Townhall...
The
Brave New World of Media
6/23/2011
By Robert Knight
When
I was a reporter years ago in
Ocean City, Maryland, I learned the hard way that freedom of the press
can be
expensive.
In
the dark days of winter, ad revenue
was scarce. Both weekly papers lived to a great extent off the city’s
legal
ads. Our editorials regularly chided Mayor Harry Kelley, while our
competitor
paper remained mayor-friendly. So when Kelley got teed off, he yanked
our legal
ads but not theirs. I can still recall racing with our staff to the
local bank
before paychecks started bouncing.
Today,
the “legacy” media –newspapers,
magazines and broadcasters – face more than ornery public officials.
The
Internet is wreaking havoc with traditional funding streams while
opening
countless opportunities for more voices, citizen journalism and the end
of the
Big Three TV networks’ dominance. The latter actually began with the
debut of
CNN in 1980, and Fox News Channel in 1996, but the Internet and talk
radio have
speeded the decline of ABC, CBS and NBC as well as scores of newspapers
and
magazines.
With
13,400 journalists laid off in
the last four years, reporting has become a mile wide and an inch deep.
There
are more sources and stories than ever, but fewer in-depth pieces
except for
interminable, public interest thumb-suckers that editors like in order
to win
Pulitzers.
The
winnowing out presents major
problems, including less scrutiny of the ever-growing government.
Still, the
“legacy” media anchor the whole information network, since even
bloggers have
to quote reliable sources to be credible. But everything is changing
with
lightening speed.
The
media are in such a flux that the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued a 465-page report on
June 9 that
tries to figure out what, if anything, the government should do about
it.
The
good news is that “The Changing
Media Landscape” rejects a return to the radio-stifling Fairness
Doctrine, and
also FCC Commissioner Michael Copps’ dangerous idea to create a
public-values test
for broadcaster license renewals.
The
FCC report frequently warns
against government entanglement, and cites advances by the new media,
including
“legacy media” Websites. Also, nonprofits now do a lot of original
reporting,
and bloggers analyze government reports. Instant videos are possible
from
millions of cell phone users.
The
authors fret mostly over the
dearth of “local news,” which is not surprising given that the full
title is
“The Changing Media Landscape in a Broadband Age by Steven Waldman and
the
Working Group on Information Needs of Communities.” But the report
provides
countervailing facts, such as, “Over the last seven years, the number
of hours
of local TV news has risen by 35 percent,” along with local newspaper
readership.
The
report also calls for trimming red
tape, informing the public when an advertiser pays for story placement
(“pay-for-play”) and for the FCC to consider letting noncommercial
broadcasters, including religious entities, use up to one percent of
on-air
time for fundraising.
Finally,
the report endorses
public-private collaborations, which is sketchy. But it also trashes
government
subsidies for journalists, a hare-brained idea hatched by the far left
Free
Press, which envisioned a $50 billion “Public Media Trust Fund.” Just
imagine
hordes of AmericCorps volunteers manning the brave new newsroom. The
report
warns that:
“AmeriCorps
has grown and prospered by
focusing on the forms of service on which most Americans can agree …
Creating a
government-financed AmeriCorps for reporters would potentially
seriously harm
AmeriCorps.” (p. 357)
Actually,
I’d worry more about
Pravda-like bulletins, not harm to one of Obama’s favorite boondoggles
Overall,
there is a lot to like in
this FCC report, even if it does describe the Public Broadcasting
Service (PBS)
as “currently the most trusted and neu¬tral source for news, according
to
polls.”
The
bad news is that the report calls
for the government to use race and sex to assign favorable tax
certificates,
and to collect data on “racial, ethnic, and gender employment at
broadcast
stations and cable systems,” which had been discontinued in 1996. The
report
notes that courts have forbidden race-based policies, but skips over
that speed
bump to call for exactly that. Also, the report implies that the
Internet is
under the FCC. This reflects the power grab by FCC commissioners when
they
issued their “net neutrality” rules last December in defiance of a
federal
court ruling and Congress’s unwillingness to extend that power to FCC
bureaucrats.
All
this said, for media watchers, the
report is must reading. Waldman, co-founder of Beliefnet.com and senior
advisor
to FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski, clearly appreciates both the old
and new
media, having had experience in both. You can almost forget that as a
Beliefnet
blogger, he suggested finessing the abortion issue to speed passage of
Obamacare. Almost.
Here
is one of his signature passages
from the FCC report:
“It
is a confusing time. Breathtaking
media abundance lives side-by-side with serious shortages in reporting.
“Eric
Schmidt, former CEO of Google,
certainly conveyed the gist when he estimated that humans now create as
much
information in two days as we did from the appearance of Homo sapiens
through
2003. Or, we could consider that Facebook did not exist in 2003—and now
reaches
more people than all other major U.S. media outlets combined.
“It
is also important to realize that
just because this report points out a particular problem does not mean
that we
believe the FCC has the responsibility or authority to solve it. We do
not view
the government as the main player in this drama.” (p. 9)
No,
let’s hope that compiling this
465-page report is enough for now.
Read
it at Townhall
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