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The Mainstream Media's Michael Moore Inferiority Complex
In a world full of political provocateurs and public hotheads, why is it that only Michael Moore triggers the media's all-too-absent obsession with factual accuracy? Because he scares them.
"Facts," Ronald Reagan famously said, "are stupid things." But that may be too harsh. They can just be made to do stupid things. For instance, if I told you that the American economy had grown by a robust 3.2 percent in 2004 and 2005, you'd think it had done pretty well. If I told you that the bottom 90 percent of American workers actually lost income over that same period because so much went to the very rich, you might think differently. Both facts are true. They just need context.And context is what facts so rarely get. Here at The American Prospect, the economist Dean Baker writes a blog dedicated to providing some of that sorely needed context in the media's reportage of economic and social policy data. It's a big job, because he's one of the few people doing it. Except when a new Michael Moore movie comes out. Then, suddenly, the press becomes obsessed with facts and context and the relevance of omissions.
Take CNN. A few days after the release of Sicko, they set a whole team on fact checking the provocateur's documentary. "We found," they said, "that his numbers were mostly right, but his arguments could use a little more context. As we dug deep to uncover the numbers, we found surprisingly few inaccuracies in the film. In fact, most pundits or health-care experts we spoke to spent more time on errors of omission rather than disputing the actual claims in the film."
So Moore was on solid ground. But that wasn't enough for CNN. This week, Moore was set to appear on Wolf Blitzer's Situation Room. Before he came on, though, Blitzer had CNN's medical correspondent, Dr. Sanjay Gupta, offer a "reality check" on the film:
As Dean Baker pointed out, the "reality check" needed a reality check of its own. But never mind that. It's more important to ask, what accounts for this unrelenting obsession with Moore's accuracy? As a certified health care wonk who loves nothing more than posting comparative spending graphs, I'm all for rapidly increasing the complexity and accuracy with which these issues are debated. But the media rarely indulges such passions. Apparently Michael Moore has a peculiar effect on them.
To wit, Moore is a documentary filmmaker. Fred Thompson is a likely Republican candidate for president. Thompson recently released a radio commentary on the Moore's movie that mixed outright falsehoods with deceptive omissions. There was no media outcry, no Wolf Blitzer follow-up, no CNN truth squad. Nothing. Silence.
Or forget Thompson. Recently, the entire field of announced Republican candidates debated, live on national television. Mitt Romney, one of the frontrunners, took the opportunity to claim that Saddam Hussein never let the inspectors into Iraq, and if he had, we wouldn't have gone to war. This is untrue. The media did not collapse into paroxysms over the inaccuracy. Indeed, they hardly seemed to notice it.
So what accounts for their peculiar obsession with the truth of Moore's films? It's not that these media outlets relentlessly examine the veracity of other public figures, or that Moore is somehow greater in stature than leading presidential candidates. It's a mystery.
Here's a guess, though: Michael Moore elicits a very specific type of status anxiety in mainstream journalists. Moore's product -- passionate, provocative political commentary -- is a close cousin of the media's product -- bloodless, boring political commentary. And Moore is a former journalist, an editor at papers in Flint, Michigan and Mother Jones. What he does is, broadly speaking, in the same realm as what they do. But there are differences between the product he puts out, and what the media offers. A major one is that Moore's releases strike massive emotional chords with the American people, setting off weeks of heated discussion every time he unveils a film. Additionally, he is paid in the tens of million for the production of his documentaries and invited to Cannes when they're released. Nice as the occasional invitation to the White House Correspondents Dinner may be, the two just don't compare.
So there's an acute desire on the part of the press to separate what Moore does from what they do, both in order to explain away his successes and to underscore their own assumed strengths (objectivity, rationality, etc). His failings may be manifold, but that hardly renders him unique. His treatment, however, is unique. The world is full of political provocateurs and public hotheads, but only Moore triggers the media's all-too-absent obsession with factual accuracy. Ann Coulter doesn't, and Al Franken doesn't, and Rush Limbaugh doesn't, and Mitt Romney doesn't. Only Moore. Because he scares them.
Here's a radical thought, though: Maybe if these mainstream media types were as incredulous towards the powerful as they are to Moore, his productions wouldn't pose a threat. After all, there's nothing wrong with fact-checking, and asking hard questions, and raising an oppositional eyebrow towards pabulum and propaganda. The problem isn't that the media is so quick to doubt Moore. It's that they're so trusting the rest of the time.
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23 Comments so far
Show AllThat the media so carefully scrutinizes Moore's work while casually ignoring the lies told by major RepubliKKKan players only proves further that the media is truly the tool of big business and the right-wing, fascist American GOP government that big business OWNS.
Michael Moores exposes the Media as a propaganda tool for Big Business and Right Wing Politicians.
Everytime Mike speaks out, Americas media is exposed and the America public tunes out and into sites like commondreams.org/alternet/zmag/rabble.ca.
Dobson/Coulter/Dobbs/Hanity and Co, blast the media as left wing... this is nothing more than a smoke screen to continue pushing the American Media (and to be fair Canadian (CTV) and British (BBC) media) further right.
Welcome to the 21st century and the true power of the Internet. Thank You Michael.
the US MSM is an anachronism waiting to be buried......heads up CTV/BBC et al
omg! moore makes the msm do some research & fact checking! how uncomfortable them.
yes to all the comments above. moore is also like stephen colbert at the washington correspondents' dinner: he holds a very uncomfortable mirror up to the msm and reminds them what boot licking sycophantic power worshippers they all really are. and also how utterly humorless they all are.
I wish more people on the progressive side of things, especially those with public profiles who can get media coverage when they speak, would study the way Michael Moore handles his confrontational interviews. He's good. He is forceful without going into cheap-shot attack mode, is never personal, and seems friendly even while scolding.
To me a good part of it is that he actually fully believes what he's saying. He's never political in the sense of trying to "spin" his position for the benefit of those who might disagree. There's almost nobody else on the public scene who is a good forceful advocate for progressive ideas and policies, who can go one-on-one with people like Wolf Blitzkrieg.
If there were a few more public people with that kind of speaking ability, progressives might be able to enact some of what they say they believe in.
See this quote from "In The Last Throes, Judiciously" below:
"The most astonishing thing to know about Harry Reid is that he was reputedly once a boxer. Does that mean someone threw a punch at him on the schoolyard grounds in seventh grade and broke his horn-rim glasses? Is that what they mean when they say this guy was a boxer? I only ask because I desperately want the leader of the Democratic Party in the Senate to be a fighter. But, today, everything about what Harry Reid says, does and even looks like to me telegraphs punching bag, not fighter. Or wet noodle. Under a doormat. You know - the one leading into the servants' quarters."
"
The mainstream media is boot licking the IRON HEEL that Jack London warns us all against.
Hoa binh
I even heard a republican politician (of course) state recently that we were right to go to war in Vietnam because of the Gulf of Tonkin attack. In fact, the attack never occurred, but it was based on that untrue event that congress voted to start a war with Vietnam where 1-3 million Vietnamese died (not to mention 58,000 US soldiers, plus the thousands whose life ended premature because of the horror and injustice they saw. That is the ultimate betrayal.
Does it sound familiar? By the way, as we all know, Saddam and Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11, yet our government officials continue to trot out that mistruth. Oh I know, they don't say it exactly, but can you explain why many supporters of the war have that mistaken belief?
so it goes
http://www.wordsareimportant.com/lifeisbeautiful.htm - A different look at Iraq.
Great piece. Very helpful in that I find myself defending MM sometimes -- even with so called 'liberals.'
Who would ever believe CNN is credible?
Here's a "News Flash", Moore does not have to answer to any one. But, he picks and chooses the facts just like everyone else.
Our news media answers to the companies that own them and the companies that pay for advertising. They are more concerned with hiding the truth then reporting the truth.
I think that when the D.C. Madam's phone records are exposed ABC's statement that there wasn't any story in them will be the last nail in the coffin of the MSM as anything other than a propaganda arm of corporate America.
According to a story yesterday on Counterpunch Palfrey, in an interview, as much as stated that Dick Cheney's phone number is on the list. (To be fair to ABC they didn't get the earlier records from the time period that Cheney kept a residence in D.C. while he was CEO of Halliburton.)
i just don't understand. i read this news and EVERYONE repeats the same things day in and day out. Corporate control, big business, big media, big pharma..etc. etc.
is it any suprise? it been moving to this for a long time. why does everyone act like there is some conspiracy going on? like analyzing it is constructive. do things to freaking change it.
The campaign is not to check the facts on Moore, but to smear him with innuendo. If one watches the piece by Sanjay Gupta on CNN, one is perplexed by the assertion that Moore fudges his numbers, but the lack of actual numbers stated as "fudged". The numbers that Gupta DOES bring up, are hysterical for being irrelevant. It is not that Moore is LYING about any of this, or even being misleading. It is that he gathered numbers from a different place as Gupta (Moore actually used WHITE HOUSE projections for 2007, for example, whereas Gupta refers to numbers from 2004, which would seem out of date...) But the point is not to show that Americans spend a thousand dollars more or less on health care than Moore said, the point is to smear him. To present him as unreliable. It is not a professional turf war, but a PR campaign in the service of the private medical industry. Corporate news is CORPORATE. It is "checking facts" and reporting innuendo for one reason: To protect the health insurance giants of the United States. Watch the videos on Moore's own website, or read more on the smear campaign here: http://unknown-arts.org/politics/?p=115 if you are interested.
Too bad this article is not printed in every
newspaper, magazine, and checkout rag in the
US. Would be interesting to have a poll taken
then of how many people agree with it - hmmm,
maybe that magic 29% would disagree...
Michael Moore is a true American hero !
OK wdmax3: give us some of facts that MM picks and chooses.
Wow! Great! Now, having nailed down once again that monster, the sinister media of right and left, we can sleep well. Hosanna! One fellow even open his eyes when talking with "liberal" friends. Stop this nonsense. What an easy job to bark on whip while ignoring whip holder!
Common Dreams sometimes smell like old Soviet Union press, if you know what I mean. I am sure very few know or even understand what I am talking about.
Unchecked CNN-broadcast facts:
"Before the war, EVERYONE believed that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction" (Condi Rice to Wolf Blitzer -- at least twice).
"Canada is a safe haven for terrorists. The 9/11 terrorists entered the US through Canada" (more than one guest on Lou Dobbs's show).
Again I say-Michael Moore for President. Who else can so accurately identify and courageously come up with solutions than Mike.
they also aren't reporting that bush plans to stay in office past the 2008 elections.
google: nspd 51
If the slug M M thinks life is so much better in Cuba, why doesn't he move his fat ass there?
Another limo liberal sucking America dry.
I'd like to see us turn this around. We need to get the word out about Sicko. When you tell people about it who are conservative or middle of the road, don't show any hate about how screwed over people are here, just the importance of people seeing what Michael Moore has to say for himself.
If I had the money, I would pay people to see this movie. I'm going to drag as many people out to the theater as I can.
I think it's everyones duty as an American to do the same, but be nice about it so we don't pi$$ people off.
Check out Michael's web site http://www.michaelmoore.com/sicko/what-can-i-do/
He's supporting H.R. 676. This bill is only 26 pages long, it is great and can be downloaded from http://www.michaelmoore.com/sicko/what-can-i-do/petitions/pnum649.php
Send it to the Small Business Administration in your area. Print out copies and give it to local businesses. If there's a small business you shop at, give them a copy.
Tell Republicans this bill is good for American businesses so they can compete in a global economy. We have lost jobs to Canada because businesses didn't have to pay for health insurance there.