This is an introductory installment of a series to be titled "The Just Say NO-Bama Campaign" that will examine the crafty use of language in the political propaganda on the most important issues of our day and the news media’s coverage of the public debate. Check back each Wednesday for the next installment.
Language is one of the richest forms of expression we have. Like any form of art, it can paint a picture as nearly true as an actual unretouched photo or one as incomprehensibly abstract as a Jackson Pollock.
The explosion of media outlets in the Internet Age has enriched our use of language in the most crafty ways. At the same time, the pace of the news cycle has loosened once sacrosanct fact checks and editorial balances. Just as television reduced the news cycle from 24 hours to 6, and the Internet reduced it to hourly, Twitter is rapidly compressing it even further, to the minute. The cacophony of messages is deafening, with even the most vaunted media outlets reduced to “reporting the reporting” in an endless, “He said, she said and that’s all we have time to say.”
Instead of reporters and editors confirming sources and analyzing the information to parse fact from innuendo and conjecture – which takes time – they seem to be giving up the ghost of old journalism rules. The public is therefore left to fend for itself when it comes to wading through the muck of propaganda, forced to rely on the (questionably reliable, mostly partisan) Blogosphere and Twitter to determine what is truth.
Don’t get me wrong. I’m a HUGE fan of Blogs and of micro-blogs like Twitter. Duh! ‘Nuff said [sic]. However, I am deeply concerned that the rules of engagement have been irresponsibly relaxed under the pressure to compete for the scoops, exclusives and gotcha-quotes-of-the-day, which media use as a key marketing tool to earn an audience and therefore advertisers.
It seems that our “news” is little more than lightly filtered information. Whatever falls into the daily colander gets rinsed clean, packaged into a branded format and regurgitated to a hungry audience. This predominates on cable television news but is occurring with increasing frequency in the content of broadcast network news, radio news and – worse – the few newspapers that remain.
Try this at home: How many times in the span of a broadcast or on a printed page does your news provider cite another news outlet’s coverage of a topic? Or, how many times does the talking head say, “according to X organization” without any further substantiation for what is being presented, much less offer an opposing source or suggesting that certain questions remain on the matter. Don’t get me started on the dearth of follow-up questions! As a corporate communications strategist I can spot a pre-packaged video news release in a New York second, and I can tell you they are used now more than ever.
It’s pure laziness. Imagine if your child came home and tattletaled on another kid or a sibling. Do you take what he says as pure fact? Or do you ask him a few probing questions and then, depending on the seriousness of the matter consult with another parent?
Over the next few installments, this column will explore how the news organizations are repeating the propagandist terms like “Apology,” “Socialism,” “Racism,” etc. and therefore limiting and coloring public debate. Oh, and before anyone gets on a high horse, I’ll be giving equal scrutiny to some lefty wing nut exploitation, too. Stay tuned.


Salon.com
Comments
I hope you realize that if you strip cable news of propaganda terms, you'll destroy a large part of the Outrage Industry.
It would be fun watching them struggle to discuss the mechanics of a policy. I bet they wouldn't last 2 minutes before somebody starts screaming "socialism!"
I'm staying tuned...
You're asking some very critical (and largely overlooked) questions here. And the most important one is the title of this post: Where have all the news editors gone?
Speaking as a still-employed newspaper reporter, I never thought I'd come to the defense of editors. Grousing about the boss is nothing new, particularly in newspapering. But those of us who have good ones know how important they are. It's evident not a lot of other people have that experience, in or out of journalism.
Fellow OSer Stellaa asked a similar question in relation to Twitter, and here's what I said in response:
". . . Skepticism is critical to all news reports. In newspapers, it starts with an editor who can challenge the assumptions or accuracy of a report. Put up or shut up time for the reporter. Critical in every sense of the word."
I rambled on & won't bore you with the details. Basically it comes down to this: people who don't know a news editor from a smooth fart (or a news editor's value) are going to have to be their own news editors -- when reading, they're going to have to be skeptical, challenge assumptions, agendas, sources.
That's work. And that's why so much "citizen journalism" is less than useless -- it can be misleading and make understanding more, not less difficult.
Looking forward to your further reports -