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CrisisPapers Donating Member (271 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 11:15 AM
Original message
Pity the Poor Mainstream Media!
| Ernest Partridge |

It is very difficult for an old liberal like me to be sympathetic about the plight of the corporate media, given the way they have behaved of late. But the simple fact of the matter is that the commercial news media have fallen into a deep financial pit, and that is both good news and bad news for the political health of our republic.

In 2005, newspaper circulation declined over the previous year by 2.6 percent, with the largest declines posted in the major newspapers. Still worse, in 2007, newspaper advertising revenue fell by 9.4 percent. As a result of this shrinkage, in 2007 2,400 journalists lost their jobs, and 15,000 have been canned in the last decade.

The predicament of network TV evening news programs is still more desperate. In 1980, the combined audience for the NBC, CBS and ABC newscasts was 53 million. Just last month, that audience tallied at 21.5 million: about seven percent of the US population. And the median age of that audience is 60.2, which means that the networks are failing to reach the essential younger age cohorts.

The newspaper and broadcast industries cite a number of alleged reasons for these figures: the internet, competition from cable news programs, and declining literacy and political interest among the public.

Missing from this list is "the crud factor"; namely, that the quality and credibility of reporting has deteriorated so spectacularly that the public, fed-up with the insults and lies, has turned to other sources of news and information. As Newsweek's Tony Dokoupil reports: "less than one person in five believes what he reads in print... and nearly nine of ten Americans believe that journalists are actively biased."

The good news: at long last, the mainstream media is being punished for its failure to perform its essential service to the public; which is the presentation of accurate and relevant news along with competent, informed and diverse opinion.

The bad news: as the founders of our republic warned us, access to essential public information and the free publication of diverse opinions are indispensable to a free society. And as Thomas Jefferson wrote to John Jay, "our liberty depends on the freedom of the press, and that cannot be limited without being lost." Fortunately, a sizeable portion of our population, having acquired a healthy contempt for the corporate media, has found more reliable and informed sources of information in the alternative press and in the internet.

This promising development is undermined by the plain fact that the growing use of the internet as a free source of information and opinion is economically unsustainable. Why buy a newspaper or a magazine, when much or most of the content therein can be read for free on a computer monitor? And if so, who then will pay the researchers, writers, investigators, graphic designers, video producers, and publishers who gather, authenticate and then write and publish quality news and opinion?For as we the "news consumers" too easily forget, quality journalism comes to us at a cost. The all-too-infrequent investigative reports in today's media often require hundreds of hours of "hidden" labor by reporters and their staffs. The Pulitzer Prize winning disclosures in The Washington Post of the deplorable conditions at Walter Reed Army Medical Center required months of investigation by Dana Priest, Anne Hull, and Michel du Cille. Likewise, James Risen's and Eric Lichtblau's exposure of illegal wiretaps by the Bush administration, and David Barstow's recent uncovering of the Pentagon's "hidden hand" inside the sock-puppet media "analyses" by retired military officers, each of which required substantial financial support by the publisher, The New York Times. Exposés such as these are, in turn, the raw material of journalistic scrutiny, and citizen activism and dissent, all of this nourished by the considerable investment of time and money by the publishers. Conversely, the quality of news reporting, in particular foreign reporting, has been severely compromised by the reduction and closing of news bureaus throughout the world.

If independent investigative reporting and responsible journalism are to be restored, how are they to be financed? Not by net surfers like you and me, who enjoy the product of hard journalistic labor for free. And yet, all of the aforementioned "scoops" – about Walter Reed Center, the illegal wiretaps, the retired military "experts" – can be had, gratis, on the internet. Just follow the links. To be sure, many websites, including those of print publications, are at least partially supported by advertising income. Even so, it is doubtful that advertising alone can support a flourishing alternative independent media. Moreover, if ad revenue is to be the primary support of this new media, then the concerns of the commercial sponsors will all too often trump the public interest -- a situation that is today the scourge of "the old media." I happen to subscribe to The Nation, The American Prospect and Mother Jones, among other progressive publications, but not because I have to. Most of their content is available on the internet. My subscriptions amount to donations, motivated more by conscience than by necessity. When I download content from publications to which I do not subscribe, I am a parasite gaining free "nourishment" from the labor and costs of others.

So I pose the question anew: with the erosion of paid support of established "mainstream" print and broadcast media, who and what is to pay for information and diverse opinion that is essential to a functioning democracy? If the purveyors of the junk that dominates the mass media today fail to reform themselves and as a result shrivel and die from financial strangulation, we'll all be the better for it. Good riddance! But the question remains: who or what is to support the indispensable responsible journalism that is the lifeblood of our democracy – in particular, the journalism that appears on the internet, which might well become the next mass media?

It won't do simply to ignore the question and to go on using the free internet while we have it. Such behavior imitates that of the Grover Norquist "tax reform" crowd, which willingly enjoys the benefits of the common public resources that are sustained by tax revenues – the courts, an educated public, physical infrastructure, regulation of commerce, protected food and drug supply, scientific research and development, etc. – yet steadfastly advocates the abolition of those taxes.

Simple fairness, not to mention economic viability, require that the investigators and reporters of essential public information be compensated, and that the requisite time, energy and expertise required to obtain this information, be financially supported.

But how is this to be accomplished?

I confess that I don't have a simple answer. If you do, please share it with me, and we will publish the worthier proposals in The Crisis Papers.

But here, at least, is a suggestion, admittedly in need of much elaboration and refinement: adopt a system of financing similar to that of the music and entertainment industry.

As I understand it, most copyrighted music is registered with two agencies: ASCAP and BMI. Radio stations, artists, etc., who perform this music must pay a fee to the appropriate agency but not directly to the composers. The agencies then conduct surveys to determine how often the copyrighted works are performed, and then issue individual payments to the composers in proportion to the number of performances. (In my brief stint as a talk show host, some thirty years ago, I was not allowed to use a BMI tune as a theme, since the station was registered only with ASCAP. If my recollection of the system is incorrect, I am confident that some reader will set me straight). According to this arrangement, neither ASCAP nor BMI exercised any control over the use of titles in their inventories. They were entirely passive; it was up to the performers, station managers, disk jockeys, etc. to decide what was or was not to be performed, and this decision was, in turn, responsive to public preferences.

Might not a similar system be adopted by the internet service providers? A uniform fee might be assessed to each internet user, and the proceeds of that fee might then be put into a general "author/designer/producer/publisher fund." Content creators might then be compensated according to the number of "hits" recorded for their works. (As any user of Google is well aware, this is a far more accurate system than the surveys conducted by ASCAP and BMI). Since literally millions of individuals post on the internet, there would have to be several "filtering" mechanisms separating the amateurs from the pros. One such filter might be a minimum threshold of "hits" required for compensation. Another would be an annual registration fee to be paid by the authors, with the payment added to the general fund. Suppose that fee were to be one hundred dollars. Since the likely annual payments to the vast majority of amateur bloggers would fall far short of the annual registration fee, most would opt themselves out of the system.

This system, like that of ASCAP and BMI, would be totally passive: no place here for censorship. The public, or if you prefer, "the market," would rule. Payments would then be proportioned to the individual choices of the millions of users of the internet. And like ASCAP and BMI, the distributing agency would be a private, non-profit association of composers, artists and publishers, regulated by the government.

The cost to each internet user? Negligible, I believe, given the fact that there are now 211 million internet users in the United States, and nearly a billion worldwide, with internet use increasing by about eighteen percent a year. If each US user were to be charged ten dollars a year for payment to the "author/designer/producer/publisher fund," that would total more than two billion dollars to the fund. An annual fee of one hundred dollars (about eight dollars a month), with revenues of twenty-one billion, would finance a free, independent and diverse media industry that would rival, and perchance supplant through open competition, the rotten-to-the-core corporate media that has betrayed us so spectacularly today.

For one hundred bucks a year, that's a bargain, any way you look at it.

-- EP
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villager Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 11:33 AM
Response to Original message
1. as someone who also works as a journalist... let me tell you, we need *something*
since bloggers can't shoulder the entire burden of being a "free press" all by themselves...!
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Prophet 451 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 12:34 PM
Response to Original message
2. Interesting thing
There is one source of news which is always likely to have finance behind it: the BBC. Here in Britain, it is law that every household which owns a TV (which is virtually everyone) buy a TV license (currently £139 a year). The vast majority of that fee (minus the minimal admin costs) goes to the upkeep of the BBC and a fair portion of that goes into their news service. While their content is free to anyone with a web connection, it is directly financed by Brits.

You're right that more and more people percieve an active bias among reporters. Sadly, in my experiance, they assume that bias is a liberal one rather than a nakedly conservative, pro-corporate and pro-America bias. Having seen what passes for news media in the US, I'm still amazed that any American can heard the words "liberal bias" without either laughing or throwing up. You have the most conservative news media in the Western world.
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cascadiance Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 02:22 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. Part of the problem when you don't pay journalists adequately for their efforts...
... is that many of them that do stay in the profession to do work and do so on the blogs or other indy press outlets do so because they're willing to work for less to help their point of view be heard by the public, not just a duty to provide the public information.

That's in a way a good thing. That we have people who are willing to work for free or a lot less than they deserve for their efforts to bring forth information that we might not otherwise get.

It's sad that we have to have so many sources that all have bias, and not many left that try to take a professional "unbiased" provider of news any more the way a Walter Cronkite tried to do in his day.

I think its good to recognize that even when a journalist tries hard to be objective, there will still be some bias in their journalism. But the effort itself should be seen by a perceptive audience, and the more people we have like that, the more a busy population that doesn't have time to be their own filters and look at all different points of views in different stories, will be more adequately informed.

Part of solving this problem also is to get the public to have more free time to inform themselves as well, so that they can be more demanding of those places they do get information, and then consume it and perhaps even pay more for it if they feel its being done professionally. Right now with people working 2-3 jobs to make ends meet, they have little time to consume news as well as little money to pay extra for something that they perceive valuable that they might have had time to consume.

If we can get back to the 60's equation more where we have a better balance of wealth distribution and a decent and thriving middle class with the American Dream alive, that will also help our press get healthy again.

I saw some of the same corporate media games people complain about today even 20+ years ago when I worked in television news as well, so that battle is always with us. Its just how much we allow it to be warped that is a big issue.
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Ernest Partridge Donating Member (66 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 06:19 PM
Response to Reply #2
10. The Brits have it right.
I am well aware of the British licensing system which supports the outstanding BBC. However, I unforgivably forgot about it when I wrote the essay.

Of course, such a system could go a long way toward reforming the broadcast media in the United States. There might also be a licensing fee attached to cable and satellite use.

But hopefully, for somewhat less than $274 per year (the USD equivalent of 139 UK Pounds).

The UK system for supporting pubic broadcasting is analogous to my proposal for a fee attached to access to the internet. The primary difference is that my proposal calls for private non-profit agencies like ASCAP and BMI, rather than the government, to manage, collect, and distribute the funds. Given the well-founded American distrust of "big government" control of information, this would be a decided advantage. In addition, my proposal also keeps the dirty hands of big business away from control of the funds. ASCAP and BMI, it should be noted, are controlled and managed by and for the content creators (artists, composers, authors, designers), not their corporate customers.
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Prophet 451 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-07-08 03:27 PM
Response to Reply #10
16. Well, the fee could easily be kept lower
The lovely thing about one-to-many communications like TV or the webway is that costs don't really change when you add more viewers. The UK has a population of around 60 million, the US around 300 million. Based on my schoolboy maths, that means the US could run a BBC-alike outfit for a TV license fee of around $55 a year. Of course, with cable, you can build it into the cost of basic cable subscription.

I actually agree with what you're saying with regard to funding. The problem, I suspect, is going to be users. Internet users have gotten used to thinking of web content as free (and this is the fault of people in the IT industry, like myself, who spent too long giving things away to encourage adoption). The idea that someone somewhere has to pay for the production of that content (or, it has to be ad-driven with everything that comes with that) is something many users never think about.
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tavalon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 10:00 PM
Response to Reply #2
14. Remember, you're talking to the smartest kids in the class
We know that what you say is completely true. The average American is well, not quite as smart and we can argue the chicken and egg thing all we want, but it is a plain fact that the average American is not just ugly but also stupid, really stupid.
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Prophet 451 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-07-08 03:30 PM
Response to Reply #14
17. You're right and apologies
I didn't mean to be condescending. I have a fairly low opinion of the general public world-wide but I'm not sure I'd say they were stupid as such. Rather, I suspect that, like W, they are not so much stupid as intellectually lazy and uncurious.
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Pharaoh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 01:18 PM
Response to Original message
3. PBS and BBC
Public funded news without strings,

at least in a perfect world that's how it should work...
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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 03:02 PM
Response to Original message
5. "Pity" is not the four letter word that I would use.
They want respect and support, let them get it the old fashioned way, let them earn it.
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Goodnevil Donating Member (260 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 04:13 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. What about the 24 hour news media outlets
like CNN, MSNBC and Fox? You don't address their rise or dominance of public opinion. It seems to me that Newscorp, Viacom, etc., really haven't lost any money at all. Print media and network news is down for the count because of the internet and cable/satellite respectively.

I think the diversity of opinion in this country is shrinking due to the big three (4 if you count CNBC).
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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 04:23 PM
Response to Reply #6
7. That's true, I didn't address that.
I don't have cable or watch TV so that ought to tell you something about my opinion of it. But you make sound points.
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Goodnevil Donating Member (260 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 07:25 PM
Response to Reply #7
11. I don't watch them anymore
but I don't think that there is any doubt that many Americans do and that they really do improperly influence us. To be certain, the "Fox news phenomenon" has taken over CNN. MSNBC is still holding out a bit against the sensationalism but they know that people want to be entertained...not informed.

I suspect that your hypothesis about the news media losing it's relevance in the information age will come true as well for the big 3 24 hour news channels sooner or later. They offer no good service except to entertain and I have Battlestar Galactica for that!
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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 07:35 PM
Response to Reply #11
13. I don't disagree with any of that.
It's been my experience that watching TV "news" gradually turns your brain into mush.
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Ernest Partridge Donating Member (66 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 05:57 PM
Response to Reply #6
9. Cabal News
CNN, MSNBC, FOX are "news media"? Gimme a break!

Cable news is the problem, not the solution.

A Crisis Papers correspondent calls it "Cabal News," which about sums it up:

"Cabal" (def): "a group of conspirators or plotters, particularly one formed for political purposes." (MS Encarta Dictionary)
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 05:38 PM
Response to Original message
8. I can't think of any better ideas
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McCamy Taylor Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-06-08 07:34 PM
Response to Original message
12. Most of the $$$ would go to porn sites. If they were excluded, soft corp porn sites would pop up to
take the $$$s. Wherever there is a buck to be made, someone will show up to sell the public sex or sublimated sex.

If you want to use this specifically to subsidize news and culture---for instance, I think they should have virtual libraries so that people can read books on line---they need to create an actual library, with a librarian, who puts periodicals in it. And then everyone with an internet connection pays a fee and is automatically signed up to use it. Since it is a library, you could even have librarians on duty to help people with searches. You could also start publishing (oh my, the publishing houses are going to be angry!)
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digidigido Donating Member (553 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-07-08 11:28 AM
Response to Original message
15. perhaps a refinement
Edited on Wed May-07-08 11:29 AM by digidigido
ASCAP and BMI collect a license from the broadcasters. Charging the Internet providers a small monthly fee, say even $1 per month per household & Business internet connection, and having them pay it
directly to news organizations in direct proportion to the number of hits each site gets might work. e.g. If there are 1,000,000 households and businesses connected to the internet paying
$1 per month that means each month $12,000,000 comes in. If there were 240,000,000 hits each month to news sites then each hit would be worth 5 cents, and each site would get 5 cents
per hit per month. Of course that's an arbitrary figure, but I'm sure you get the idea.
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depakid Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-07-08 03:59 PM
Response to Original message
18. "the crud factor"
This is precisely why I canceled my subscription to the Oregonian the mid 90's.

Quite aside from their dishonesty (they've been know to simply make up facts) and their transparent bias, it's so poorly written as to be embarrassing.

Every now and again, they'll come around offering 3 months free... and apparently, they aren't getting many takers.
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