
dust-up between two of the country’s best news organizations, CBS
News and The New York Times.
Last month, the Times alleged that CBS essentially paid Jackson $1
million to appear on its flagship news magazine, 60 Minutes. Jackson
had been booked for a network entertainment special, which was to
air in November, coinciding with the release of his latest
greatest-hits album. But by then he was mired in a fresh pile of
sexual misconduct charges.
So, the Times reported — and this, the network acknowledges — CBS said
it couldn’t possibly broadcast the special “with an elephant in the
room,” and told Jackson he had to clear the air on the molestation
accusations before the special could run.
The amounts in play aren’t clear. CBS had advanced Jackson $1.5
million, and he was supposed to end up with $5 million if the
special aired. The network vigorously denies that it offered a
sweetener for the 60 Minutes gig, and denounced The Times for basing
its $1 million allegation on a disgruntled former Jackson associate.
Still, even without additional pay Jackson unquestionably had a strong
financial incentive for submitting to the interview. At a minimum,
if the special didn’t air he would have had to repay CBS his $1.5
million advance.
So he talked. And his 60 Minutes gig turned out to be a vastly more
popular show than his entertainment special. An estimated 10
million-11 million viewers watched the special, which was an
armchair testimonial to Michael’s vast talent and not a fresh
performance. By comparison 18 million watched him on 60 Minutes — 12
percent better than its weekly average — as Michael, predictably,
told correspondent Ed Bradley he was blameless.
In the aftermath of the Times story, CBS was roundly condemned for
selling its soul.
The focus of criticism was the payment allegation.
There’s a longstanding tradition among mainstream U.S. journalists
that they don’t pay sources. Why? The principled reason is that the
prospect of payment might very well influence what the source says.
If money corrupts the information, the public suffers.
The ban was always a bit simple-minded, though it does save publishers
money. It prohibits only one of the numerous benefits that sources
may derive from talking to reporters — which include prestige,
vindication, career advancement, vanity, revenge. Pursuing them
affects what’s reported, routinely and powerfully.
Accordingly, stories often have their own back-stories, involving
negotiations with sources over exclusivity, prominence, visuals, the
promise of a scoop next time if the source likes the treatment this
time.
News is built out of self-interest, and just because cash doesn’t
change hands doesn’t mean benefits aren’t conferred or denied.
So if there’s corruption in the Jackson affair, the money is the least
of it. Michael wasn’t going to say anything anyway. An interview in
which he protests his innocence has all the news value of an Easter
egg roll. It illuminates nothing, advances the story of his alleged
molestation not a millimeter.
CBS may claim that the interview cleared its obligation to the public
to hold an accused celebrity accountable, but that’s plain silly.
Michael was, in the parlance of the interview business, a prime
“get,” and CBS had the leverage to get him — just as it tried for a
sit-down with Jessica Lynch by offering her a book deal and a TV
movie.
The more disturbing corruption has to do with why such a great news
outfit was squandering time and treasure on such stupidity. It
doesn’t help that CBS is among those organizations forced into
marriages of convenience with movie studios, publishing houses,
cable owners and the like that they’re corporately expected to play
nicely with. Synergy and convergence are the buzzwords.
But the rise of ratings-driven nonfiction TV is broader than ownership
consolidation. And it’s a uniquely potent threat to journalism,
since it looks so much like news reportage that the viewer may
overlook the fact it ignores the most important duty of news:
telling us what matters. That 60 Minutes should so resemble tabloid
TV that the Jackson interview fit right in is the true price of
corruption.
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