Frank Rich says it well—he often does—but he only tells half
the story.
In his New York
Magazine requiem for the mainstream media, he reports that the
mainstream media has been losing money, readers and staff at an alarming rate…
to the point where Rich reasonably fears for the survival of iconic brands like
The New York Times and the Washington Post.
Newsweek
has
already ceased print publication and Time
is on life support.
Yet, Rich fails to tell the other side of the story: whatever
its financial condition, the mainstream media continues to exercise outsized influence
on American culture and political debate.
It succeeded in putting Barack Obama in the White House,
twice. It is already hard at work on the Hillary campaign.
When it comes to influence, the left-leaning media has been winning out over more
conservative media outlets. Obviously conservative publications have not been doing a very good job of defending their ideas. If they do not know how to
fight back, it’s time they learned.
As the mainstream media’s financial fortunes decline it
exercises more and more political and cultural influence. If your ship is going down why not drag others down with you.
However well Rich said it, Dickens said it better. He was not talking about the media but his opening to A Tale of Two Cities applies perfectly to the current state of the mainstream media:
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times,
it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of
belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the
season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we
had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to
Heaven, we were all going direct the other way….
In many ways, it’s the story of today’s mainstream media.
Unfortunately, Rich can do no better than to offer the
conventional explanation for the current state of the media: the internet and
social media did it in.
In his narrative, no sooner had the Times recovered from
Judith Miller’s pre- Iraq War reports about Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass
destruction than it was hit with a double whammy: the Great Recession and the
rise of social media.
Note how clever Rich is. He acknowledges that the Times slants the news, but declares that its problem has been that it slants too far to the right..
And he blames it all of Judith Miller, for whom he seems to
hold a special animus. The notion that the Times ever lost readership because of Judith Miller is risible. Why not mention
that orgy of coverage of Abu Ghraib or the paper's bias against Israel?
Several years before the Iraq War, I was talking with
someone who, at the time, was working at the New York Times. We were comparing the Times and the Wall Street
Journal when this man, whose politics were to the left of the Times, interjected by
quoting one of his intellectual heroes.
He opined: “As Chomsky said, with the Journal at least you can trust the facts.”
I have not been able to verify that Chomsky said it, but it
is true that newspapers that are addressed to people who will use the
information to make decisions are held to different standards than are papers
whose main purpose is to entertain and propagandize.
When you are using information to conduct your business you
will not long survive by relying on a newspaper that skews the facts as often
as the Times does.
Rich does not emphasize the point, but while Times and the Washington Post are fighting for their lives, but the Wall Street Journal and The Economist and the Financial Times are profitable. Could it be that they give you reliable information and do not use their news columns to tell you what you should think.
They are only marginally profitable, but they are not
selling off assets and laying off staff to stay in the black.
It seems also to be true that business publications have had
a better grasp of the business of publishing. The Journal never gave away content. It has always had a pay wall.
The Times and
other publications have suffered from what Rich correctly calls a “hippie”
attitude of giving it away for free. Now they have a pay wall, but they are
competing with many news sources that do not.
Hopefully, I have offered a fair and balanced appraisal of
Rich’s article. To be fairer and more balanced I will emphasize Rich is writing about the
eclipse of the print media as a business model.
Yet, in the midst of his requiem he fails to mention the one
modern media outlet that has, internet or not, been a rousing financial
success. While the mainstream media is dying before our eyes, Fox News has been, as they say, printing money. Profit estimates for Fox News are approaching a billion dollars a year.
Despite or perhaps because of its profitability, Fox
News is constantly vilified in the mainstream media. It can make all the money
it wants, but the dying mainstream media has made it a priority to prevent Fox from exercising any ideological or cultural influence.
Like any news organization, Fox News has two functions: to
report and to comment. Most of the time it makes every effort to separate the
two. Shepard Smith does not offer commentary. Neither does Bret Baier.
And yet, Fox News is constantly excoriated as a propaganda
organ, to the point that you will have difficulty citing it as a source of information. Rich does not attack Fox by name, but he does so by maligning contributor Judith Miller, without ever mentioning who she works for. Left thinking people do not need to be told.
If the mainstream media is dying, then what is the solution
to its financial distress? Rich suggests that these publications might be
bought up by liberal billionaires who do not, like Rupert Murdoch with The New
York Post, care whether or not they are making money.
If that doesn’t work, their supporters will shift to plan B.
They will argue that these publications are of such
transcendent national interest that they need to be bailed out by the
government. If Michael Bloomberg or Google does not want The New York Times, next stop: NPR.
7 comments:
"Yet, in the midst of his requiem he fails to mention the one modern media outlet that has, internet or not, been a rousing financial success. While the mainstream media is dying before our eyes, Fox News has been, as they say, printing money."
Why would he? As you just point out right above this, he is talking about the eclipse of PRINT media. Fox News Network is not print media. To imply that Fox is special because it has succeeded "internet or not" is nonsensical and inapplicable to his argument.
It is easy to compare the "rousing" sucess of Fox News (or ANY tv show, really) to the decline of PRINT media like the NY Times; the more appropriate comparison is to MSNBC, obviously, or CNN. Can you still then say it is the ONE television news network to be a financial success?
Just stating the obvious here.
Ostensibly, Rich is writing about the print media, as I mentioned. But he also includes television news under the heading of old media.
If it wasn't clear enough, here are a few quotes:
He said this, too:
"You cannot work at any old-media organization, print or television, without having many friends and former colleagues who are seeking work, often outside the news business."
And this:
"The Times has a new CEO, bustling moneymaking schemes, and, soon, a retooled website, but anyone who says he knows how the story will turn out, whether there or at The Wall Street Journal or at NBC News or at this or any other print magazine, is kidding himself."
Describing David Halberstam's book, Rich mentions these four media outlets:
"...four organizations then considered to be serious competitors, if not exactly peers, of the Times: CBS, Time Inc., the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times."
And this:
"But as a new Pew “State of the News Media” study finds, even crime news is in decline on local television these days, no doubt because it requires more reporters than the staples that now dominate: weather and traffic."
And this:
"An essential step to welcoming change is to stop romanticizing what came before. That includes fantasies about the “golden age” of twentieth-century television. Superficial as the network evening newscasts may be now, they are no more so than the halcyon fifteen-minute evening newscasts presided over by Chet Huntley and David Brinkley. As for the sainted Edward R. Murrow, he would have been right at home on 60 Minutes. He didn’t just take on Joe McCarthy and the plight of migrant workers but conducted celebrity interviews in which he lobbed softballs at Sophia Loren, Elizabeth Taylor, and Liberace."
Good riddance. All the leftists want us to do is read poetry while riding a train, eating free-range tofu and admiring the windmill-covered landscape. If you keep telling your customers that their immutable characteristics define them, their values are archaic, their money ill-gotten, and their sensibilities superstitious... you'll probably lose those customers. Never was so much arrogance hoarded by so few. Cry me a river...
Tip
Well, having read his article, I still don't think you can conclude from it a big slight against Fox News. He doesn't mention MSNBC, either. If anything, he seems to lump "cable news" together (except CNN) as part of the "new" vs. the "old" media.
The legacy media still play a big part because there is no similarly sized opposing media--they have the installed equipment. Also, they see their decline, and are shouting louder to cover it up. As Glenn Reynolds says, this will work until it doesn't. (May the day come soon!)
Rich says Jayson Blair was bad enough, but Judy supporting BUSH!!!111!! was just completely outside the pale!
"A clean slate of leaders, uncharacteristically humble circumspection, hard work, and a new regimen of checks and balances restored the paper’s internal equilibrium and external reputation." Riiiiiiiiiiiiight.
Sorry, but his page one was as far as I could get.
The mainstream media delusion is total. Their decline is unstoppable. It's like watching a train wreck in slow motion, but this one is fun!
Tip
Post a Comment