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Tonight! Alexander Cockburn Live in Portland, Oregon, Saturday November 19

Today's Stories

November 19 / 20, 2005

Fred Gardner
The Raid on MendoHealing

St. Clair / Vest / Walker
Playlist: What We're Listening to This Week

 

November 18, 2005

Michael Neumann
The Palestinians and the Party Line

Dave Lindorff
Murtha and the L Word

Michael Donnelly
Black November 15

Mark Chmiel / Andrew Wimmer
Uncrucify Them

Don Monkerud
A Decent Workplace

Tom Kerr
Grant Clemency to Tookie Williams

Trish Schuh
Faking the Case Against Syria

 

November 17, 2005

John Walsh
A Fractured Anti-War Movement

Rep. John Murtha
Iraq Must Be Freed from the US Occupation

Brian J. Foley
We Are All In GITMO Now

CounterPunch News Service
Guardian Apologizes to Chomsky; Publishes Total Retraction of Brockes' Slurs

Dave Lindorff
In Post-Saddam Iraq, There are No Civilians

Mark T. Harris
Coming Out in an Up-and-Coming Sport

Cockburn / St. Clair
From Reporter to Courtier: the Decline of Bob Woodward

 

November 16, 2005

John F. Sugg
Al-Arian Speaks: In His First Interview Since the Trial Began, Al-Arian Talks About What the Jury Didn't Hear

Noam Chomsky
Putting Out the Englightenment

Dave Lindorff
Shake and Bake: Pentagon Admits Using Phosphorous Bombs on Fallujah

Evelyn Pringle
Laurie Mylroie's War

Sam Husseini
Trying to Look a Female Suicide Bomber in the Eye

Pierre Tristam
Toturers' Theater

Greg Bates
Waffling Alito Charms DiFi

Farrah Hassen
Moustapha AkkadDavid Lean of the Middle East Killed in Amman Blast

Bill Christison
Evidence Mounts That Bush Wants New Wars

Website of the Day
Violent Oscillations

 

November 15, 2005

Todd Chretien
My Evening in the No Spin Zone; Or Why Bill O'Reilly Hates San Francisco

Leah Caldwell
Death of the Jailhouse Press

Frederick Hudson
Rosa's Wreath: Miss Parks and Robert Williams

Harry Browne
Bush-Linked Judge Bows Out: Another Mistrial in Irish Ploughshares Case

Jason Leopold
Secret CIA Testimony: Iraq Posed No Threat

Ingmar Lee
Logging Lackies vs. Canada's Most Endangered Species

Diana Barahona
Showdown on the Silver Coast

Tom Andre
New Orleans, Two Months Later

Website of the Weekend
Ernest Crichlow: 1914-2005

 

November 14, 2005

Diana Johnstone
The Origins of the Guardian's Attack on Chomsky

Paul Craig Roberts
Power Over All: Unlimited Detentions and the End of Habeas Corpus

Conn Hallinan
Provoking Syria: Cambodia All Over Again?

Joshua Frank
Off She Goes: Hillary in Israel

Christopher Reed
The Persistence of Racism in Koizumi's Japan

 

November 11 / 13, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
First the Lying, Then the Pardons

Gwyneth Leech
Cross Connections: a Painter Reimagines the Passion of Christ in the Wake of Abu Ghraib

Elmas Mallo
Chillin' in the Blazin' Texas Sun: Inside the Texas Prison System

Michael Neumann
The Rebel King of Bluegrass: Jimmy Martin, an Appreciation

Saul Landau
Leakgate: the Screenplay

Sam Husseini
Bush and Zarqawi Bomb Because We Let Them

Brian Cloughley
Sleaze, Deceit and Torture

Ron Jacobs
Rep. McGovern's Withdrawal Resolution: a Step in the Right Direction?

Lila Rajiva
Dover Bitch: the Curses of Pat Robertson

Michael Donnelly
Hypocrisy Watch

Joe Allen
Murder in El Salvador: Who Killed Gilberto Soto?

Roland Sheppard
Lessons from the Montgomery Bus Boycott

Justin E.H. Smith
Another Monkey Trial?

Ben Tripp
The Cost of War

St. Clair / Vest
Playlists: What We're Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Jones, Louise, Ford, Smith, Albert and Engel

Website of the Weekend
Iraq Vets and Against the War Need Your Help!

 

 

November 10, 2005

Peterside, Ogon, Watts and Zalik
Delta Blues Again: Ken Saro-Wiwa, 10 Years Gone

Pat Williams
Will Alito Cost the Republicans the Senate?

Steve Higgs
Bush Crony Targets Indiana's Forests: 400% Hike in Logging

Jimmy Massey
Is Ron Harris Telling the Truth?

Lucson Pierre-Charles
Haiti: Insanity Takes Over

Anthony Newkirk
Syria in the Crosshairs

Lawrence R. Velvel
Why Did Libby Lie?

Website of the Day
Imperial Margarine

November 9, 2005

Gary Leupp
The Niger Deception / Plame Affair: an Incomplete Chronology

Tariq Ali
Blair Defeated on Terror Laws

Chris Floyd
The Philosopher's Stone

Elaine Cassel
The Shocking Trial of an American Citizen: the Case of Ahmed Abu Ali

Joshua Frank
Sen. Max Baucus's NASCAR Pay Day

Alison Weir
Memo to Jon Stewart: Glad You're Against Torture, So Why'd You Give Israel a Pass?

Diana Johnstone
Rage in the Banlieue


November 8, 2005

Paul Craig Roberts
Still No Jobs

Roger Burbach
Bush v. Chavez: the Imperial President Meets the Bolivarian Democrat

Ron Jacobs
An Interview with Behzad Yaghmaian on the Paris Uprising

Ralph Nader
"The Worst Marketed Disease on the Planet"

Jim McGrath
Voter Beware: a Cautionary Tale for Election Day

David Bloom
McCain, Israel and Torture: Setting the Record Straight

Stan Goff
Jimmy Massey, Ron Harris, and Ambush Journalism

 

November 7, 2005

Dick Reavis
The Origins of Mr. Danger

Jason Leopold
Cheney and the Cover Up: the Vice President Lied

Dave Lindorff
What Country was Bush Talking About?

Eli Stephens
A Tale of Two Generals: the Lies of Colin Powell

David Swanson
The Bush-Cheney Ethics Refresher Course: a Syllabus

M. Junaid Alam
An Interview Stan Goff

Matt Reichel
Paris Uprising: a Rebellion in Real Time

Naima Bouteldja
Paris is Burning

Jeff Halper
Israel as an Extension of American Empire

Website of the Day
Dispatches from Paris

 

November 5 / 6, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
Storm Over Brockes' Fakery: Guardian Fabricates Chomsky Quotes

Lawrence R. Velvel
Lying, Law Schools and Executive Power: What Senators Should Ask Alito

Diana Johnstone
Srebrenica: a Response to Certain Criticisms of My Essay

Roosa / Nevins
The Mass Killlings in Indonesia, 40 Years Later

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Missing the Bus: When Conscience Bows to Calculation

John Ross
The Zapatistas' Otra Campaign for Mexico's Presidential Elections

Mike Whitney
Globalizing Sadism: the United States of Torture

Mark Engler
Will Big Business Turn On Bush?: the Economic Nightmare Unfolds

Juliano Mer-Khamis
They Shoot at Children, Too

Ron Jacobs
When Gen. Westmoreland Visited

Jill S. Farrell
Bird Flu and the Posse Comitatus Act

Missy Comley Beattie
Trent Lott's Untroubled Sleep

Mitchel Cohen
People of the Dome, Revisited

Evelyn J. Pringle
Bush-Cheney and Big Oil's Big Summer

Reza Fiyouzat
Signs of Life or Last Gasp? Structural Problems in the Democratic Party

Charles Sullivan
When Courage Fails: a White Southerner on Rosa Parks

Zachary Richard
Return to Louisiana

Ben Tripp
Beginning of the End? Don't Start Cheering Just Yet

St. Clair / Vest
Playlists: What We're Listening to This Week

 

November 4, 2005

Jeffrey St. Clair
Blood on the Tundra, Betrayal in the Rotunda: Losing ANWR

Dave Lindorff
A Majority Now Favors Impeachment: If He Lied, He Must Be Tried

Phillip Cryan
Crackdown in Colombia

Christopher Brauchli
Katrina and Tax Breaks for the Very Rich

William S. Lind
Exit Strategy: You Can't Stay the Course in a Lost War

Daryl G. Kimball
Of Madmen and Nukes

George Beres
Laurels for Negroponte?

Peter Montague
Why We Can't Prevent Cancer

 

November 3, 2005

James Petras
The Libby Affair and the Internal War

Saul Landau
Torn Families and Shot Down Planes: a Cuba Story

Rep. Cynthia McKinney
An Occurrence at Gretna Bridge

Michael Dickinson
Bang! Bang! You're Deaf! Sonic Weapons Over Palestine

Joshua Frank
Sham Behind Closed Doors

Remi Kanazi
Dancing with Perseverance

Reza Fiyouzat
Taxation or Racketeering?

Website of the Day
CIA Leak Investigation: Bigger Fish, Deeper Water?

 

November 2, 2005

Cockburn / St. Clair
Holy Alito!: Not as Crazy as Scalia, But Just as Bad

Robert Oscar Lopez
Saving Rosa Parks from American Hypocrisy

John Walsh
The Philosophy of Mendacity: From Leo Strauss to Scooter Libby

Brian J. Foley
Why Most Americans Don't Care About Gitmo (and Why They Should)

Ramzy Baroud
Rolling Back Syria

M. Junaid Alam
What Moral Values?

Todd Chretien
Judgment Day for the Governator

Bruce K. Gagnon
The Democrats' Slap Happy Day

Website of the Day
Hands Off Dave!

 

November 1, 2005

Ron Jacobs
An Interview with Kent State's Dave Airhart

Gary Leupp
The Plame Affair Leads to Rome

John Ross
Days of the Dead on the Border

Bill Quigley
Why Are They Making New Orleans a Ghost Town?

Joseph Nevins
From a Boundary of Death to One of Life

Dave Lindorff
Thinking About Impeachment

Linda S. Heard
Bashing Syria: Another Trojan Horse from the UN?

Heather Gray
Thank You, Mrs. Parks

Michael Dickinson
To Di For: Charlie and Camilla Cross the Pond

Jeffrey St. Clair
Kent State: Wise Up and Back Off

 

October 31, 2005

Elaine Cassel
Libby's Lies

Mark Weisbrot
Pop Goes the Bubble: Bernancke and the Fed

Mike Whitney
Carry On, Patrick Fitzgerald

Norman Solomon
After the Libby Indictment, the Press Acquits Itself

Farooq Sulehria
Trading Weapons While Kashmir Burns

Nicole Colson
Scapegoating Immigrants

Madis Senner
Dhafir Sentenced to 22 Years: Another Erosion of Civil Rights

Paul Craig Roberts
Scooter and the Neocons


October 29 / 30, 2005

Cockburn / St. Clair
The Libby Indictment: Gotterdammerung for the Bushies?

Peter Linebaugh
The Wedges of Hephaestus

Tim Wise
Framing the Poor: Katrina, Conservative Myth-Making and the Media

John Chuckman
Bushspeak: Dark and Garbled Words

Steven Higgs
Green Hoosiers: Forging a New Democracy in the Heartland

Brian Cloughley
The Fifth Afghan War

M. Shahid Alam
Israel and the Consequences of Uniqueness

Nikki Robinson
Crack Down at Kent State

Ralph Nader
Let the PIRGs Begin!: Student Activism Thrives

Joe DeRaymond
Requiem for Bethlehem Steel?

Joshua Frank
Karl's Great Escape: Did Rove Rat on Scooter?

Laura Santina
Tongue-Tied on Iraq: Why Aren't the Dems Screaming Bloody Murder?

Fred Gardner
Death of an Organizer

Michael Dickinson
Insult Your Country

Ron Jacobs
Autumn in America

Dr. Susan Block
Fear and Sex: a Halloween Greeting

Vanessa S. Jones
Self-Portrait, 1994. Bronte Beach

Jeffrey St. Clair
Playlist: What I'm Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Marbet, Gardner, Ford, Albert, Engel, Krieger & St. Clair

Website of the Weekend
Red State Update

 

October 28, 2005

Jared Bernstein
Inflation Up; Wages Down: Fastest Decline in Wages on Record

Virginia Tilley
Embracing the Anti-Aparthied Movement in Israel/Palestine

Phil Gasper
The Race to Execute Tookie Williams

Jennifer Matsui
It's Mardi Graft Time!

Manual Garcia, Jr.
Is the US Really Against Torture?

Monica Benderman
In the Name of Justice

Jason Leopold
Fitzgerald Focuses on the Forgeries

Dave Lindorff
Suddenly, Bush Endorses Right of Fair Trials


Otober 27, 2005

Saul Landau
The Scandal Isn't the Leak, But the Illegal War

Stuart Hodkinson
Bono and Geldoff: "We Saved Africa" Oh No, They Didn't!

Ingmar Lee
Stop the Troops!: No Glory or Honor in Iraq

Lila Rajiva
License to Bill: Gates Does India

Ilan Pappe
The Last Moment of Hope

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Waiting for Fitzgerald

Michael Donnelly
Look Who's Talking Now: the GOP on Perjury

Ron Jacobs
Escape the Weight of Your Corporate Logo

Cockburn / St. Clair
White House in Meltdown

 

October 26, 2005

Kathy Kelly
For Whom They Toll

Gary Leupp
Dialectics of the Plame Affair

Mike Marqusee
Empire of Denial

Eric Ruder
War Crimes in Afghanistan

Patrick Cockburn
Iraq: a Constitutionally Divided Nation

Joshua Frank
Fitzgerald v. the Bushies: Hold Your Elation in Check

J.L. Chestnut, Jr.
The Legacy of Rosa Parks

Website of the Day
Decent Work in America: the 2005 Work Environment Index

 

 

October 25, 2005

Paul Craig Roberts
Condi and Syrian Regime Change: Could Somebody Recommend a President?

Ken Sengupta / Patrick Cockburn
Attack on the Palestine Hotel

Conn Hallinan
Sleight of Hand: Iran, India and the US

Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed
Pulling the Court Strings

Jackie Corr
Barbara Bush: Poster Gorgon of the Houston Astros

Robert Day
Talk to Strangers

John Sugg
Judith Miller and Me

 

October 24, 2005

Dave Lindorff
Revoke Judy Miller's Pulitzer

Michael Donnelly
Shades of Iran/contra

Patrick Cockburn
A Nation Stands on Trial

Mike Whitney
Apres Rove

Norman Solomon
Iraq is Not Vietnam, But...

Bill and Kathleen Christison
US Foreign Policy and Palestine

 

October 22 / 23, 2005

Alexander Cockburn
When Divas Collide: Maureen Dowd v. Judy Miller

Billy Sothern
Letter from the Circle Bar, New Orleans

Saul Landau
Bush, an Assessment

Ralph Nader
An Open Letter to Bush on Harriet Miers

Behrooz Ghamari
Whose Justice Does Saddam's Trial Serve?

Brian Cloughley
Bush the Strategist: Pyrrhus Without a Victory?

Diana Barahona
Venezuela's National Workers' Union

Fred Gardner
Dershowitzed!

Lee Sustar
What the War on Terror is Really About

Patrick Cockburn
Murder of Saddam Trial Defense Lawyer

Laura Carlsen
Mexico City Seamstresses Recall 1985 Quake

James Petras
China Bashing and the Loss of US Competitiveness

Joshua Frank
Invading Iran: Who is to Stop Them?

Manuel Garcia, Jr.
Disasters are Us

Michelle Bollinger
When Abortion Was Illegal

Missy Comley Beattie
CSI: Iraq

Kona Lowell
Intelligent Design: Making High School Fun

Ben Tripp
Tanks for the Memories

Jeffrey St. Clair
Playlist: What I'm Listening To This Week

Poets' Basement
Albert and Engel

Website of the Day
Indictment Watch

 

October 21, 2005

Dave Lindorff
The Democrats' Abortion Hypocrisy

Winslow T. Wheeler
Paying for Their Mistakes: Incompetence, Deception and the Defense Budget

Col. Dan Smith
The Destruction of the National Guard

Norman Solomon
Media at Crossroads: 25 Years After Reagan's Triumph

Madis Senner
Abusing Katrina

Michael Donnelly
Richard Pombo: DeLay in Cowboy Boots


October 20, 2005

Dave Lindorff
Impeachment Comes to NYC

Ray McGovern
16 Fatal Words: Cheney's Chickens Come Home to Roost

Jeremy Brecher /
Brendan Smith

Attack Syria? Invade Iran?: By What Constitutional Right?

Patrick Cockburn
Saddam Refuses to Recognize Court

Kevin Zeese
Was the Iraqi Constitution Vote Fixed?

Ross Eisenbrey
Millions Would Lose Pay and Protections Under Enzi Amendment

Randy Shields
James McMurtry Makes It in Dayton

Justine Davidson
Prosecuting Bush in Canada for Torture: a Small Victory

After Lucas Cranach
Judy and Holofernes

Joe Allen
The Scandalous History of the Red Cross

 

 

Subscribe Online

Weekend Edition
November 19 / 20, 2005

Down for the Count?

The Future of the Daily Press

By DICK J. REAVIS

For the past two years academic observers of the press and a few of its working members have been diagnosing the continuing decline in circulation numbers for American daily newspapers, and it's fair to say that they've recently come to a consensus: most newspapers, especially metro, or monopoly dailies, are moribund.

Figures describing the percentage of homes that subscribe to newspapers have shown declines-of about three-quarters of a percent annually-for forty years. In The Vanishing Newspaper, a 2004 book, University of North Carolina journalism professor Philip Meyer puts a date on the looming demise of the daily press. The industry, he says, will be "running out of daily readers late in the first quarter of 2043."

Meyer is not alone in predicting the end of newspapers, although only he has assigned a date to the demise. The 2004 volumes, All the News That's Fit to Sell, by Duke University economics professor James T. Hamilton, We the Media, by former San Jose Mercury News columnist Dan Gillmor, and the 2005 Tuned Out: Why Americans Under 40 Don't Follow the News, by Vermont journalism professor David T. Z. Mindich, are also obituaries for the press.

Though industry spokesmen have responded to these dire, if scholarly, predictions with howls and whines of derision and denial, the facts keep lining up with the scholars. In mid-2005, the Audit Bureau of Circulations reported that readership had slipped about 2 percent over the first half of 200-a doubling of the historic rate.

The ABC report's figures were skewed by adjustments made in the wake of circulation scandals at dailies in Dallas, Chicago, New York and Los Angeles, but nevertheless caused new worry. Some of the nation's 1456 dailies recorded circulation losses as steep as 9 percent, and only a third showed any, always modest, gains.

The Bureau's most recent report, year-to-year for September, puts the national decline at 2.6 percent, another acceleration in the rate of circulation loss.

Newspapers aimed at a national readership fared better than others in both the ABC spring and September surveys, though there was little to cheer about; the New York Times, USA Today and The Wall Street Journal all gained or lost about a point.


Fragmentation

Circulation losses at metro dailies reflect several factors, prime among them a fragmentation of tastes in news consumption, especially among 18-35 year olds, whose habits and attitudes are extremely important to advertisers because the young are at the stage of life in which key purchasing decisions are made.

But fragmentation is not new to American publishing.

A preview may have been the displacement of the nearly-universal large-format magazines, Life, Look and the Saturday Evening Post, which passed their primes in the 1960s. Technology, i.e., television-like the Internet today--is often blamed for their decline. But TV did not thin magazine circulation so much as disperse it: niche market magazines proliferated as the old standbys slumped.

As early as 1969, journalism educator James Carey observed that, "out on the streets, in cities and neighborhoods where we live, the separatist tendencies outweigh, at the moment, the convergent ones." And certainly geographer David Harvey anticipated media fragmentation in The Condition of Postmodernity, first published in 1990. In the popular press, Robert D. Putnam's 2000 Bowling Alone drew attention to "generational succession" as a factor that was undermining both newspaper circulation and civic participation.

Today more young women read Cosmopolitan, Mindich reports in Tuned Out, and more young men read Maxim than read Time or Newsweek. The typical viewer of Headline News is 51 years old, and the typical viewer of CNN's traditional programming is between 59 and 64. The median age of New York Times readers is about 48, roughly the same as for the national newsmagazines, and-horror of horrors!-"Nearly half of people under the age of 30 . . . use late night comedians as a major source of news."

After reviewing dozens of readership studies, Mindich concludes that, "Eighty percent of young people don't read the newspaper today, and there is no evidence that they will read 20 years from now."

The prevailing wisdom in press circles ten years ago was that the young were marrying, bearing children and buying homes at a later age, and that when the kids got settled, they would subscribe to newspapers.

That won't happen, Mindich and his co-thinkers declare.


The Web as Trojan Horse

Optimists are saying that old newspapers will never die, they'll just shift to the Internet, and recent consumption studies ostensibly support their hope. For example, the proportion of readers age 18-29 who consider the web as their chief source of information is nearly identical to the proportion that relies mostly on newspapers, 36 to 37 percent. And with every year, the proportion of people who rely on the web for news increases, while newspaper circulations shrink.

"The web, it is increasingly clear, is becoming journalism's future," long-time industry figures Tom Rosenstiel and Bill Kovach predicted in a commentary on the 2005 report of the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press.

But both Rosenstiel and Kovach come from the editorial side of journalism's "Church and State" divide; business-side industry figures take a dimmer view.

One problem is that despite several promising experiments, nobody has yet found a way to "monetize" Internet news delivery. The strong suit of metro dailies has been their appeal to universal readerships, to whom they bring advertisements for standard goods. Fragmentation is eating away at the base of that kind of one-size-fits- all marketing.

Some observers have noted another business problem with any switch to web delivery. Internet publication is more akin to radio than to newspaper production, a manufacturing business, Meyer points out-and like radio, web publications are cheaper to establish.

Bob Liodice, CEO of the U.S. Association of National Advertisers, may have been a bit premature in 2004 when he declared that "The mass media don't exist any more." But as readerships fragment, advertising revenues will also fragment. And because it's a cheaper news delivery system, webification is likely to provoke a rush of fledging competitors, intent on peeling off slivers of once-universal, or monopoly, revenue.

Lower cost and lower revenues inspire changes that discomfit the industry's editorial side, for a different reason. Newspapers operate on a "one to many" mode, while the web shows a "many to many" tendency, veteran webifier Dan Gillmor argues. The most successful web publications, he reports, are those in which editors supervise stories which, like newspaper articles of the pre-commercial era, are reported by amateur as well as professional scribes.

The editorial differences between web and paper publications finds a partial analogy in what has already transpired in television news. In a 2004 column for the Washington Post, Rosentiel outlined these differences:

"Network news was built around the carefully written and edited story, produced by correspondents and vetted in advance . . . Cable news is a live and extemporaneous medium ... Only 11 percent of the time is devoted to edited stories . . .

"What is lost in the cable obsession," he continues, ". . . is the chance to double-check, to rewrite, to edit -- and often to even report. What is lost with the passing of network TV, in other words, is the journalism of verification. It is gradually yielding place to a journalism of assertion."

Most journalism pundits are reluctant to admit it, but it's so evident as to be notorious: via the blog, the Web has already transformed news delivery as cable did with television.


Mourning Democracy

Studies by scholars who are concerned about the future of the press do not differentiate between readers who fall away because they have become cynical or indifferent to public life, and those who distance themselves because they distrust the media. Nor, generally speaking, do the studies entertain the notion that "the journalism of assertion" could boost, rather than undermine circulation.

The Pew Center's 2005 annual report, for example, lumps together indifference to political news with suspicion of its sources. "By more than three-to-one (73%-21%)," Pew's survey found, "the public feels that news organizations are 'often influenced by powerful people and organizations' . . . The percentage [of readers] saying that they can believe most of what they read in their daily newspaper dropped from 84% in 1985 to 54% in 2004," the study's authors added.

But these findings could as easily point to political awareness as to apathy.

Most observers of the press-including Putnam, Meyer and Mindich-see little or no promise in rising distrust of the press. They have responded to the sunset of metro dailies largely by bewailing the future of the political system.

"Democracy was more manageable when the mass media... tended to mold us into one culture," Meyer laments.

"The failing health of the nation's news media . . . is a threat to political life itself," Mindich warns.

Duke economist James T. Hamilton has sounded a more critical note, however, by pointing to a logic for any turning-away from politics. "People remain rationally ignorant about the details of public policy," he wrote, "because they have such a low probability of influencing the course of events."

Or in other words, to the extent that American government is perceived as no longer democratic, the polity loses interest in news about public affairs.

 

Devolution

The discussion about the decline of metro dailies hasn't produced agreement about whether their disappearance bodes ill or well. Two possible perspectives present themselves. One pictures the decimation as unplanned deforestation. The other sees that when old trees fall, sunlight reaches saplings on the forest floor.

In Europe the daily press has been long pledged to "the journalism of assertion," just like today's cable news on American television. And two of the three healthier American national dailies also show partisanship, the New York Times for the Democrats, and the Wall St. Journal for Republicans.

Historians agree that Revolutionary-era American newspapers were established largely to promote factional interests. They were not, as scholar Mitchell Stephens notes, "newspapers that struggled to find a balancing quote from George III." Their readerships were limited to circles of the like-minded. Contributions and subscription fees accounted for most of their income, which was, in any case, secondary: these newspapers were published to build influence, not generate profits.

According to most histories, the pattern changed little until 1835, when James Gordon Bennett founded the New York Herald, a downscale, sensationalist daily, packed with stories from the everyday life of its city. It spurred the birth of other mass-circulation newspapers whose strong suit was local reporting.

Toward the end of the nineteenth century, advertisers began underwriting most of the costs of publishing papers aimed at the masses, and early in the new century, high-speed presses made massification even more attractive, from a business point of view. Investors cooked up plots for economies of grand scale, and where they could, bought and merged competing Republican, Democratic, Protestant, Catholic, Jewish, sectarian and socialist newspapers. The result, in city after city, was the local monopoly of the metro daily. American journalism became a profitable, established, reputable commercial enterprise, a matrix of local monopolies.

The editorial expression of the new commercial journalism was "objectivity"--"naïve empiricism" to its kindest critics--a doctrine which the Associated Press adopted as dogma in 1923.

"Originally the development of this form of journalism was grounded in a purely commercial motive: the need of the mass newspapers to serve politically heterogeneous audiences without alienating any significant segment of the audience," Carey observes.

Though over the past forty years, some textbooks and press organizations have quit proclaiming objectivity's tenets, the gospel still casts a long shadow in claims about "fairness," "balance" and "verification."

The upshot of contemporary developments is that devolution is underway. While the universal readership of metro dailies wanes, fragmenting and polarizing as it goes, the Internet presents a low-cost alternative for news delivery to niche markets, and rewards the deprofessionalization of the trade. When and if a tipping point comes, when metro dailies abandon print for web delivery--as most observers expect them to do--they will not be able to preserve their monopoly positions. Instead, they will face challenges from new entrants, some of whom won't need to "monetize."

Portents of the future are already evident-among them this publication, but most are national, not metropolitan or regional organs. If the American tradition of local dominance in the daily press continues, the coming generation of web-based metro dailies will rely on wire services for most of their out-of-town news, but will edit it to suit their ideological interests. ("Objective" dailies have been editing wire copy to suit regional interests for years; adding a political slant won't be anything radically new.) Local stories will be written by amateurs and professionals, and even on the local level, a hundred schools of thought--including a few on the Left--will once again contend.

Dick J. Reavis is a Texas journalist who is currently an assistant professor of English at North Carolina State University. He can be reached at: dickjreavis@yahoo.com

 

 

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