The FCC's Christmas Gift to Big Media
On Dec. 18, the five commissioners of the Federal Communications Commission met in Washington, D.C., and, by a 3 to 2 vote, passed new regulations that would allow more media consolidation. This, despite the U.S. public's increasing concern over the nation's media being controlled by a few giant corporations.
Dissident FCC Commissioner Michael Copps said of the decision: "We generously ask big media to sit on Santa's knee, tell us what it wants for Christmas, and then push through whatever of these wishes are politically and practically feasible. No test to see if anyone's been naughty or nice. Just another big, shiny present for the favored few who already hold an FCC license-and a lump of coal for the rest of us. Happy holidays!"
It was Bush-appointed FCC Chairman Kevin Martin, now just 41 years old, who rammed through the rule changes. He has served President Bush well. As deputy general counsel for the Bush-Cheney campaign in 2000, he was active during the Florida recount. Before that he worked for Kenneth Starr at the Office of Independent Counsel during the Monica Lewinsky scandal. Rumor has it that he may run for governor of his native North Carolina. His wife, Cathie Martin, was a spokeswoman for Vice President Dick Cheney in the midst of the scandal around the outing of CIA operative Valerie Plame. She now works on Bush's communications staff.
The federal regulation in question is the newspaper-broadcast cross-ownership ban. It has for decades prevented the same company from owning both a television or radio station in a town as well as a newspaper. Underlying this ban is the core concept of the public interest. Copps couldn't have been clearer: "Today's decision would make George Orwell proud. We claim to be giving the news industry a shot in the arm-but the real effect is to reduce total newsgathering." Mergers will result in newsroom layoffs and less, not more, coverage of local issues.
Martin's new rule is also going to hurt the diversity of the U.S. media. Juan Gonzalez, former president of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, recently testified at a congressional hearing on media ownership. He said, "Even as our nation has become ever more diverse racially and ethnically ... minority ownership of the broadcast companies ... has remained at shockingly low levels. ... Direct experience has shown us that ownership matters when it comes to ... a diversity of voices and meeting the news and information needs of minority communities."
Gonzalez pointed out that the new rule will allow the 19 minority-owned TV stations in the country's top 20 cities to be targeted for takeovers by newspapers, further reducing minority ownership.
There is a reason that journalism is the sole profession explicitly protected in the U.S. Constitution. As a check and balance on government, it is essential to the functioning of a democratic society. As Thomas Jefferson famously stated, "Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter."
By eliminating the newspaper-broadcast cross-ownership ban, Martin claims to be saving newspapers. In a New York Times Op-Ed piece, he writes: "In many towns and cities, the newspaper is an endangered species. ... If we don't act to improve the health of the newspaper industry, we will see newspapers wither and die." As Copps pointed out in his scathing dissent to the rule change, "We shed crocodile tears for the financial plight of newspapers-yet the truth is that newspaper profits are about double the S&P 500 average."
The problem facing Martin and his big media friends isn't that newspapers are unprofitable; it's that they are simply not as profitable as they used to be. This is in part because of the Internet. People no longer have to rely on the newspaper to post or read classified ads, for example, with free online outlets like Craigslist.
The media system in the United States is too highly concentrated and serves not the public interest but rather the interests of moguls like Rupert Murdoch and Sumner Redstone, who controls CBS/Viacom. Media corporations that will benefit from Martin's handout are the same ones that acted as a conveyor belt for the lies of the Bush administration about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. We need a media that challenges the government, that acts as a fourth estate, not for the state. We need a diverse media. The U.S. Congress has a chance to overrule Martin and the FCC, and to keep the newspaper-broadcast cross-ownership ban in place. It should do so immediately, before the consolidated press leads us into another war.
Amy Goodman is the host of "Democracy Now!," a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on 500 stations in North America.
© 2007 Amy Goodman; distributed by King Features Syndicate
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20 Comments so far
Show AllAll FCC votes are 3 (Republicans) to 2 (Democrats). Neither public outcries nor reasoned argument make any dents in the ideology of the majority. The "public" air waves seem no longer to belong to the public. Bush appointees poison whatever they touch.
Perhaps the 2009 Congress will be so kind as to pass legislation forbidding the concentration of media ownership and mandating the reversal of all that has occurred so far.
Maybe the 2007-08 Congress would be so kind as to give it a shot. Maybe the Soros Foundation would give grants to local journalists/broadcasters/unions so they could buy back what has been lost to the corporate money-men.
Oops! It was mcpete rather than nspire.
You all know that the FCC increased their penalties for dirty words usually when the Politicians got caught uttering them. And I am not just talking about Nixon in the March 23, 2002 Common Dreams article either. Seems that people fear that swearing will tarnish Bush and Cheney's wholesome images.
Gail, hope it passes.
redwriteman says: INTERNET DEREGULATION is a codeword for corporate control of web content. Preserving Net Neutrality is the next great battle we dare not lose. Right now, the corporatists have no more control of internet content than phone companies have over our private phone conversations.
You've heard about how they control net content in China. It's happened in other places already.
Found it! Note that any reduction in funding to the CBC results in the cutting of programming.
Tories target CBC in party fundraising letter
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20071224/tories_fundraising_071224/20071224/
Tories blast CBC in party fundraising letter
"Let's face the facts," Finley writes in a letter, released by the party Monday.
"Running as a Conservative in Canada is never easy.
"The Liberals have long benefited from the support of the country's most powerful vested interests. And the NDP has always been backed by the country's loudest vocal interests."
He goes on to ask for $100 or $200, and argues that financial support will help the Tories overcome the challenge of fighting the Liberals and "their vested interest allies."
http://www.cbc.ca/cp/media/071224/X122413AU.html
put "The Facts: The Liberals and the CBC by Doug Finley" if you want to read the original letter.
Seems that the FCC is going after the internet:
A positive agenda for media reform in the U.S.
In my report on the 2005 National Conference for Media Reform for rabble.ca, I noted that media reformers were preparing for what they called "the perfect storm." By "the perfect storm" they were referring to the impending future when the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and Congress make crucial decisions about the future of the media, specifically in relation to the internet.
http://rabble.ca/news_full_story.shtml?sh_itm=cb71bff15b65d51cb4a06472c805cacb&rXn=1&
Canada has something similar to the FCC but we call it the CTRC.
NDP to Harper: Nix CanWest buy-up
VANCOUVER / TIMMINS - The CRTC's decision to allow CanWest Global's US-leveraged purchase of Alliance Atlantis Communications is wrong, NDP Canadian Heritage Critic Bill Siksay (Burnaby-Douglas) said today.
"This deal appears to allow an end run around requirements that Canadian broadcasters should be owned and controlled by Canadians," said Siksay. "The CRTC seems to have bent over backwards to allow CanWest's American financing partner—Goldman Sachs Capital Partners—to gain a foothold. This is not acceptable to ordinary Canadians."
"The CRTC has made it clear: money talks and cultural values walk," added former NDP Heritage Critic Charlie Angus (Timmins-James Bay). "We're talking about a U.S. investment banker picking up control of a major Canadian broadcaster."
(cont)
http://www.ndp.ca/page/6050
And, can't find it right now, but Harper is speaking out against the CBC - so, nspire, you may have to look elsewhere for your docs.
Kevin Martin is essentially a political hit-man, as his previous involvement in the 2000 Florida post-election debacle indicates. He is a man without a conscience; he feels no shame. To watch him at the recent Congressional hearings or at the public FCC hearings is to see a man whose facial expression says: "Screw all of you." Martin is unconcerned either with public opinion or Congressional opinion. He will do as he is commanded by his masters. He is no doubt looking ahead to a massive payoff when he leaves the FCC and moves into some phenomenally lucrative job as a lobbyist or an executive for one of the telecom companies.
they will have their hands full trying to control the situations unfolding here and abroad and the internet as well.
Probably, as Cockburn from Counterpunch has said, the web will just be turned off, the plug pulled suddenly before push comes to shove.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvqRztOP-H8
HERE'S SOME GOOD NEWS, PEOPLE:
"A new effort to ensure the 2008 presidential election is held using verifiable paper ballots and random audits to ensure accurate vote counts is underway in Congress."
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/122707N.shtml
INTERNET DEREGULATION is a codeword for corporate control of web content. Preserving Net Neutrality is the next great battle we dare not lose. Right now, the corporatists have no more control of internet content than phone companies have over our private phone conversations. But an assault on yet another freedom of which we once took for granted is gearing up. Contrary to what others have said, the internet is a powerful medium and getting more powerful by the day. Indeed we can thank the internet for providing the MARGIN needed to enable the Democratic takeover of congress in 2006 (recent Dem gutless caving to Bush not withstanding). We should all be aware that the right-wing corporatocracy seethes that there is a medium out there that they do not control. The fact that the internet is the last refuge of media democracy makes the right-wing rabid. Get ready for war, folks.
Dear Southern, rent the dvd "Rome". Then rent "Is Miss. Burning?" while remembering the FBI likely supplied the intel to the Klan that got those young men killed. Then rent Judgement At Nuremburg (Stanley Kramer, 1956). Southern, Aryans are no different now than they were 2000 years ago. Alcohol, Drugs, Blood sports, gratuitous sex, and constant war were always on the menu.
By the way, for those who want to throw out their TVs, I pretty much agree. I had cable once for about 6 months, 20 years ago, gave it up. It was more than $600 a year for CRAP and that was way back when.
That said, a nice tv (got one 2 years ago) playing incredible movies is a pleasure to the eyes, the ears, and sometimes even the mind and heart. If you want to kick back and chill, rent Babylon5. 30 dvds at about a buck a piece and they pay the postage. It finished ten years ago and is still the premier sc-fi series ever run on TV. Even puts the best Star Trek to shame. Bab5 was a NOVEL, for adults, placed on the screen with full character and continuous plot development (not just isolated episodes) on separate but interwoven tracks. It did this for 22 episodes of 44 minutes each year for 5 years, and the best space travel, space battle stuff I've ever seen in theaters or out. They did themselves proud. A single movie more than 80 hours long (without a single f**ing gut puke commercial - ever.) And they made 6, 90 minute "episodes". HUGE.
And yes, I am aware that creatures with a brain attached to a spinal column with attached appendages is believed to be a unique production of planet Earth. Life here made tubes and grew brains, eyes, ears(??, and mouth on one end, with effluvia out the other. Although sometimes it does end up in the posts.
Peace.
I find that if I try to engage most people in questioning any of this thought control they think I am paranoid at least, or maybe even a conspiracy theorist... but it's all unfolding, step by step. I turned my tv off 10 years ago. When I happen to be someplace where a set is blaring, I am stunned at what is considered news, and appalled at what is taken to be entertainment. What is wrong with us?!
KEM -- I just had an idea to stimulate increased readership in CD:
How about using the college bulletin board (apartment for rent) trick of easily made tear-off phone numbers, but instead provide this web address, along with the main portion asking questions about some of the topic covered, and how to bypass the propaganda machine of MSM.
We can make these to post everywhere, with "hook" type large font issues questions (health, fed reserve banker's gaining while we all loose, Iraq, Iran, Impeachments …
"can you trust the news from corporate controlled media
I wonder what the percentage is of Americans who get their news from sites like this, when compared to those who get their news from TV and newspapers? Anyone know a close count?
I believe this FCC decision is just another big step for our government to control the press, like Hitler and Stalin managed to do. Then too, check out the Commissions Act of 2006. Bush has power now available, if he ever decides to use it, that Hitler and Stalin only dreamed of having. He could totally control the websites also.
The FCC and MSM have the internet in their sights as well.
www.savetheinternet.com
I got rid of my T.V. the summer of 2002 when I no longer trusted the MSM.
I started going to the library, used and new book stores and searching the internet and if there was a guess lecturer in town, I went. I finally woke up to all the lies that I have been told my entire life.
This country is not what it is portrayed to be.
The truth is very important to me. Some people do not mind being lied too; I am not one of them.
This is not a democracy. A quiet, domestic war is taking place against the American people. This war has been going on for a long while and the perpetrators have gotten into all sections of our society. The Federal Reserve is poison. Our elections are rigged and will remain that way, we are ruled by secrets and lies. There is no war on terror. We are being used. We are not safe. We need to unite. We need to have our questions answered without being attacked as being unpatriotic.
The elite, rich hold the weapons and the power. One way to fight is to stop shopping. Do not use your credit cards. Stay home with your family more and stopping watching television. If you child is uncomfortable with school, listen to him/her. Our school system is only there to indoctrinate.
peace coup writes:
> "We can counter this by creating more online media outlets that will continue to draw eyeballs away form the monopoly media outlets."
Yes, but the problem is most people want to click on the TV, kick back and be fed a steady stream of high-resolution, high-motion imagery, whether it is news, entertainment, or infotainment. So, you can put up all the great websites you want, and link in youtube and similiar jerky, fuzzy, slow, low-res video clips, and no matter how shocking and informative they are (and by the way, on youtube alone you can find plenty of gripping video from Iraq and around the world which really tells the story of what's going on), the vast majority of Americans will still get nearly all their news and political information from corporate-fed television.
In order to effect a revolution in which the bulk of the people are tuned into the vast amount of creativity and high-quality information that independents can and do produce, the content has to be made EASILY available in HIGH TECHNICAL QUALITY formats. It has to be as easy and as accessible as changing channels on your cable remote. It can't require you to know how to hook up a computer and debug its OS, or remember and type in some URL, and it has to come on right away in high-def. Otherwise, the majority of people we'd like to reach won't be able or won't bother.
Only the corporations that control consumer electronics, cable TV, and the internet wires can make it easy for people. They can do it very readily, and they can just as readily make it hard for people. They can make it as hard as they need to in order to keep control of the bulk of the infostream while allowing a mostly uncensored and independent, but slow and unreliable internet to exist in a marginal setaside of the available bandwidth. And given how lazy most people are, they don't have to make it very hard at all to keep people tuned into corporate products.
The only way to make them open up the vast bandwidth that is available on existing infrastructure, so that all producers are on an equal footing - so called network neutrality - is to force them to do so by law, force them to do something which goes entirely against their financial interests as sellers of programming content, and against their political interests as gatekeepers of news and information.
So, unfortunately, the internet by itself, as we know it, does not give us a workaround way to avoid having to engage the actual political process and win the critical victories there that will enable the creation of a new political order.
I unpluged my TV in October and I have not missed the evening propaganda cast one bit. I'll save my Euros by skipping the 'digital' TV.
Dear ezeflyer, WELL SAID! The boycott of the commercial MSM is the first step, it attacks one of the main roots of our national paralysis, and makes our personal lives free of its toxic influence. Other boycotts must follow, but this is an easy and radical change, seperating one's self from the lies and appeals for compulive consumption that surround us. No cable, no sattelite, TVs for film monitors only!
Why watch commercial ridden MSM tv, listen to MSM radio or read MSM newspapers and mags when we can we have free online access to sources of information and entertainment like CD and YouTube and cheap satellite radio? When we should really get off our butts and get out more. Boycott the MSM.
Go to www.democracynow.com for today's Democracy Now with Amy Goodman reporting on this subject and Commissioner Copp's scathing minority rebuttal.
We can counter this by creating more online media outlets that will continue to draw eyeballs away form the monopoly media outlets.
Every website, forum, blog, news feed, or motivational site we create is a victory for democracy.