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AOL (A division of Time Warner, Inc., New York, NY, www.aol.com) The world's largest online information service with access to the Internet, e-mail, chat rooms and a variety of databases and services.  is muscling its way into online journalism Online journalism is defined as the reporting of facts produced and distributed via the Internet.

An early leader was The News & Observer in Raleigh, North Carolina.
. Be afraid.

MAY 16, 2001 WAS A TYPICALLY eventful day in the never-ending news cycle. George W. Bush unveiled a controversial energy plan, ticking off environmentalists with his zeal for oil exploration. Louis Freeh prepped for his humiliating hu·mil·i·ate  
tr.v. hu·mil·i·at·ed, hu·mil·i·at·ing, hu·mil·i·ates
To lower the pride, dignity, or self-respect of. See Synonyms at degrade.
 mea culpa me·a cul·pa  
n.
An acknowledgment of a personal error or fault.



[Latin me culp
 before Congress as op-ed wags eviscerated the FBI's bungling bun·gle  
v. bun·gled, bun·gling, bun·gles

v.intr.
To work or act ineptly or inefficiently.

v.tr.
To handle badly; botch. See Synonyms at botch.

n.
 of the Timothy McVeigh Timothy James McVeigh (aka Oklahoma City bomber April 23, 1968 – June 11, 2001), was a former American soldier who was convicted of eleven federal offenses and ultimately executed as a result of his role on the April 19, 1995, Oklahoma City bombing.  case. Abortion funding caused a stir on the House floor. Jenna Bush Jenna Welch Bush (born November 25, 1981 in Dallas, Texas at Baylor University Medical Center)[1] is an author and school teacher who is the daughter of U.S. President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush as well as the fraternal twin of Barbara Bush.  received a judicial wrist-slap for underage boozing.

Logging onto America Online, however, one might have surmised that May 16, 2001 was the most frivolous 24-hour stretch in recorded history. On AOL's welcome screen, the startup window that greets about 70 million different people each month, the headlines contained nary nar·y  
adj.
Not one: "Frequently, measures of major import . . . glide through these chambers with nary a whisper of debate" George B. Merry.
 a mention of Arctic drilling or misplaced mis·place  
tr.v. mis·placed, mis·plac·ing, mis·plac·es
1.
a. To put into a wrong place: misplace punctuation in a sentence.

b.
 evidence. In the choicest, eye-level section of the screen, the top item instead screamed: "Give good vibes? Take the attitude quiz!" Below that was an equally earth-shattering tidbit: "See Mariah's makeover pic" Following that: "A fine romance? Find one with personals in 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
."

In the top-right hand corner, just above the weather forecast, was a small box marked "Top News" Perhaps this was where an earnest member of AOL's journalistic stable--a Time reporter, a Fortune columnist--could offer a few quick, sober words regarding the Fed's rate cut, or the Middle East's turmoil. But during the evening's prime surfing hours, the Top News box was strangely empty--a light-blue void on a page otherwise cluttered with "Do you sing in the car?" polls, plugs for the latest J. Lo flick, and "Name that celebrity!" contests.

Such techno-glitches, which occur with disturbing frequency, have yet to hamper AOL's evolution into one of America's most popular news outlets. Every day, nine million people log onto the welcome screen. Compare that to the three million who peruse pe·ruse  
tr.v. pe·rused, pe·rus·ing, pe·rus·es
To read or examine, typically with great care.



[Middle English perusen, to use up : Latin per-, per-
 the daily New York Times. And at a time when network newscasts and major newspapers struggle to retain their audiences, AOL is enjoying spectacular growth; in the first quarter of 2001 alone, the service added 1.75 million new subscribers, giving it a total of 29 million. The next largest competitor, Microsoft's MSN (1) (MicroSoft Network) A family of Internet-based services from Microsoft, which includes a search engine, e-mail (Hotmail), instant messaging (Windows Live Messaging) and a general-purpose portal with news, information and shopping (MSN Directory). , has signed up just five million.

AOL's trashy fare is no less crowd-pleasing than David Letterman's Top Ten Lists or the National Enquirer's "Baywatch Star Caught in Love Nest" stories. But neither late-night talk shows nor supermarket tabloids claim to be anything more than light entertainment, only barely tinged by current events. AOL, on the other hand, seems to consider itself a sober news organization. After all, this is the company that engineered last year's $350 billion merger with Time Warner, home to such serious journalism brands as 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.
, Time, and Fortune. It has hired dozens of veteran reporters from the likes of the Associated Press and The Washington Post to work as online editors, charged with selecting which wire-service stories appear in AOL's news section. Those hires were designed to reflect CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  Gerald Levin's assurance that "journalism is going to be at the heart of this company." And when Editor & Publisher Online omitted AOL from a recent survey of journalism sites, Gary Kebbel, director of programming for the AOL News Channel, emailed a protest letter. He contended that many people use AOL as their online news source in lieu of the Web sites of their local newspapers.

No cut-and-dried figures can back up that claim, but anecdotal evidence anecdotal evidence,
n information obtained from personal accounts, examples, and observations. Usually not considered scientifically valid but may indicate areas for further investigation and research.
 supports Kebbel's vision of AOL as USA Today Lite for Netheads. About a quarter of AOL's usage stems from the viewing of content, from the Top News to dieting advice in the "Lifestyles" section. (The bulk of the remainder comes from email and chat.) And while some subscribers may disregard the notion of AOL as a journalistic outlet--much like those folks who buy The New York Times only for the crossword--there is little doubt that millions spend at least a few minutes each day perusing AOL's stories. And chances are, they're going to find it far easier to locate a tell-all about Christina Aguilera's vixen vixen

female fox.
 makeover than a serious article on Indonesia's embattled president--the former will likely be a blaring headline on the welcome screen, the latter will require four or five twists and turns through the site's less glamorous regions.

If AOL'S version of news delivery is indicative of the future of online journalism, then the future looks mighty grim. No other legitimate news organization relies so heavily on celebrity-oriented drivel driv·el  
v. driv·eled or driv·elled, driv·el·ing or driv·el·ling, driv·els

v.intr.
1. To slobber; drool.

2. To flow like spittle or saliva.

3.
 and trifling service pieces. Top headlines like "Doomed to be a spinster SPINSTER. An addition given, in legal writings, to a woman who never was married. Lovel. on Wills, 269. ?" or "George Clooney: Hot or not?" make AOL seem like little more than an online amalgam of Entertainment Weekly and The Montel Williams Show. Even worse, the service has scant regard for the traditional divide that separates a newsrooms' editorial and business sides. Legitimate stories are seamlessly mixed in with advertorial ad·ver·to·ri·al  
n.
An advertisement promoting the interests or opinions of a corporate sponsor, often presented in such a way as to resemble an editorial.



[adver(tisement) + (edi)torial.
 fluff, and ethically murky sponsorship agreements call into question the entire operation's objectivity. The Internet, once envisioned as a promising venue for independent journalism, is becoming a digitized WalMart circular under AOL'S watch.

Shameless Product Plugs

Dating back to its earliest incarnation, as a gaming service called Control Video Corporation, AOL has fancied itself a populist enterprise unconcerned with geekdom's cyber-libertarian ideals. Though its chairman, the ubiquitous Steve Case, now rubs elbows with prime ministers at Davos, his business roots are decidedly humble--he once peddled sham poo for Procter & Gamble and pepperoni pies for Pizza Hut. Unlike other online pioneers, whose heads buzzed with radical concepts about techno-democracy and the reinvention of the public domain, Case rarely seemed to view the Internet as anything grander than a sales opportunity. It was no gaffe when Barry Schuler, AOL's president of interactive services, recently called himself the "guy who turned the Internet into Happy Meals." Only at AOL could such a statement be deemed a boast.

The paucity of meaningful content on AOL dates back to the company's scrappy origins, when it lacked the resources to obtain brand-name fare--financial analysis from CBS (Cell Broadcast Service) See cell broadcast.  Marketwatch, or Hollywood gossip from Entertainment Weekly. Instead, the service relied on user-created content, particularly the salacious sa·la·cious  
adj.
1. Appealing to or stimulating sexual desire; lascivious.

2. Lustful; bawdy.



[From Latin sal
 babble bandied about in the chat rooms. In 1996, Rolling Stone estimated that the company earned over $7 million per month from sex-oriented chat alone (a figure that Case, ever mindful of AOL'S family-friendly image, vigorously disputed).

Yet content has become one of the company's most lucrative revenue sources. AOL, which once proudly touted a no-ad policy, earned $2.4 billion in advertising and commerce revenue in 2000, doubling its 1999 income. Most ads are viewed as users zip from the welcome screen to the companion "channels," adjoining sites that focus on sports, entertainment, or parenting. Those channels, in turn, steer users toward the e-commerce sites of AOI's sponsors, who shell out eight-figure sums for their privileged status. A marriage-trends "story" on the Women's Channel will inevitably lead to the TheKnot.com; a Family Channel piece that trumpets Mother's Day factoids will nudge users toward 1-800-flowers.com or Godiva.com.

The scheme wouldn't work without the welcome screen, the initial lure in AOL's bait-and-switch advertising strategy. During the mid-1990s, the screen's links tended toward the whimsical--"Toilet Paper: Do We Really NEED It?" or "Don't Look Up! Bird Droppings: What YOU Need to Know." This was before AOL began printing money with advertising revenue; in 1995, the struggling company raked in just $6 million from ads and e-commerce combined. In 1996, a Sony executive bribed AOL into giving his company welcome-screen ink by sending the engineering department a bushel bushel: see English units of measurement.  of Walkmans.

Today, even 10,000 Walkmans couldn't buy that sort of placement. The welcome screen is the Internet's Manhattan, a high-rent district for the General Motors and eBays of the world. In exchange for their millions, deep-pocketed advertisers receive the finest in online buzz. Last fall, after Time Warner's hot.dots magazine began receiving a daily welcome-screen mention, hundreds of thousands of visitors began frequenting the publication's Web site--over a month before the inaugural issue. And when music retailer N2K plugged its fire sale on Titanic soundtracks, it sold over 750 CDs--in the first 20 minutes. Eat your heart out, Ron Popeil.

Not surprisingly, the welcome screen is now packed with in-house ads for AOL's floundering WB television network ("Dawson's Creek: They graduate tonight at 8 p.m.") or tacky come-ons for Martha Stewart-style baubles ("Make this summer bright! Glorious combinations of color and candlelight by Illumination").

"They used to divide the welcome screen into just three little blurbs," says David Cassel, editor of the AOL Watch newsletter and one of the company's most tenacious critics. "Now I see over a dozen links, plus a menu for over a dozen AOL areas. It's like a casino. They want to make it as hard as possible for you to wander off someplace some·place  
adv. & n.
Somewhere: "I didn't care where I was from so long as it was someplace else" Garrison Keillor. See Usage Note at everyplace.
 else."

Since users cannot close the welcome screen as they surf, it is far more valuable to advertisers than the easily ignorable banners or pop-ups that most Web sites offer. And, of course, there is the sheer number of eyeballs at stake, over a quarter of them belong to "newbies" with less than one year's experience online, who are most apt to use e-commerce. "I sort of miss the bird-dropping content," sighs Cassel. "At least that was a bit edgy. Now it's mostly slick corporate propaganda for AOL Time Warner properties."

Mr. Stinky's Back!

The shameless hawking would not be so troubling were AOL more honest about its crassly commercial aims. This is, after all, the corporation that instructed Nora Ephron to change the title of her film from You Have Mail to You've Got Mail The audio announcement heard millions of times per day by AOL users. The voice was recorded by Elwood "El" Edwards in 1989 at the suggestion of his wife Karen, who worked in customer service for Quantum Computer Services (before Quantum became AOL). , the better to publicize its copyrighted catch phrase. But the postmerger AOL crows about its dedication to journalism, as if the welcome screen and its affiliated channels were some sort of digital rival to The Washington Post. To its credit, the service does feature all the top Reuters and Associated Press clippings, often with links to full-text speeches or a few paragraphs of instant analysis. When Vermont senator James Jeffords abandoned the Republicans, for example, the Top News box on the welcome screen did feature a one-click link to the AP story, as well as off-links to a menu of companion pieces on the GOP's miscues or the mood in Vermont. But these wire-service packages are often seamlessly combined with softer items that smack of sponsorship dollars. Right below a recent Reuters headline reading "U.S. Takes Action Against IRA Ira, in the Bible
Ira (ī`rə), in the Bible.

1 Chief officer of David.

2,

3 Two of David's guard.
IRA, abbreviation
IRA.
," for example, AOL's programmers saw nothing wrong with placing a link to a story on Lyme Disease--a link which directed users to an insipid advertorial on MayoClinic.com. Nor did they have any qualms about turning a seemingly objective business feature, "Lower mortgage rates spur refinancing boom," into an off-link that whisked surfers away to Realtor.com. And the spotlight story under the "Technology" banner, a glowing report on Microsoft's Xbox gaming console, failed to mention AOL's considerable financial interest in the system; Warner Brothers has licensed several of its movies to Xbox developers.

There is also a surfeit sur·feit  
v. sur·feit·ed, sur·feit·ing, sur·feits

v.tr.
To feed or supply to excess, satiety, or disgust.

v.intr. Archaic
To overindulge.

n.
1.
a.
 of Weekly World News-like oddities among the news, including an array of Yeti-of-the-Month yarns in the "Watercooler" section. On one typical day, the Watercooler's top stories were "Monkey Man panic grows in New Delhi" and a tale of a giant flower known for its offensive odor. The latter item was the only news-oriented link to earn a hallowed welcome-screen mention, with a teaser teaser

an animal used to sexually tease but not to impregnate the members of the opposite sex. Usually males and they may be surgically prepared to ensure that they cannot mate or are not fertile.
 that read: "Cover your nose! Mr. Stinky's back!"

Even in AOL's more serious quadrants, such as the national news page, the line between objective information and paid advertisements is blurry at best. One headline will lead into a standard wire-service story; another will direct a clicker click·er  
n.
One that clicks, as:
a. A remote control, as for a television or VCR.

b. A computer mouse.

c. A mechanical counter.
 to the for-profit Governmentguide.com, where visitors are peppered with sophomoric soph·o·mor·ic  
adj.
1. Of or characteristic of a sophomore.

2. Exhibiting great immaturity and lack of judgment: sophomoric behavior.
 "fun facts" regarding the Bush administration. (Did you know that Colin Powell "enjoys fixing old Volvos"? Neither did The Washington Monthly.) After a while, ethics-conscious users begin to question anything and everything. Did AOL have a sponsor-related reason for giving such prominent play to "Hormones reduce cancer risk"? What about "Brad Pitt to launch clothing line"?

Hard news without clear commerce tie-ins is treated like digital Brussels sprouts Brussels sprouts, variety (gemmifera) of cabbage producing small edible heads (sprouts) along the stem. It is cultivated like cabbage and was first developed in Belgium and France in the 18th cent. , a barely tolerable nutrient that's ritually shoved to the edge of the plate. Finding the latest scoop on AOL Time Warner recording artists like Lil' Kim or Kid Rock seldom requires more than a click or two--their pretty mugs frequently grace the welcome screen. Finding the latest scoop on California's energy crisis requires considerably more effort. "Half the work of journalism is making decisions about what matters, and cutting out the stuff that doesn't," says Mindy McAdams, the Knight Chair professor of journalism at the University of Florida University of Florida is the third-largest university in the United States, with 50,912 students (as of Fall 2006) and has the eighth-largest budget (nearly $1.9 billion per year). UF is home to 16 colleges and more than 150 research centers and institutes. . "When you go to a news source that you trust, you believe that they're going to give you the most important stuff in the least amount of time" On AOL, however, the most vital news is often buried beneath an avalanche of "Vanilla Ice--Still hot?" and "Monitor credit free--Be notified quarterly of inquiries to your file."

Not Just For Kids

The conventional wisdom holds that the typical AOL user is a teenybopper teen·y·bop·per  
n. Slang
1. A young teenage girl.

2. A teenager who follows the latest fad or craze, as in dress or music.
, far more interested in boy-band gossip than the Nasdaq. But statistics don't support the stereotype; in fact, 84 percent of AOL's members are over the age of 24, and the average age of an online user is 39. Though many AOLers may be heads of households with 12-year-old daughters, a recent American Demographics study found that these kids are not exactly Internet junkies; teens spend 30 percent less time online than adults. And, since they often lack credit cards, they are less likely to be swayed by e-commerce pitches.

AOL bristles at any suggestion that its content policies are less than journalistically sound. The company boasts of employing a hard-nosed staff of editors, including several veterans of America's most influential dailies. But for a company that clucks about its old-school credentials, AOL is surprisingly ornery or·ner·y  
adj. or·ner·i·er, or·ner·i·est
Mean-spirited, disagreeable, and contrary in disposition; cantankerous.



[Alteration of ordinary.
 with curious reporters. "They told us they have a news staff of about 40 people," says Larry Pryor, director of the online journalism program at the University of Southern California The U.S. News & World Report ranked USC 27th among all universities in the United States in its 2008 ranking of "America's Best Colleges", also designating it as one of the "most selective universities" for admitting 8,634 of the almost 34,000 who applied for freshman admission . "We tried to ascertain at one point the accuracy of that statement, and our reporter was physically thrown out of AOL by a security guard. They're extraordinarily defensive about their position on journalism because, I think, AOL fundamentally doesn't understand what journalism is."

The company keeps remarkably tight-lipped tight·lipped also tight-lipped  
adj.
1. Having the lips pressed together.

2. Loath to speak; close-mouthed. See Synonyms at silent.
 when asked about such allegations. The Washington Monthly spent over a month trying to coax an AOL executive--any AOL executive--into making an on-the-record defense of the service's approach to the welcome screen and its subsidiary content. Yet a flurry of polite phone calls and pleading emails (including several to AOL Time Warner editorial tsar Walter Isaacson) were either rebuffed or met with stony silence. In the end, the only official quote provided was a terse statement from corporate spokesman Nicholas Graham: "You can say AOL declined to participate. The executives here decided that this concerned something that was proprietary. ... I can't remember them ever granting an interview on this subject. If you can find a story out there about the welcome screen, I'd love to hear about it."

The company's top brass are not always so reluctant to talk. When Jonathan Sacks, AOL's senior vice president for interactive services, keynoted last year's online-journalism conference at USC An abbreviation for U.S. Code. , his comments scandalized the hundreds of ink-stained wretches in attendance. An ex-Miami Herald reporter with a graduate degree in journalism from the University of Iowa Not to be confused with Iowa State University.
The first faculty offered instruction at the University in March 1855 to students in the Old Mechanics Building, situated where Seashore Hall is now. In September 1855, the student body numbered 124, of which, 41 were women.
, Sacks stunned the crowd with his flipness. In between half-jokes about the public's distaste for long articles and the "threat" of free Internet access on college campuses ("a problem, we're working on it"), he outlined his commerce-centric vision for "interactive journalism."

"In the interactive space, a New York Times book review is more valid in a way, is more useful in a way, when there's a link at the bottom of the screen that takes you to a place that you can buy a book," said Sacks, seemingly unaware of the ruckus that has surrounded the Times's electronic partnership with Barnes & Noble. "That's really what the promise of interactive journalism is about. It's an integrative experience ... We are likely to integrate commerce opportunities" He topped off his sermon with a chilling declaration: "First and foremost, we think people want convenience. Convenience is king in the interactive space."

"The basic thing I walked away from there was that a story was only as valuable as the button you could put at the bottom, where you could sell something related to it," says Ken Layne, founder of the now-defunct journalism site Tabloid.net. "Just at my table, the people were whispering darkly to each other, whispering things like, `What about a famine? What's the link for that? What about a race riot? What's the link for that?'" In a critique of Sacks's speech for the Online Journalism Review, Layne wryly noted that ads for 1-800-flowers.com would be a perfect match for plane-crash stories.

But such dilemmas are of scant concern to AOL's programmers; they are paid to appease advertisers and generate traffic, not wrestle with journalistic quandaries. As a result, ethical missteps are becoming more frequent. In March, for example, The Wall Street Journal reported that AOL irked People.com by asking the site to edit out an offending line ("He may not be Oscar material") from a Keanu Reeves profile; AOL was planning a live chat with the Matrix star, and didn't wish to offend. People.com refused, so AOL didn't link to the story.

AOL claims the requesting employee acted alone and was reprimanded for his transgression. If that is indeed the case, then the company's executives deserve equal censure for dismantling the "Chinese wall Chinese Wall

The ethical (not physical) barrier between different divisions of a financial (or other) institution to avoid conflict of interest. A Chinese Wall is said to exist, for example, between the corporate-advisory area and the brokering department to separate those giving
" that theoretically separates business and editorial interests. When the Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times

Morning daily newspaper. Established in 1881, it was purchased and incorporated in 1884 by Harrison Gray Otis (1837–1917) under The Times-Mirror Co. (the hyphen was later dropped from the name).
 agreed to split some advertising revenue with the local arena, the Staples Center, there was a newsroom revolt; at AOL, such behavior hardly causes an eye to bat. AOL receives a kickback The seller's return of part of the purchase price of an item to a buyer or buyer's representative for the purpose of inducing a purchase or improperly influencing future purchases.  each time a user opens an account with either DLJ DLJ Distributor License for Java
DLJ Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Inc.
DLJ Drive Like Jehu (band)
DLJ Defence Laboratory Jodhpur (India)
DLJ Dead Letter Journal
 or E*Trade, two online brokers who advertise on the service. "If you're DLJ or E*Trade," AOL ad sales guru Meyer Berlow once bragged to Fortune, "you're going to pay me on every single trade, forever." That vested interest Vested Interest

A financial or personal stake one entity has in an asset, security, or transaction.

Notes:
For example, if you have a mortgage, your bank has a vested interest on the sale of your house.
See also: Right
 in the financial well-being of advertisers destroys any semblance of AOL's journalistic credibility.

"The really scary thing," says Layne, "is that a year after [his speech], Sacks won. AOL's earnings are fine, the Time Warner collaboration seems to be going a lot better than a lot of the analysts said. And most of the independent content sites are out of business." Indeed, as the Salons of the Web struggle to remain afloat, AOL keeps marching along. According to Jupiter Communications, AOL Time Warner properties accounted for nearly one-third of all time spent on the Internet this past January. Steve Case is projecting $40 billion in revenue for 2001, an astronomical figure that AOL hopes to achieve via "cross-media opportunities"--massive ad packages that will grant clients visibility throughout the AOL Time Warner empire, from the welcome screen to CNN to InStyle.

Journalism by the Numbers

For the moment, an Internet user can still elude AOL's ad-garbled content by signing up with a rival ISP (1) See in-system programmable.

(2) (Internet Service Provider) An organization that provides access to the Internet. Connection to the user is provided via dial-up, ISDN, cable, DSL and T1/T3 lines.
. But the moment may be brief. The coming migration from dial-up to broadband will be a boon to AOL, which now controls around 20 percent of the nation's cable lines. The current FCC (1) (Federal Communications Commission, Washington, DC, www.fcc.gov) The U.S. government agency that regulates interstate and international communications including wire, cable, radio, TV and satellite. The FCC was created under the U.S.  chairman, laissez-faire devotee Michael K. Powell, seems unlikely to force AOL to share that pipe with competitors; he suggested as much this past February, when he opined that "openness is not always a good thing?' Independent service providers will fold or be gobbled up, and the welcome screen will become an omnipresent om·ni·pres·ent  
adj.
Present everywhere simultaneously.



[Medieval Latin omnipres
 fact of life for Time Warner cable This article or section needs sources or references that appear in reliable, third-party publications. Alone, primary sources and sources affiliated with the subject of this article are not sufficient for an accurate encyclopedia article.  customers. Don't like it? Well, then enjoy your slow-as-molasses 56k-dial-up modem.

Nor will AOL's future reach be strictly limited to computer owners. The company is diving headlong into interactive television with AOLTV (America OnLine TV) An Internet TV service from AOL that provides access via a phone line or through the DirecTV satellite from Hughes Electronics. Versions of the AOLTV set-top boxes also include the TiVo technology for digitally recording TV programs. , a $250 set-top box intended to rival TiVo and Microsoft's WebTV. AOL's cable holdings give its device a competitive edge, since it could be configured to provide special services to existing Time Warner customers. Then, of course, there is the matter of AOL's marketing clout. With free access to the nation's most-read magazines and most-watched cable networks, the company can engineer the sort of publicity campaign that small-fry TiVo can only dream about.

Conscious of the cries of "Monopoly!", Case has been careful to emphasize that AOL is committed to serving the public interest. "Of course we want to make our numbers, and we will make our numbers," he told a conference crowd this past May, referring to his lofty revenue goals. "But we also want to make a difference" Promising words. But Case conveniently neglected to define what AOL means by "public interest," a trite and hazy phrase that is nowadays used to justify everything from the death penalty to mega-mergers.

Chances are, of course, that AOL's definition of the public interest doesn't quite jibe with that of consumer advocates. During the FCC's mergerreview process, AOL and Time Warner filed a joint statement attesting to the public benefits of their impending im·pend  
intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends
1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending.

2.
 union. Quoting liberally from cheerful reports by Goldman Sachs (titled "Perfect Timeing") and Merrill Lynch ("You've Got Upside!"), the lengthy memo gushed about the new company's ability to speed the dissemination of information technology. "This merger is not just about putting different forms of media together," the document quoted Case as saying. "It is about something new and powerful--a truly mass-market, interactive company providing service on a global level that will become even more central to people's lives."

Yet nowhere does this public-interest filing mention AOL Time Warner's commitment to providing objective information--or, as McAdams puts it, understanding "that there is a big difference between a consumer and a citizen" Lost amid all the hubbub about "the spectrum of new consumer offerings" and "boundless possibilities for new consumer services" was any discussion of AOL's attitude toward its role as the nation's foremost media gatekeeper. Will the company provide unbiased coverage of its own financial interests? Is it committed to a clear separation between editorial and advertorial content? Can a balance be struck between the vital ("House keeps Bush abortion aid ban") and the trivial ("Ted Danson: No more Mr. Nice Guy")? The memo addressed none of these concerns.

But Sacks did, if only for an instant, in his infamous USC address. "We're the biggest guys," he said. "We're big, and we're bad?" The hyperbole was meant to elicit laughter among the crowd's idealists, to poke good-natured fun at their cantankerous can·tan·ker·ous  
adj.
1. Ill-tempered and quarrelsome; disagreeable: disliked her cantankerous landlord.

2.
 commitment to the Internet's democratic, even anarchistic an·ar·chism  
n.
1. The theory or doctrine that all forms of government are oppressive and undesirable and should be abolished.

2. Active resistance and terrorism against the state, as used by some anarchists.

3.
 potential. But the jest elicited only dread; the truth can do that.

BRENDAN I. KOERNER is a Markle Fellow at the New America Foundation The New America Foundation is a non-profit public policy institute and think tank located in Washington, D.C. that promotes innovative political solutions transcending conventional party lines -- what they call radical centrist politics.  
COPYRIGHT 2001 Washington Monthly Company
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:journalism standards of America Online
Author:KOERNER, BRENDAN I.
Publication:Washington Monthly
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 1, 2001
Words:3805
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