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Carrying a Torch for Anti-China Protests
When an official enemy is targeted, media take notice
For once, mainstream media have found an anti-government protest to embrace. When the Olympic torch arrived in San Francisco on April 9 and thousands of demonstrators took to the streets to decry human rights abuses by the Chinese government, journalists descended on the scene like ants at a picnic.
CNN led the feeding frenzy. The cable network gave the torch and related stories more than 40,000 words of coverage throughout the day, according to a Nexis search, and it frequently played as the top story of the hour. During the three hours of Wolf Blitzer's Situation Room, five different correspondents and producers reported from the streets of San Francisco, one "Internet reporter" tracked protesters' web and text messaging activity, and a correspondent in Beijing relayed Chinese reaction-which was minimal, since the action unfolded around 4 a.m. in China. Live feeds came in from several different helicopters circling over the city, and Blitzer boasted that "CNN is watching every angle of this developing story right now."
In many ways, it was a coup for protest organizers, whose message reached far and wide. Despite much shallow coverage and inane speculation about the whereabouts and path of the rerouted torch (Daily Show, 4/10/08), CNN actually did provide a number of different angles on the story and acknowledged its importance. "We will stay with the story, given the international ramifications of what's going on," explained Blitzer. "There's so much at stake right now, not just the Summer Olympics, but a lot of diplomatic and economic ramifications, as well, as we watch very, very closely to see what's going on."
And CNN did give the story more context and explore both background and ramifications. They interviewed an Olympic historian on past games-related protests; they turned to senior international correspondent Christiane Amanpour on the international political repercussions of the protests; and they briefly explained the situations in both Tibet and Darfur, interviewing high-level ambassadors and U.N. figures about them. They sought out the positions of the presidential candidates on the issue as well as those of George W. Bush and House Leader Nancy Pelosi. They explored the potential fallout for big U.S. companies like Coca-Cola that sponsor the Olympic Games. They even made their audience poll of the morning about whether an opening ceremony boycott would be an effective protest method to change Chinese policy.
Not that the coverage strayed entirely from typical protest coverage. As usual, relatively few protesters were interviewed-along with a similar number of pro-Chinese government counter-protesters. And journalists seemed particularly enthralled by the potential for violence by protesters, particularly after attempts to grab or put out the torch along the London and Paris torch relays. Well before the relay began, CNN anchor Fredricka Whitfield announced, "Something else we're watching-about an hour-and-a-half from now, it's expected that protesters, whether it be pro-China or perhaps free Tibet demonstrators, will potentially clash as the torch run makes its way through San Francisco."
Anchors repeatedly returned to the theme, looking for scuffles: "Are folks rowdy or are they pretty much under control right now?" asked anchor Don Lemon. Blitzer even interrupted a correspondent's interview to track a minor confrontation between some protesters and police officers during the run. In the end, like most peace protests, the San Francisco protests were almost entirely peaceful, with only a few scuffles and arrests despite the massive police presence (L.A. Times, 4/10/08).
Not inherently fascinating
CNN's torch protest coverage reveals an important lesson about protest coverage in general. Repression and violence in Tibet, Darfur and other areas under Chinese control or influence deserve much more media attention than they receive. But surely protests targeting a pre-emptive war launched by CNN viewers' own government, either with the aim of preventing it from being launched or ending it after hundreds of thousands of lost lives and hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars, would be significantly more newsworthy to an American audience than protests targeting the Chinese government's actions.
And yet, comparing word counts on the day of each protest, CNN gave the torch nearly five times the coverage of the most recent large-scale anti-Iraq War protest in January 2007, which drew hundreds of thousands of people to Washington-and, as Extra! reported (3-4/07), more coverage than most previous anti-war demonstrations. Even the unprecedented protests that took place in February 2003, in which up to 30 million people in more than 600 cities around the world demonstrated against the imminent Iraq War (Guardian, 2/17/03)-the largest anti-war protests since the Vietnam War-only edged out the thousands of San Francisco torch protesters, in the number of words CNN devoted to them, by about five to four.
It's not that the media find the torch itself inherently fascinating. Before the last Summer Games in 2004, when it passed through four different U.S. cities, the torch run generated little media excitement. In fact, media outlets' own involvement in the torch run seemed to determine its newsworthiness to them: The only broadcast network to give it more than a passing mention was NBC, which owned exclusive rights to the games, and CNN only gave it a brief spurt of attention when it came to CNN hometown Atlanta and a network correspondent acted as a torchbearer (6/18/04).
Was it the unique mix of torch relay and protests? Olympic historian David Wallechinsky (4/9/08) told CNN anchor Fredricka Whitfield: "In terms of protesting, you've never seen protests before on a torch relay. This is really the first time." Whitfield replied, "Yes, you've never seen it take place like this, which means that's why it's kind of, in part, getting a lot of attention, because this is a moving target, and these protesters have been very aggressive."
In fact, just two years ago, the torch was the moving target of more than 33 protests as it wound its way through Italy for two months preceding the Winter Games in Turin (London Independent, 1/25/06). The majority of these focused on the environmental impact of a planned high-speed train from Turin to Lyons, France, which would tunnel through mountains containing asbestos and uranium (AFP, 12/10/05), though others protested the commercialization of the games and their cost to Italian taxpayers (London Guardian>, 2/9/06). The torch was rerouted at least four times in Italy because of protests; it was grabbed from a torchbearer's hands momentarily, and once protesters threw a flag over it in a failed attempt to put out the flame-all remarkably similar to what happened to the 2008 torch in Paris and London.
But U.S. media couldn't have cared less. According to a Nexis search, NBC, which had rights to the games and devoted significantly more airtime to them than the others, mentioned the protests twice (NBC Nightly News, 2/5/06; Today, 2/9/06); CNN devoted less than 400 words to the story, and just about everyone apparently found the mix of the Olympic torch, protests and violence so unremarkable that they had completely forgotten about it by the time the 2008 protests rolled around.
When hundreds of thousands of anti-war protesters took to the streets in September 2005, CNN's Aaron Brown admitted that "it's true they didn't get any coverage" from his network, which only made passing mentions of the protests, because "the national story today and the national conversation today is the hurricane"-meaning Rita, a storm that struck Louisiana and Texas (Media Advisory, 9/27/05). It's a common media excuse-something else more important was happening, so we just didn't have the time.
Of course, what's deemed important is a judgment call made by the media themselves. The day the torch hit San Francisco also happened to be the fifth anniversary of the fall of Baghdad, and though the Iraqi city was under a tight curfew to prevent protests or violence, at least 23 Iraqis and five U.S. troops were killed. Meanwhile, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, Gen. David Petraeus, and U.S. ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker appeared before Congress for the second of two days, calling for an indefinite halt to troop reductions and framing Iran as the top threat to the U.S. in Iraq (New York Times, 4/10/08).
In newspapers, coverage of the embattled torch edged out coverage of Petraeus and the Iraq policy debate during the week of April 7-13. Despite the fact that no protests happened between April 10 and April 13 and thus coverage dropped dramatically, cable still managed to give the Olympics 6 percent of its news- hole for the entire week, less than the 11 percent they gave to the Iraq policy debate, but double the coverage they gave to events in Iraq (PEJ News Coverage Index, 4/7-13/08).
Different target, different coverage
There is one crucial difference between the protests: their targets. While the San Francisco protesters did hope to send a message to their own political representatives, the Chinese government was their ultimate target, and targeting China is firmly in the mainstream at a time when that country's economic and political power is growing in the face of U.S. economic weakness. China certainly has far more critics among journalists' favored sources and the pundit class than does the U.S. government in a time of war, making it a much more comfortable target of criticism for the media.
On the day the torch visited San Francisco, in fact, the U.S. House of Representatives called on China to "end its crackdown on nonviolent Tibetan protesters and its continuing cultural, religious, economic and linguistic repression inside Tibet," and encouraged the State Department to include China on its list of "the world's most systematic human rights violators" (House Resolution 1077). Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has spoken out in support of Tibet, and in a politically significant move, George W. Bush received Tibet's leader-in-exile, the Dalai Lama, at the White House.
The U.S. government has a history of quietly providing limited support to Tibet freedom struggles when strategically useful in its political chess game with China, beginning with CIA support for the 1959 Tibetan revolt, and evident today with National Endowment for Democracy support for Tibetan groups in exile (AlterNet, 5/14/08). The Free Tibet movement calls for much greater and less opportunistic support, but its general message is rather easily accommodated or appropriated by politicians in Washington and their media enablers.
Those journalists also have biases of their own, and it was sometimes difficult to disentangle journalists' backing for protesters from anti-China sentiment. Many made references to "Communist China" and some even drew starker parallels. Jeffrey Toobin, CNN's legal analyst, argued:
Whether it was the Nazis in 1936 or the Chinese Communists in 2008, they are all using [the Olympics] to promote their country. And if we want to take a stand against that kind of repression, not going to the opening ceremony is a very appropriate way of doing it. . . . It does say the United States government doesn't approve of the Chinese government. And that seems like a very appropriate message to send right now.
CNN's Jack Cafferty then jumped in and took it even further:
We continue to import their junk with the lead paint on them and the poisoned pet food and export jobs to places where you can pay workers a dollar a month to turn out the stuff that we're buying from Wal-Mart. . . . I think they're basically the same bunch of goons and thugs they've been for the last 50 years.
Host Wolf Blitzer chuckled and went to a commercial break.
CNN was quick to point out, too, the media repression in China surrounding the protests that they themselves were reporting with such vigor. Coverage in China was "very limited indeed," CNN correspondent John Vause reported, with state-run media ignoring the protests and mysterious "technical difficulties" blacking out foreign broadcasts at key times. "So, what you're having here in China is essentially one line being carried by the government. Any other voices are being censored out."
In the United States, government censors don't block out coverage of protests they don't like, but they scarcely need to, since the corporate media like CNN so reliably drown out those "other voices" that directly challenge the government's line.




16 Comments so far
Show AllTHANK YOU, Julie. Nationalism really is a cancer, to be rooted out at every turn.
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CEFD61538F931A35753C1A96E958260
Mass coverage of American protests against China, but hardly a whisper about all the American protests against its own government? Huh. Who woulda thunk?
And correct me if I'm wrong . . . but isn't that an example of 'managed information'? Something, might I add, that we Americans so loudly decry the Chinese government of doing, not to mention the former Soviet Union?
Seventhson
Agree it is very much controlled media in the US, perhaps even more than other countries. Some Americans are still under the illusion that they are free and have democracy in America. HA HA HA the second the media is controlled and the elections are controlled you don't have democracy anymore. Wake up Americans and write, phone your elected people and remind them who you are, "WE THE PEOPLE"
"We're at war with EurAsia. We've always been at war with EurAsia."
[...pssst, East Asia]
"We're at war with East Asia. We've always been at war with East Asia."
Some American journalists never cease to amaze me. Totally blind to their own governments' human rights abuses over the years and still continuing in Iraq, they trumpet their criticisms of China.
Human rights abuses in China are deplorable but don't forget that Western democracies are beneficiaries of these abuses in the form of all kinds of imported inexpensive goods. China has contributed in no small degree to a rising standard of living in Western countries.
I wonder what Jack Cafferty's response is to the fact that China has underwritten the prosperity of the US over the past decade or more? What is the current US indebdtedness to China? last I read it was in the hundreds of billions of dollars. Seems to me that Jack lives in a monstrous glass-house.
The truth is you can't even hold these peaceful protests in china otherwise the government will run you over with a tank. Anti-war protests are common, ones directed at China aren't. I think that since the 60's were so used to people protesting over one thing or another that we tend to block it out, im sure the media sees it that way. China's actions in the past year alone are apalling from Tibet, to vetoing sanctions against Zimbabwe, to supporting genocide in Darfur....and that's not even begining to cover it's human rights abuses (250,000 people in reeducation camps according to Time magazine. Criticize the US all you want, they're not even close to China's league.
Many protests happen in China that never make the news. While China has a repressive regime, the US has a larger percentage of its population in prison. The anti-Chinese protests in the US seem hypocritical and naive when our own country is far worse in many respects -- violent aggression and occupations, torture, corruption, internal repression which, though more sophisticated, is really just as bad . . .
And Christiane Amanpour is reported to be involved in other schemes of CNN, read about Congo!
http://www.taylor-report.com/Rwanda_1994/
Jaded Prole August 11th, 2008 9:57 am - "Many protests happen in China that never make the news."
Exactly! My history major senior seminar was a class called "Minorities in China". Wow! What an eye opener. The instructor (a French-born American who spoke 12 languages, married to a Korean woman) gave us all kinds of news not reported here in the good ol' "free" USA about protests going on all the time in China. Many of them were about minority rights. VERY few of them elicited repressive responses from the government. In fact, many of them were quite peaceful. "Course, THOSE never got reported here.
I agree with this article 100 %
When thousands of people on the streets of the Western World to criticize the undoubtedly problematic human rights situation in China, the mainstream US media takes notice.
How ironic then, that when an at least equal number take to the streets to oppose the failed and often grossly unjust foreign policies of the US, from the illegal invasion of Iraq to US support for human rights abuses and war crimes on a massive scale against Palestinians by Israel, to the overthrow of governments across the world, the same media tends to ignore the protests as if they never happened.
The conventional wisdom in the US is that the anti government dissidents in China are prodemocracy heroes while the antiwar/antioccupation activists here in the US are more often than not intimidated by accusations of a lack of patriotism, treachery....or worse.
why the hell do you think I turned my back on america ( small a) and moved to Canada. Democracy and the not bought off elected people are a thing of the passed in america.
That is how strong I feel about the way the US is going the wrong way I had the nuts to move my entire family to another country. I can now watch from a safe distance the total self destruction of america by its greed lies and influence from other countries to a point it will be the largest 3rd world country ever seen in the history of the world. Huge military and the rest are gutter rats fighting over food. So go ahead point your fingers at the world as when you get out of america you will find the world is laughing at you.
Hollywood has done all it could to canonize, if not deify, the "Free Tibet" movement, and way too many people have been taken in by this hot air and that from the US mainstream media. The facts are far different, and this outstanding article from this woman who is with Extra, a real solid progressive source shows at least some of what we need to get to know about this matter, but an article can't cover the whole history of all the propaganda that the often phony "free Tibet" fanatics and dogmatists have put out with all their hagiography of the Dalai Lama who simply puts on his damn trousers the same damn way as I damn do, except he's must more corrupted by his own damn arrogance and false sense entitlement like most jack asses in Hollywood.
Agree 100% with AD August.
Hollywood has made it easy to demonise the Chinese in general, not only with Tibet. Going all the way back to the 1920's and the Fu Manchu serials, the Chinese have been depicted as evil, gangsters, prostitutes etc.
Even as recently as 2006, Martin Scorsese (who also directed Kundun) continued the image of Chiense as bad guys in his movie Departed. Try as one might it's difficult to find any Hollywood movie about Chinese that can be described as being fair.
Here's what Samir M. Janakat, head of the sports edition of Jordan's leading Arabic daily Al-Ra'i said, "Four years ago, I went to China for the first and only time. Before that, all I knew of China is what HOLLYWOOD depicted in its films: China is poor, laggard, chaotic and even evil. However the image was totaled broken when I touched my feet on the land."
With generations of such brainwashing no wonder the mainstream media has bought into it and feel comfortable enough to exaggerate and even lie about the Chinese. Even Cafferty of CNN can feel bold enough to call the Chinese 'goons and thugs'.
Is it any coincidence that it's Hollywood stars jumping on the bash China bandwagon?
This article is excellent...
We should be talking about Adolph W Bush and Benitto Merkel's war on democracy in Eastern Europe. Free Eastern Germany from the rip off Federal Republic of Germany which legally mandates that those doing the same job in Eastern Germany must get paid less than those doing the same job in Western Germany. More to the point, both support the war on democracy using their client and Western created state of Georgia against the decent people of Ossetia. Free Ossetia from the outrageous whips and chains of tyranny of the sadistic, swine state of George. Stop the war crimes against the Ossetian people. Stop the USA and collaborator Germany's war on democracy. Let freedom ring though the neo con tyranny collapse.
Free Puerto Rico, free Bosnia, free Croatia, free the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, free the Golan Heights, and free most definitely Colombia from the iron rule of the genocidal, dope pushing junta. Oh, and free all Ireland-- one Ireland whole and free.