In
it's final days, Campaign 2004 has become even nastier. At the core of this devolution
of our politics process sits the campaign media -- a mob of reporters too overworked
to stray from the campaigns' master script of attack and counter. Character assassinations
meant to further polarize American voters, have taken center stage in our 24-hours
news cylce, with the candidates' stances on the issues -- healthcare, education,
the economy, anyone? -- shoved to the margins.
The
latest GOP ad on the air in Colorado and other battleground states features bloodthirsty
wolves as the terrorist threat from which the Bush campaign claims it's saving
America. It is yet another representation of the fear mongering that drives their
last-minute rush to November 2. Such negative ads are everywhere with few correctives
in the news.
Ad
watcher Kathleen Hall Jamison says, according to Fred Brown of the Denver Post
that impact of negative advertising may be a primal survival instinct. "People
remember what's bad -- the negative -- because it's more likely to hurt them or
eat them." Eat them?
Mike
Cummings at the University of Colorado says that campaigning is more negative
than ever and candidates are less shy about "savaging" their opponents.
The
viciousness on TV is not confined to the TV screens. A local story reports that
"Littleton teenager Aaron Oster-Beal: awoke to the find the family's Kerry Edwards
yard sale covered with a rude surprise -- a pile of dog excrement."
Talk
about a campaign that's become, to put it bluntly if crudely: full of shit.
And
where is the news media while all of this is going on. They are selling the ads
and fanning the flames with more heat than light.
Election
coverage has a dynamic that goes largely unchanged year after year. Just like
in the war coverage of Iraq there is a "master narrative" driving the reporting.
This year's master narrative revolves around the dirty back and forth between
the campaigns, a process made simple for journalists by a coterie of campaign
operatives on hand to deliver the latest jab.
It
is widely assumed that our media operates outside the political system as a watchdog,
a "fourth estate." But like in the Iraq War in which CENTCOM commander Tommy Franks
assigned the media a role in his war plan as "the fourth front, " the role of
the media has changed. Media today is an integral part of the political process
as well, a key component in what I call our "Mediaocracy."
After
the 2000 election, I co-edited a book challenging the simplistic belief that George
Bush and Bush alone "stole" the election. In "Hail to the Thief." (Innovatio)
I argued that we can only understand what happened in that election by understanding
the role, function and performance of the media that covered and mis-covered it.
In February
2001, red-faced media executive admitted to a Congressional committee that their
election eve forecasts, which influenced the outcome, were deeply flawed.
So
sorry!
I
wrote then. "The counting and undercounting of the election ballots, the mistaken
votes and bizarre 'overvotes' was a scandal seen around the world, Rarely seen
and poorly covered in the media was another scandal within that scandal -- the
role played by the media itself."
That
scandal was not a crude conspiracy nor is it a simple accidental occurrence Its
roots can be found in the corporate media environment that has been changing for
years as well as in the increasing corporatization of politics itself.
It
reflects a growing symbiotic relationship between increasingly interlocking media
elites and political elites. Together they form a powerful interdependent system
in which overt ideology and shared worldviews mask more covert subservience to
corporate agendas. Together these two forces form a Mediaocracy -- a political
system tethered to a media system
After
every election, journalists do post-mortems acknowledging their own limits and
mistakes. The honest ones admit there was a uniformity of outlook in which the
horse race and scandals are over covered and the issues under covered.
They
concede that there was a focus on polls without explaining their limits adequately
or how polls in turn are affected by the volume and slant of media coverage. There
were criticisms of how entertainment values infiltrated election coverage, what
TIME magazine calls "Electotainment" They bemoan the fact that were was more spin
and "opinionizing" than investigative reporting.
Has
this changed in election 2004 or is it more of the same? While others forecast
the results, I can safely predict that these deeply institutionalized media failures
will once again be acknowledged and decried in this year's post-mortems.
When
will the media perform its own pre-mortem?
Danny Schechter is executive editor of MediaChannel.org. His new film WMD (Weapons
of Mass Deception) on the media coverage of the war will be released this month
by Cinema Libre Studio. See www.wmdthefilm.com
for more.
©
2004 MediaChannel.org
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