![]() |
|
|
Double Standard: Errant reporters punished; media's mistakes ignored - 12/1/03
Putting Iraq on the auction block - 10/5/03
|
The
lessons of Jessica Lynch on media monopoly By Edward Wasserman The affair of Jessica Lynch, the U.S. Army private who was injured in Iraq and rescued in a commando raid, seems unrelated to monopoly control of the media. But the handling of her story offers good reason to cheer Senate elders for moving to reverse the ideologically besotted Federal Communications Commission decision to trash safeguards against deepening concentration of media ownership. In the latest
development of the Lynch story, CBS News, desperate to get the
19-year-old West Virginia girl for an exclusive on-camera, sweetened
the pot dramatically. CBS can do this. As fans
of monopolistic excess know, CBS belongs to Viacom, which also owns
all things Paramount, 39 TV stations, MTV, VH1, Showtime, Comedy
Central, The Movie Channel, Sundance, Nickelodeon, Simon & Schuster
and the huge Infinity radio network, plus such trifles as
Blockbuster Video and several big movie and TV producers. So in wooing young
Jessica, CBS News wasn’t confined to offering flowers for Mom, a
limo to the studio and a backstage tour. Viacom’s honchos dangled a
two-hour CBS News documentary, a TV movie produced by CBS
Entertainment, the possibility of co-hosting an MTV special and a
book deal with the venerable Simon & Schuster. This was denounced by
other media heavyweights. They were probably chewing their cheeks
that they hadn’t thought of it first, but they were also concerned
that by bidding high, Viacom might make it hard for everybody to get
the “exclusives” that the ravenous flock of TV news magazines
believe their ratings depend on. Under the ethics of big
time news, it’s cool that top-flight anchors make seven figures for
reading a Teleprompter and marquee correspondents get $10,000 for
addressing business conventioneers. But the schlubs whose
misfortunes constitute the news TV journalists are paid a fortune to
report cannot get a
nickel. That would be unethical. (Also expensive.) Hence the dismay
over CBS’ reported offerings to Jessica. But that’s not the most vexing ethical quandary with the Jessica
affair. The real problem is that nobody knows what the facts of the
story really are. So what exactly is Viacom buying? Initial accounts were
based on unnamed Pentagon sources. (They’re people we pay to tell us
things that make us feel better.) Jessica was captured after her
hapless supply convoy was ambushed. She was wounded blazing away at
Iraqi troops. Shot and stabbed, she was maltreated by her captors,
tortured, finally recovered in a nighttime raid in which special ops
fought their way in and carried her home. Some of that’s true.
Subsequent reporting, prompted by a highly skeptical report on the
BBC, suggested that her horrific injuries were from the crash as her
vehicle maneuvered to evade the Iraqi ambush. She was likely too
mangled to fight. Overstretched Iraqi doctors say they did their
best, even tried to return her to American forces. Her rescue was
unopposed; the Iraqi military had abandoned the hospital before the
raid ever took place. The point isn’t to
denigrate Jessica Lynch’s service or the valor of those who brought
her home. But Viacom would hardly buy the story of a supply clerk whose
superiors landed her in a fine mess, and who spent agonized days in
a sparsely equipped enemy hospital, tended by kindly but ineffectual
doctors until she was rescued in a needless display of videotaped
bravado. No, the parent of CBS News — one of the world’s great news
organizations, the home of Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite —
can only be falling over itself to invest in a different Jessica
story, the one built by Pentagon propagandists around blinding
courage and patriotism, the one that may well be make-believe. Maybe Jessica isn’t a
combat hero. No shame in that. But if she’s not what CBS
Entertainment’s movie proposes to say she is, what is CBS News
prepared to say? That’s the most disturbing element of the whole
affair. Thanks to Viacom’s commercial ambitions, Jessica Lynch could
never be a story on 60 Minutes. She becomes a no-go zone for CBS
News. It’s that compression of
news and entertainment, and the abusive potential in consolidating
control over both, that ought to be Congress’ concern as it reviews
the FCC’s latest lunacy.
The Senate Commerce
Committee, in a bipartisan vote, moved to roll back this month’s
decisions liberalizing common ownership of newspapers and TV
stations and raising the cap on how much of the population a single
media company may reach. The committee even insisted that radio
mega-giants like Clear Channel — which purportedly engineered the
protest against the Dixie Chicks for opining against the Iraq
invasion — actually sell some of their bloated holdings. The senators may just be
posturing. And they don’t directly address that melding of news and
entertainment, and the potential — apparent every time Time puts
Warner’s latest movie on the cover of a once great news magazine —
to make news a marketing channel for the chieftains of popular
culture.
|