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Corporate Versus Independent Media.


During the recent protests in Washington, D.C., against the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, the leading cable news network became fascinated with "independent media." Journalism free of huge economic interests--what a concept!

"Modern-day demonstrators say you just can't trust folks like us, the so-called corporate media," a 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.
 anchor explained, introducing a report that aired repeatedly over a two-day period. Correspondent Brooks Jackson took it from there. "They call themselves the independent media," he said, and that means working without ties to the large corporations of the media world.

"Global corporate media? Gee, that would be us," Jackson deadpanned, "CNN, owned by Time Warner, soon to be merged with America Online See AOL. . They don't like us very much. They want to tell their story their way." Naturally, CNN proceeded to tell its story CNN's way. The report allowed the "independent journalists" just a few tightly snipped words in edge-wise. But at least one incisive remark made it through the network's editing gauntlet: "We believe that objectivity is, in fact, a myth--that everyone has a bias, everyone has an agenda, and that corporations, like major news corporations, have a corporate bias."

Well, getting even a few seconds to make that point on CNN amounted to a bit of a breakthrough, although the correspondent's narration was intent on maintaining a bemused tone. Meanwhile, as usual, self-satire on CNN's part appeared to be inadvertent.

Midway through the report, one of the independent journalists complained that on television "usually the corporate folks get the last word." Sure enough, a minute later CNN's Jackson got the last word, reading the end of the script as he noted "some unintended irony--a protest against globalism glob·al·ism  
n.
A national geopolitical policy in which the entire world is regarded as the appropriate sphere for a state's influence.



glob
 covering itself on the World Wide Web." It was the kind of quip quip  
n.
1. A clever, witty remark often prompted by the occasion.

2. A clever, often sarcastic remark; a gibe. See Synonyms at joke.

3. A petty distinction or objection; a quibble.

4.
 that goes over big in network studios, a smirky smirk  
intr.v. smirked, smirk·ing, smirks
To smile in an affected, often offensively self-satisfied manner.

n.
An affected, often offensively self-satisfied smile.
 tag line tag line also tag·line
n.
1. An ending line, as in a play or joke, that makes a point.

2. An often repeated phrase associated with an individual, organization, or commercial product; a slogan.

Noun 1.
 with insight more apparent than real. In this case, the correspondent provided an easy cliche, obscuring the vast distinction between international solidarity and corporate globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
.

Gathering in the nation's capital to take action on behalf of human rights, economic justice, labor rights Labor rights or workers' rights are a group of legal rights and claimed human rights having to do with labor relations between workers and their employers, usually obtained under labor and employment law. , and environmental protection, thousands of protesters understood from the outset that mainstream news was unlikely to illuminate the key issues. Efforts by independent journalists have made alternative coverage available at www.indymedia.org and other websites. These days, news stories about "independent media" often emphasize the use of digital technology. But the most important successes are human rather than technical. No matter how modern the streaming audio A one-way audio transmission over a data network. It is widely used on the Web as well as company networks to play audio clips and Internet radio. Computers in home networks stream audio (mostly music) to digital media hubs connected to home theaters.  and video, it wouldn't matter much if people across the country and around the planet weren't eager to find out what anti-corporate demonstrators are doing and why.

Within the appreciable constraints of corporate journalism, the mass media's coverage of the protests against the IMF IMF

See: International Monetary Fund


IMF

See International Monetary Fund (IMF).
 and World Bank included some valuable reporting. For instance, Time magazine's April 24 edition had a short trenchant piece headlined "The IMF: Dr. Death Dr. Death is a moniker that has been adopted by, or an epithet that has been applied to, multiple people:
  • Aribert Heim, an Austrian doctor and one of the world's most wanted Nazi war criminals.
?" Such content exists in mainstream media today because--for years and decades--activists as well as small (and yes, independent) media persisted in challenging the power of corporate globalizers while large media outlets hardly could have seemed to care less.

Yes, corporate sensibilities usually get the last word. But not always.

So, I conclude here with words from one of the great American journalists and media critics of the last century, George Seldes. For several decades, he struggled to boost journalistic independence as a crucial antidote to the convergence of big money and media power. "Only in democratic countries," he wrote in the 1930s, "is there the beginning of a suspicion that the old axiom about the press being the bulwark of liberty is something that affects the daily life of the people--that it is a living warning rather than an ancient wisecrack wise·crack   Slang
n.
A flippant, typically sardonic remark or retort. See Synonyms at joke.

intr.v. wise·cracked, wise·crack·ing, wise·cracks
To make or utter a wisecrack.
. A people that wants to be free must arm itself with a free press."

If cable television had been around then, top news editors at CNN probably would have considered Seldes to be an odd sort of fellow. He was an independent journalist who believed in eternal vigilance as a prerequisite for the free flow of information. "Never grow weary of protesting," he advised. "In this sensitive business of dealing with the public which depends on faith and good will, protest is a most effective weapon. Therefore protest."

Norman Solomon is a syndicated columnist. His latest book is The Habits of Highly Deceptive Media.
COPYRIGHT 2000 American Humanist Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Solomon, Norman
Publication:The Humanist
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 1, 2000
Words:725
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