by Glynn Wilson
It’s blackberry winter in Alabama with cloudy skies and cool temperatures and there’s not much light for shooting bird pictures. Plus, the spring migration is about over anyway.
So it’s a good time to read and/or catch up on weekend programming on C-SPAN, where you can learn allot about what’s going on in the world beyond the suburbs.
It’s always funny and somewhat instructive to watch the annual White House correspondents dinner at the National Press Club building in Washington, D.C., especially for a credentialed Congressional reporter who has attended events there myself.
Last year on a trip there I met a lot of interesting people, including some of Hunter S. Thompson’s editors and friends - and the famous White House shill reporter and gay male prostitute, Jeff Gannon.
It was interesting to watch President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura flee the building as soon as the dinner program ended after the spoof conservative comedian Stephen Colbert reamed the president while pretending to support him as his hero. It was also seriously funny to watch Bush lookalike comedian Steve Bridges do Bush better than Bush.
Bush Faces Press With Comedian Lookalike
Earlier in the evening, however, there was an interesting program on C-SPAN’s Book TV, which featured MediaChannel’s Rory O’Connor interviewing Danny Schechter, who calls himself the “news dissector.”
Schechter’s new book When News Lies: Media Complicity and The Iraq War is billed as “an up to date indictment of the role media played in promoting and misreporting the war on Iraq.”
According to the MediaChannel.Org Web site, “It is an analysis of how and why the media got it wrong that pinpoints the failures of journalism and the collusion of media companies with the Bush Administration.”
“Most of the anti-war movement focused on the crimes of the Bush Administration ignoring the mainstream media, its far more effective accomplice,” says Schechter, a former network producer with ABC and CNN. “The government orchestrated the war while the media marketed it. You couldn’t have one without the other.”
With the book you also get a feature-length DVD of the prize-winning film WMD (Weapons of Mass Deception), which chronicles the media war fought alongside the military campaign and the struggle to stand up for truth and a foreword by acclaimed media writer and Vanity Fair columnist Michael Wolff, along with prefaces by independent Iraq reporter Dahr Jamail and information warfare specialist Colonel (Ret) Sam Gardiner, a war analyst for the PBS News Hour with Jim Lehrer.
The film WMD, distributed on DVD by Cinema Libre Distribution, won top documentary prizes at film festivals in Austin Texas, Denver Colorado and Durban, South Africa.
For more information and to see the trailer narrated by Academy Award winner Tim Robbins, visit wmdthefilm.com.
Or check out Schechter’s media watchdog site, MediaChannel.Org.
It has long been my position that the media and the press need critics from the left as well as the right. As an investigative reporter who got into the news business at a time when then-President Ronald Reagan had the press on the ropes and the Moral Majority had the media on the march to the right, I have watched with great angst as this trend has continued under the fear-mongering Bush administration.
It is unclear whether the media and the press in this country will take up the call and respond to this criticism, or whether all the new alternative media sources will supplant them. But it is clear that large numbers of people are disgruntled with the mainstream media and turning to alternative sources for news online.
According to a survey by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, the World Wide Web continues to grow as a source of news for Americans. One-in-four, 24 percent, list the Web as a main source of news. Roughly the same number, 23 percent, say they go online for news every day, up from 15 percent in 2000; the percentage checking the Web for news at least once a week has grown from 33 percent to 44 percent over the same time period.
We say long live the press, the Internet, the First Amendment and the United States of America. But the media critics are right. The corporate media is complicit in this war and the damage this administration has done. The public should hold them accountable and raise hell about it.