Related link: https://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/03/opinion/03SULL.html?ex=1391144400&en=d24ab38de…
Every now and then, you run into people who believe that newspapers have a crucial role in society. It’s sort of a benevolent dictator theory, featuring investigative reporters, crusading editors, and getting the information out to the public. A not-so-hidden aspect of this belief is that newspapers are trustworthy, and have the public good at heart. That journalists are somehow slightly more noble-spirited and public minded than the rest of us. That journalism is a noble profession.
In fact, to some degree, I used to believe that.
The big casualty this political season has been any vestige of that belief as applied to large-scale reporting (I’m still willing to stipulate that local reporting might involve some impulse towards the public good). From Howard Raines to astrology, I have no faith in the New York Times’s editorial policies anymore.
Dean’s fabled scream, which was really nothing but which got treated as something enormous, lost me my faith in television and the more immediate forms of publishing (keep in mind: I’m not a big Dean fan. It’s just that there are reasons to be for Dean, and reasons to be against Dead. And the scream was neither).
That the same pundits who proclaimed Dean inevitable now proclaim Kerry inevitable, and proceed to speculate about Hillary-for-VP with about the same levels of (1) proof and (2) confidence, don’t blush and aren’t mocked from every op-ed in the land, makes me wonder about the gullibility of our reporters and editors in general.
And that Janet Jackson’s breast was a bigger story than almost everything else, including the ongoing tales of Saddam’s mendacity well, that’s just plain depressing (or substitute any number of other issues here. There’s lots of things more important than her breast. And if you want to focus on her breast, how about wondering why she’s apologizing for it, but not the guy. How did it become all her fault anyway?).
The big question, for me at least, is where do we go from here. Is it even possible to have a large-scale democracy in a land where the media are hopelessly inept?
If not, how do we fix it? Somehow, I don’t think blogs are the answer.
The big question, for me at least, is where do we go from here. Is it even possible to have a large-scale democracy in a land where the media are hopelessly inept?