The Versailles Media Got Nothing Wrongby: Paul RosenbergSat Jun 07, 2008 at 14:25 |
| (Another diary about Bill Moyers last night. There's a message here: watch his show! Failing that, the full transcript is here.)
The Republican Party is not the enemy this November. They are a pathetic wreck. Hegemony is the enemy, and the Republican Party's recent inability to enforce hegemony has been superbly compensated for by the corporate media. Cultural hegemony is a concept coined by Marxist philosopher Antonio Gramsci. It means that a diverse culture can be ruled or dominated by one group or class, that everyday practices and shared beliefs provide the foundation for complex systems of domination. Or, as I like to put it, "Hegemony is ideology in common sense drag." A key aspect of Gramsci's theory is that various different cultural institutions each fulfills their own function, often in ways that purportedly have nothing to do with one another-and yet they are actually functioning like various different units in an army-or nowadays an integrated fighting force, involving everything from infantry to satellites in space. The media is an excellent example of this. In the 1990s, the media led the charge to depose Bill Clinton. As Gene Lyons meticulously documented in Fools for Scandal: How the Media Invented Whitewater, the New York Times and Washington Post persistently, repeatedly, and egregiously misreported virtually every major aspect of the so-called "Whitewater scandal." When that failed, and the Monica Lewinsky scandal emerged in its place, dozens of leading newspapers editorialized that Clinton should resign. Sixty percent of the American people disagreed, but they couldn't get a word in edgewise-which is where, when and how MoveOn.org was founded. In contrast, George W. Bush has not merely subverted the most central aspects of our constitutional order with his dictatorial theories of unchecked executive power, he has shredded the Magna Charta as well as the Constitution, and yet the media persists in lying that only the "loonie left" thinks that there's anything amiss. That's hegemony for you. And they do it, in large part, by following the supposedly "nuetral" rules of professional journalism. Although he makes no mention of Gramsci, Jeremy Iggers does a masterful job of showing that journalism ethics itself is the problem here in his 1998 classic, Good News, Bad News: Journalism Ethics And The Public Interest. So long as people think that the trouble with journalism is Jason Blair, not Judith Miller and her editors and publisher, then Houston, we have a problem. (Iggers, writing in the 1990s uses early Reagan-era examples, but the comparative misdeeds are eerily similar.) With all that in mind, here's an excerpt of the discussion that Moyers had last night with John Walcott, Washington Bureau Chief of McClatchy News, one of his ace reporters, Jonathan Landay , and Greg Mitchell, editor of Editor and Publisher magazine, and author of So Wrong for So Long: How the Press, the Pundits--and the President--Failed on Iraq, The Campaign of the Century: Upton Sinclair's Race for Governor of California and the Birth of Media Politics, and Tricky Dick and the Pink Lady : Richard Nixon vs Helen Gahagan Douglas-Sexual Politics and the Red Scare, 1950. It begins on the flip... |
BILL MOYERS:There's been all this media frenzy about Scott McClellan's book. Did McClellan, whom you know, did McClellan do a good thing in writing this book? "The operation was a spectacular success. Unfortunately, the patient died." The rigid refusal to the rethink anything in the light of such spectacular failure is a testiment to the incredible power of hegemony. It's not just thought, it's attitude bred deep in the bone. It's the very air they breath, the five-star restaurants they eat in, the parties they attend-except when that kill-joy Stephen Colbert shows up. It is, quite simply, not what they do. It is who they are. They are Versailles. We are America. The conversation contimued: JOHN WALCOTT: Well, I'm not - I don't know what questions ABC or anybody else asked. They may have asked all the right questions. The trouble is they asked all the wrong people. Truth be damned. We have our conventions to follow. As Stephen Colbert so painstakingly explained: The President makes decisions. He's the decider. The press secretary announces those decisions, and you people of the press type those decisions down. Make, announce, type. Just put 'em through a spell check and go home. Get to know your family again. Make love to your wife. Write that novel you got kicking around in your head. You know, the one about the intrepid Washington reporter with the courage to stand up to the administration? You know, fiction! Back to Bill Moyers: JONATHAN LANDAY: I also want to say one thing I think that it behooves the media to come out - major companies to say, "Yes, we got it wrong," because if you look at surveys today, the American public has lost an enormous amount of trust in the news media, in the people who are supposed to be watch, their watchdogs over government. And yet the number of people who trust the media is, like, 25, 26 percent. In the biz, they're called "news hooks." You have a larger story that needs telling, but to tell it properly, you've got to have people's attention, and at least their potential motivation to listen to a story that's got broader horizons to it. And Mitchell-who knows the biz as well as anyone-was absolutely right. The media has just had an unbelievable series of news hooks on which to hang a serious re-examination of itself-if, of course, they had even the slightest inclination to do so. But since when did King Louis say, "Off with my head!"? Let them eat mistakes. God knows that's one thing there's an endless supply of. |