When super-pundit Robert Novak stormed off the set of a live CNN
show
Thursday -- just after uttering what the New York Times delicately
calls “a profanity” -- it was an unusual episode of TV punditry. With
rare exceptions, the slick commentators of televisionland keep their
cool. But we’d be much better off if they all disappeared.
Novak’s unscripted exit from the telecast may have been a
preemptive
strike -- a kind of semiconscious work stoppage -- to avoid squirming
under the hot lights. “The moderator of the program, Ed Henry, later
said on the air that he had warned Mr. Novak that he planned to ask
him ‘about the CIA leak case,’” the Times reports. As a
bottom-feeding big fish in the pond of political journalism, Novak
wants control over the sunlight in his face.
It has become a cliche to complain about the cable news channels.
Fox
News is notorious -- or revered, depending on one’s political outlook
-- for a hard-right style that sometimes resorts to shouting down
dissenters or cutting off their microphones. Bombast has become
professionally respectable; many TV journalists yearn to be the next
Bill O’Reilly.
CNN used to pride itself on offering a more tamped-down,
supposedly
erudite version of political debate. Yet the formula, in its own way,
has always been heavily ideological. The name of one long-running
show -- “The Capital Gang” -- has been an unacknowledged double
entendre, with panelists speaking for an array of views that all fit
snugly under the big tent of financial capital. Debate might get a
little heated, but nobody wants to shake up the corporate system too
much, thank you. (No wonder. That system has made everyone in the
gang very affluent if not outright wealthy.)
Take a look at prime-time CNN now, and you might think that the
really intellectual program in the lineup is the one hosted by Larry
King. The latest developments from police departments, courtrooms,
and morgues -- often overlapping with Hollywood -- have become the
breaking news most often tracked by the cable network that’s still
claiming, with a high jump over lowered standards, to be “the most
trusted name” in news.
The downhill slide of CNN is about entertainment that masquerades
as
journalism. It runs parallel with MSNBC’s plunge into right-wing
blather that poses as discourse. The tipping point came in late
February 2003 (three weeks before the U.S. invasion of Iraq began),
when management at MSNBC cancelled the nightly “Donahue” program.
An in-house report that leaked from the network said Phil
Donahue’s
show would present a “difficult public face for NBC in a time of
war.” The problem: “He seems to delight in presenting guests who are
anti-war, anti-Bush and skeptical of the administration’s motives.”
The danger -- quickly averted by management -- was that the show
could become “a home for the liberal anti-war agenda at the same time
that our competitors are waving the flag at every opportunity.” So,
to steer clear of any such catastrophe, MSNBC made itself a home for
the conservative pro-war agenda.
During wartime -- and the current U.S. war efforts have no end in
sight -- corporate media managers see waving the flag as a very good
business practice. In sharp contrast, offering challenges to
militarized mind sets is apt to be viewed as quite hazardous.
This process is mostly unspoken and maybe even unconscious. But
the
results can be seen, heard and read every day in the U.S. mass media.
Tactics and specific politics of war may be hotly debated in major
news outlets, but the coverage scarcely raises a peep about the
fundamentals of the USA as a warfare state.
Norman Solomon is the author of the new book “War Made Easy: How
Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.” For book excerpts
and
other information, go to: www.WarMadeEasy.com
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