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Bias isn’t the biggest danger of the new media age - 11/10/2008 What would an Obama win do for race relations? Who knows - 10/27/2008 Boring old values and the New Media - 10/13/2008 Is fact-checking candidates a new trap? - 09/29/2008 Will the media show real spine? - 9/15/2008 Slow movement toward online privacy reform - 9/1/2008 The right lessons from the John Edwards affair - 8/18/2008 The political price of being a media celebrity - 8/4/2008 A bitter victory in the struggle for justice - 7/21/2008 Does shaky start for nonprofit newsroom portend bigger woes? - 7/8/2008 When the facts get in the way of a good tale - 6/23/2008 Scott McClellan and the rules of punditry - 6/10/2008 Media regulators miss the point 5/26/2008 How to pay for the news - 5/12/2008 First thing we do, kill all the consultants - News business gazes longingly at a field of holes - 4/18/2008 Why news ombudsmen matter (maybe even in Manhattan) - 3/31/2008Why news media must embrace online rules? - 3/17/2008
No more sex,
please - 03/03/2008 Popularity Pay and the Age of Calibrated Journalism - 01/07/2008
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Will
the media show real spine? by Ed Wasserman Week of Sept. 15, 2008 For a while, it looked as if U.S. politics had entered a new era in the way presidential campaigns were conducted and covered. For people who grieved over the decay of electioneering into bloopers
and bites, it was an encouraging moment. Time and again, a strong field
of presidential aspirants stood on stage and spoke at length, to the
public and to each other, about what they hoped to do and how they
proposed to lead the country. That was then. Since the nominating conventions last month, we've entered a different period, of casual smears and innuendos that have only the remotest bearing on the problems the electorate faces. And the news media, instead of acting as proxies for the public, have become the enablers of a discourse that seems destined to grow evermore destructive. The nomination of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as Republican nominee Sen. John McCain's running mate started the mudslide. How many acres of newsprint were squandered on her teenage daughter's pregnancy? I don't know how that became a front-burner campaign issue, whether it was because her opponents believed it would discredit Palin's claim to being a good parent, or because her fans saw it as a down-home affirmation of her forgiving, pro-life embrace. Regardless, the upshot was that the privacy of a young girl -- and of her boyfriend -- was savaged, and that two kids who are too young to give anything like informed consent became political pawns, with the eager complicity of the news media. That's deplorable, but my larger concern is over the ability of the media to play an independent role in the electoral process. Nowhere is it written that news organizations must cover whatever the campaigns decide they want to fuss about. So what if the McCain people figured they could get mileage out of attacking Sen. Barack Obama's ''lipstick on a pig'' remark -- an allegation that McCain was tarting up failed Bush administration policies -- as a snotty reference to Palin? Is that attack really worth covering and covering and covering, as if it were a new McCain policy stand of profound significance? In a perverse way, even the recent media effort to fact-check campaign utterances has troubling consequences. Sure,candidates ought to be called on lies. There is value to pointing out that Obama never favored instructing kindergarteners how to have sex, despite a ridiculous Republican attack ad. If the list of books then-Mayor Palin supposedly wanted banned that's circulating around the Internet is bogus, we should know that. But at the same time, every expenditure of reporting time spent assessing campaign claims puts the news media once again into a reactive mode, ratifying an agenda of informational priorities that was engineered not to illuminate the electorate, but to bring some momentary partisan benefit. Meanwhile, what goes uncovered are real issues that are well worth journalistic sleuthing: • Take McCain's truly audacious promise that keeping the ruling party in power will foment change. He also pledges bipartisanship with words reminiscent of George W. Bush in 2000. So just which elements of the Bush years does he repudiate? What would a McCain administration look like? • Or Obama's talk about restoring America's luster on the world
stage. Beyond pieties about multilate- • Or where either candidate stands on the most far-reaching legacy of the Bush-Cheney administration: The radical concentration of executive power. Voters deserve to hear about these things, even though they'll never be applause lines and the campaigns see no benefit to addressing them. Now my fear is that the campaigning is about to go from frivolous to toxic, as the real attacks begin. Soon enough, we'll see the ads portraying Obama as a cross between Malcolm X and Bugsy Siegel. When that happens, some in the media will be ready with pails and
shovels to sort through the claims. But most will return to their
habitual role of finding those with the loudest voices and handing out
megaphones. |