I am not sure exactly when the death of
television news took place. The descent was gradual—a slide into the
tawdry, the trivial and the inane, into the charade on cable news
channels such as Fox and MSNBC in which hosts hold up corporate
political puppets to laud or ridicule, and treat celebrity foibles as
legitimate news. But if I had to pick a date when commercial television
decided amassing corporate money and providing entertainment were its
central mission, when it consciously chose to become a carnival act, it
would probably be Feb. 25, 2003, when MSNBC took Phil Donahue off the
air because of his opposition to the calls for war in Iraq.
Donahue and Bill Moyers, the last honest
men on national television, were the only two major TV news
personalities who presented the viewpoints of those of us who challenged
the rush to war in Iraq. General Electric and Microsoft—MSNBC’s
founders and defense contractors that went on to make tremendous profits
from the war—were not about to tolerate a dissenting voice. Donahue was
fired, and at PBS Moyers was subjected to tremendous pressure. An
internal MSNBC memo leaked to the press stated that Donahue was hurting
the image of the network. He would be a “difficult public face for NBC
in a time of war,” the memo read. Donahue never returned to the
airwaves.
The celebrity trolls who currently reign on
commercial television, who bill themselves as liberal or conservative,
read from the same corporate script. They spin the same court gossip.
They ignore what the corporate state wants ignored. They champion what
the corporate state wants championed. They do not challenge or
acknowledge the structures of corporate power. Their role is to funnel
viewer energy back into our dead political system—to make us believe
that Democrats or Republicans are not corporate pawns. The cable shows,
whose hyperbolic hosts work to make us afraid self-identified liberals
or self-identified conservatives, are part of a rigged political system,
one in which it is impossible to vote against the interests of Goldman
Sachs, Bank of America, General Electric or ExxonMobil. These
corporations, in return for the fear-based propaganda, pay the lavish
salaries of celebrity news people, usually in the millions of dollars.
They make their shows profitable. And when there is war these news
personalities assume their “patriotic” roles as cheerleaders, as Chris
Matthews—who makes an estimated $5 million a year—did, along with the
other MSNBC and Fox hosts.
It does not matter that these celebrities
and their guests, usually retired generals or government officials, got
the war terribly wrong. Just as it does not matter that Francis Fukuyama and Thomas Friedman
were wrong on the wonders of unfettered corporate capitalism and
globalization. What mattered then and what matters now is
likability—known in television and advertising as the Q score—not
honesty and truth. Television news celebrities are in the business of
sales, not journalism. They peddle the ideology of the corporate state.
And too many of us are buying.
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