Bloviation Nation: Why are we so ashamed that pundits rule? (Culture and Reviews).When Nielsen Media Research announced recently that the Fox News Channel had topped rivals CNN CNN or Cable News Network Subsidiary company of Turner Broadcasting Systems. It was created by Ted Turner in 1980 to present 24-hour live news broadcasts, using satellites to transmit reports from news bureaus around the world. and MSNBC MSNBC Microsoft/National Broadcasting Company in monthly ratings, the news was greeted as the gravest blow to leftist left·ism also Left·ism n. 1. The ideology of the political left. 2. Belief in or support of the tenets of the political left. left media bias since Bernard Goldberg's imaginatively titled book Bias hit the streets. "We believe that if anybody's point of view is eliminated, that's biased, including conservatives," said syntax-challenged Fox News Chairman Roger Ailes Roger Eugene Ailes (born May 15, 1940) is the president of Fox News Channel and chairman of the Fox Television Stations Group. He was a media consultant for Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and George H. W. . And more than a million viewers--fed up with the way Peter Jennings advocates nationalizing the stock exchange, Tom Brokaw Thomas John Brokaw (born February 6, 1940 in Webster, South Dakota) is a popular American television journalist, Previously working on regularly scheduled news documentaries for the NBC television network, and is the former NBC News anchorman and managing editor of the program eviscerates the "fascist pigs" of the World War "" generation, and Dan Rather openly calls for the destruction of Israel--agreed with him. But Fox News' motto--"We Report, You Decide"--hints at another piety, held in even higher regard than the agon of Republicans and Democrats. This belief, shared even by those who find Fox as reliable as Das Reich, holds that the public is tired of idle punditry, talking-head spin, round-table bloviation. What the people want, goes the song, are facts! "Citizens intuitively know that the best and most reliable work of the press comes when it is providing independent information," Bill (ovach and Tom Rosenstiel, of something called the Project for Excellence in Journalism The Project for Excellence in Journalism is a US non-partisan, non-profit research organization that uses empirical methods to evaluate and study the performance of the press. In its mission statement, PEJ claims that it is not ideological or political. , suggested in a recent New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times opted. "We know...that people like information and factualness," Rosenstiel continued, introducing survey results showing increasing public dissatisfaction with the media. "People actually resent the media getting ahead of the facts." In a recent Pew Center poll, a solid majority said the media "gets in the way of society solving its problems," a third believed media criticism "keeps political leaders from doing their job," nearly half found criticism of the armed forces "weakens defense," and a quarter simply deemed the media "immoral." All this would make food for thought, if only the public, in undiminished and indeed ever-growing numbers, did not demonstrate its thirst for the very opinion-slinging that is such a blight on the culture. A few hours of viewing the newly triumphant Fox News reveals less investigative journalism than punditry unchained: The O'Reilly Factor (self-pitying superstar Bill O'Reilly's "spinfree" hour), Honnity& Colmes (a lib/con face-off/yawn-fest in the classical mode), The Big Story (mushmouthed banalysis by ghoulish ghoul n. 1. One who delights in the revolting, morbid, or loathsome. 2. A grave robber. 3. An evil spirit or demon in Muslim folklore believed to plunder graves and feed on corpses. MSNBC retread re·tread tr.v. re·tread·ed, re·tread·ing, re·treads 1. To fit (a worn automotive tire) with a new tread. 2. John Gibson), and so on. Granted, Fox News' chump change ratings--like those of all the cable news channels--is more a testament to audience fragmentation than to the overriding will of the American people; but if news junkies really are fed up with palaver, they've got a funny way of showing it. This is hardly the only instance of a revealed preference for punditry. Fans of the new MSNBC show Alan Keyes Is Making Sense Alan Keyes Is Making Sense was a short-lived news talk show on MSNBC that ran for 23 weeks in 2002. It did not air on three dates because of the 2002 State of the Union Address, coverage of Robert Blake's arrest, and Labor Day 2002. unanimously praise the recidivist recidivist n. a repeat criminal offender, convicted of a crime after having been previously convicted. (See: habitual criminal) presidential candidate for bringing "truth" to the liberal media, though (eyes does no original reporting, expends no visible effort verifying data, and in fact doesn't even seem to be listening to his guests. Practitioners of weblogging, the current Big Thing in vanity publishing, congratulate themselves for "fact-checking" the major media, while producing an opinion-to-fact ratio not seen since the golden age of talk radio. (And a gander Gander, town (1991 pop. 10,339), NE Newfoundland, N.L., Canada. Gander's airport, an important base in World War II, is a hub for international flights; it also attracts many refugees. It was the site of a Dec. at the Arbitron top 20 indicates talk radio's golden age still has some legs left.) Or consider the section of local newspapers consistently ranked as most popular with readers: the sports page. With hundreds of Web sites providing scores, fan bulletin boards tracking every hint of a trade, and several 24-hour cable channels providing continuous news and highlight clips, sports reporting functions have been entirely preempted. By the logic of Excellent Journalism types, sports pages can add no value beyond spin and thus should be headed for the showers. But this logic means nothing to the sports fan, who knows the joy of seeing news you already know rehashed by a writer you really like (or, even better, a writer you really hate). This interpretation of the facts has no constituency. Good-journalism nags are wedded to the notion that good citizens loathe the kommentariat." Opinioneers themselves are convinced they're serving the Truth and take offense at the notion that their definition of truth consists largely of shouting their opinions louder than the other guy. But there is something laudable in the rise of the bloviation nation. Among other things, what is instantly recognizable as opinion is much easier to ignore than what is presented. as fact. (The notion of zombified masses sitting around accepting Bob Novak's every brain fart has always been a fond one.) More important is the fact that, against the wishes of civic-minded schoolmarms, increasing numbers of Americans are gthering in a thriving, self-selecting, and increasingly participatory version of what activists call The Commons. That this gathering place looks less like Speaker's Corner than a corner bar is of concern only to those already convinced the neighborhood is going to hell. Tim Cavanaugh (tim@simpleton sim·ple·ton n. A person who is felt to be deficient in judgment, good sense, or intelligence; a fool. [simple + -ton (as in surnames such as Chesterton, Singleton). .com) is a writer living in San Francisco. |
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