The National Entertainment Chart demonstrates, again, how enormous the
media conglomerates are and how much of our core media are under their
control. Although concentration has not increased especially over the
past few years, the damage has been done. Democracy is premised on a
free press, and freedom of the press is premised on the absence of
public or private gatekeepers with monopolistic power. It is why the
Supreme Court ruled in 1945 that antitrust was probably more appropriate
in the realm of media than in any other area. Looking at this chart, we
can see that A.J. Liebling's adage that "freedom of the press is
limited to those who own one" is frightfully accurate, with all that it
says about the state of our core freedoms and our democracy. The Supreme
Court was sixty-one years ahead of its time.
This concentrated, conglomerated and profit-driven media system is
hardly the result of "free enterprise." These giant companies are the
recipients of enormous direct and indirect subsidies and/or
government-granted monopoly franchises. They include: monopoly licenses
to radio and TV frequencies, cable and satellite TV monopoly franchises,
magazine postal subsidies and copyright, to mention a few. For these
firms the most important competition may well be in Washington, getting
the cushy subsidies and licenses. These policies, worth tens of billions
annually, are generally made in our name but without our informed
consent. That is the heart of the problem, and it points us to the
solution: informed public participation on media policy-making.
Case in point: This summer will see the FCC's review of the ban on
cross-ownership, that is, preventing firms from owning both daily
newspapers and broadcasting stations in the same community. If the Bush
Administration gets its way, the rule will be scrapped, local media
monopolization will explode and this chart may someday be regarded as
mapping a veritable golden age of competitive media. Company-town media,
with one or maybe two conglomerate-owned McNewsrooms serving an entire
community, will be the order of the day. In 2003 a massive public outcry
prevented the elimination of the cross-ownership rule, and if the public
speaks we will stop the Bush Administration again this year. A broad
bipartisan coalition has taken shape at www.stopbigmedia.com to organize
the fight.
For many, the Internet was going to be a technological solution to the
problem of media concentration, blasting open the system and slaying
monopoly media power. Despite the Internet's truly revolutionary
implications, in itself it cannot address the core crises of our media:
the collapse of journalism and the rise of hypercommercialism. As this
chart shows, the media giants are using their immense market power to
convert the Internet into a psychedelic commercial medium, where these
problems will persist.
They also use their considerable political power. The myth of the
Internet is that it is a magic technology unaffected by policies. Not
true. The genius of the Internet has been a series of policies and
subsidies that nurtured it, especially "network neutrality," meaning all
users and websites have had equal access to the Internet without
discrimination by the Internet service providers. This is now under
direct attack by the (government-created) cable and telephone
monopolies, which want effectively to privatize control (in their hands)
over who is allowed to have a website and who is not. You can learn
about the battle to preserve network neutrality, to defend the genius of
the Internet, at www.savetheinternet.com, the website of the coalition
leading the fight to see that the First Amendment endures in the digital
age.
Freedom of the press is something we must continually fight for, or we
stand to lose it. If we contest corrupt and secretive policy-making, if
we draw citizens into the debate, as we have learned in recent years, we
can and will win. It is why the media reform movement is exploding
across the nation.
Robert W. McChesney, who teaches at the University of Illinois, is the author of Rich Media, Poor Democracy (New Press) and, with John Nichols, of It's the Media, Stupid (Seven Stories). With John Nichols, he founded Free Press, a media reform network (http://www.freepress.net).
© 2006 The Nation
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