The New York Times is having problems. It’s former executive
editor Jill Abramson called out the paper for biased reporting on the Trump
administration. Of course, we can dismiss Abramson’s opinion as that of a
disgruntled fired employee. But, what to make of Ted Koppel’s similar critique,
namely that the Times slants news coverage to make the Trump administration
look bad?
The Times used to rule the journalistic roost. It used to be
the international paper of record, the Bible of journalism. Naturally, the
arrival of the internet has damaged the Times advertising base, causing the
paper to need a bailout from a Mexican billionaire. And still, the mainstream
media, led by the Times, and followed by major media outlets, even by CNN and
MSNBC, still has the largest aggregate audience. In truth, many other media
outlets take their cues from the Times.
One should add that New Corps’ Wall Street Journal is the
most important newspaper to people in the know, but still, the Times has
traditionally had more influence on the media at large.
So, when the Times runs a major hit piece on Rupert Murdoch
and his media empire, we take notice. Since Murdoch has, by the accounting of
Jeffrey Lord, eaten the Times’s lunch, it is not wrong to consider that the
Times is fighting back by slandering and defaming its major competitor. All’s
fair, if not in love and war, at least in journalism.
One notes that if you compare Fox News with the New York
Times, the former makes far more profit than the latter. Fox News is a cash
cow. The New York Times—at least until Donald Trump bailed it out—is on food
stamps.
So, the Times wants to blame Murdoch for the failure of
liberal democracy. Why not, you ask. The hit piece explains:
The
right-wing populist wave that looked like a fleeting cultural phenomenon a few
years ago has turned into the defining political movement of the times,
disrupting the world order of the last half-century. The Murdoch empire did not
cause this wave. But more than any single media company, it enabled it,
promoted it and profited from it. Across the English-speaking world, the family’s outlets have helped elevate
marginal demagogues, mainstream ethnonationalism and politicize the very notion
of truth. The results have been
striking. It may not have been the family’s mission to destabilize democracies
around the world, but that has been its most consequential legacy.
This paragraph contains so many inaccuracies that it is
impossible to deal with all of them. If liberal democracy has been declining
around the world, the influence of the illiberal Chinese regime is the first
reason. The second reason is that when nations around the world look at
American liberal democracy, they see judges and activists imposing crackpot
ideas on the populace, like the transgender follies. They see a nation that cannot
control its own borders and that is being invaded by peoples who will undermine
it from within. They see activists judges tamping down innovation. They see the same foolish policies in Western Europe. They see
an inability to confront Islamist terrorism… we could go on.
To blame it on Rupert Murdoch is the kind of typical
demonization that has persuaded countries around the world, especially those
that have already undergone their own cultural revolutions, that they do not
want to buy what America is selling.
Lord concludes that Murdoch has supplanted the Sulzberger
family. He has more influence on world affairs and is making a whole lot more
money:
Long
before the dawn of cable news, and long before Rupert Murdoch arrived in
America to expand his Australian newspaper empire, The New York Times and the Sulzberger family that owned it
ruled the media roost.
And now
- they don’t. Because of Rupert Murdoch’s newspaper and television genius, the
Sulzberger influence on the world and in America has been overshadowed by
Murdoch's News Corporation and Fox News.
The
America where attention was paid to Times columnists
and their dominating left-wing world view has vanished - replaced by massive
audiences listening in prime time these days to Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity
and Laura Ingraham. Breakfast is not about reading The Times - it’s about tuning in
to Fox & Friends.
The Times hit job on the Murdochs
and Fox News is furious that the President of the United States - on whom they
spent volumes of print and cyber-ink insisting he would never win-calls not
them but Rupert Murdoch and - oh the horror!!!! - Sean Hannity.
In
short, what this voluminous Times hit piece is really all about is a primal
scream of anger, rage and envy that its once-upon-a-time “Kingdom and Power” of
liberalism is gone - and gone for good. The paper no longer gets to define what
is “truth”, and it most assuredly is no longer “the bible.”
Whatever
else lies ahead for the Murdochs and Fox News, it is very safe to say that this
spittle-flecked Times hit job is in reality nothing more than a testament to
just how effectively The Times monopoly and that of the larger Leftist State
Media has been eviscerated- once and for all.
So, the Times can no longer compete in the matter of
journalism. The internet has given people access to a far wider journalistic field. The wider the field, the more information available, the more
difficult it is for the Times to keep peddling its slanted journalism.
True enough, the mainstream media still holds sway. Murdoch
has merely provided a counterbalance. He has broken the monopoly control that the
Times had on journalism. He was not alone. But, he took advantage of
opportunities that the Times did not know how to monetize. The true story is that
Donald Trump did save the Times from financial oblivion.
Apparently, the business model of the Times has reduced the paper to tabloid journalism. It now keeps feeding
its readers the negative stories that they seem to want. Unfortunately,
being brought up on New York Times stories means not knowing how to think rationally.
2 comments:
I don't trust the NYT; indeed, I despise, detest, and distrust the NYT. They print the writings of Paullie "The Beard" Krugman.
I don't think the Times is dead or without influence. I speak to too many people, at least here in NYC, who repeat what it --and Rachel Maddow--say as Gospel and, likely w/o ever watching Fox, dismiss everything on it as lies and propaganda and anyone who watches or believes it as a fascist. I note this, too, as a facebook meme. But I do think the worldwide wave of distrust in government(s) is caused by the governments themselves.
Post a Comment