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Making Media
Democratic
Robert W. McChesney
The American media
system is spinning out of control in a hyper-commercialized
frenzy. Fewer than ten transnational media conglomerates dominate
much of our media; fewer than two dozen account for the overwhelming
majority of our newspapers, magazines, films, television, radio,
and books. With every aspect of our media culture now fair game
for commercial exploitation, we can look forward to the full-scale
commercialization of sports, arts, and education, the disappearance
of notions of public service from public discourse, and the
degeneration of journalism, political coverage, and children's
programming under commercial pressure.
For democrats, this concentration of media
power and attendant commercialization of public discourse are
a disaster. An informed, participating citizenry depends on media
that play a public service function. As James Madison once put
it, "A popular government without popular information, or
the means of acquiring it, is but a prologue to a farce or a tragedy,
or perhaps both." But these democratic functions lie beyond
the reach of the current American media system. If we are serious
about democracy, then, we need to work aggressively for reform.
What kind of reform? In broad terms, we
need to reduce the current degree of media concentration, and,
more immediately, blunt its effects on democracy. More specifically,
we need special incentives for nonprofits, broadcast regulation,
public broadcasting, and antitrust. I present these proposals
as the start of a debate about media reform, not as ultimate solutions.
I am sure that spirited discussion will improve these ideas: my
immediate concern is to get that discussion started. I will not
dwell here on the weaknesses of the current US media system, beyond
summarizing arguments that I (and many others) have made elsewhere.
The point here is to begin answering the natural follow-up to
such criticisms: "If the status quo is so bad, what do you
propose that would be better?"
Media and Democracy
The case for media reform is based on two
propositions. First, media perform essential political, social,
economic, and cultural functions in modern democracies. In
such societies, media are the principal source of political information
and access to public debate, and the key to an informed, participating,
self-governing citizenry. Democracy requires a media system that
provides people with a wide range of opinion and analysis and
debate on important issues, reflects the diversity of citizens,
and promotes public accountability of the powers-that-be and the
powers-that-want-to-be. In short, the media in a democracy must
foster deliberation and diversity, and ensure accountability.
Second, media organization-patterns of
ownership, management, regulation, and subsidy-- i s a central
determinant of media content. This proposition is familiar
from discussions of media in China and the former Soviet Union.
For those countries, the idea that the media could promote deliberation,
diversity, and accountability, while being effectively owned and
controlled by the Communist Party, was not even worth refuting.
Similarly, we are not surprised to hear that when cronies of the
Mexican government owned the country's only TV station, television
news coverage was especially favorable to the ruling party.
In the United States, in contrast, analysis
of the implications of private ownership and advertising support
for media content has been limited. For much of the second half
of the twentieth century, Americans have heard that we have no
reason to be concerned about corporate ownership of media or dependence
on commercial advertising because market competition forces commercial
media to "give the people what they want," and journalistic
professionalism protects the news from the biases of owners and
advertisers as well as journalists themselves.
Such views now seem very dubious. Consider
first the alleged benefits of competition. The main media markets--
film, TV, magazines, music, books, cable, newspapers-- are all
oligopolies or semi-monopolies with severe barriers to new entrants.
Moreover, media economics make it virtually impossible for a firm
to be dominant in just one sector. Because of opportunities that
come with having properties in different media markets, the largest
media firms all have rushed to establish conglomerates over the
past decade. Time Warner, for example, is one of the top five
US or global leaders in film production, TV show production, cable
TV channels, cable TV systems, movie theater ownership, book publishing,
music, and magazine publishing. It also has amusement parks, retail
stores, and professional sport teams. Disney, too, seems to have
mastered the logic of conglomeration: its animated films Pocahantas
and Hunchback of Notre Dame were only marginal successes
at the box office, with roughly $100 million in gross US revenues,
but both films will generate close to $500 million in profit for
Disney, once it has exploited all other venues: TV shows on its
ABC network and cable channels, amusement park rides, comic books,
CD-ROMs, CDs, and merchandising (through 600 Disney retail stores).
Firms without these options simply cannot compete in this market,
which is why animation is the province of only the largest media
giants. This example is extreme, but it sharply underscores the
fundamental principle.
These observations about conglomeration,
however, barely begin to explain just how noncompetitive the media
market is-if we take "competitive" in the economics
textbook sense. Firms in specific markets do directly compete,
at times ferociously. But these firms are also each other's best
customers, as when a film studio sells its product for presentation
to a broadcast network's cable channel. Moreover, to reduce risk
and competition, the largest media firms have turned to "equity
joint ventures" in the 1990s. Under such arrangements, media
giants share the ownership of a specific media project: Fox Sports
Net is jointly owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation and
John Malone's TCI; the Comedy Central cable channel is co-owned
by Time Warner and Viacom. Murdoch explains the logic behind joint
ventures as only he can: "We can join forces now, or we can
kill each other and then join forces." The nine largest American
media firms have, on average, joint ventures with nearly six of
the other eight giants. Murdoch's News Corp. has at least one
joint venture with every single one of them.
In such noncompetitive markets, the claim
that media firms "give the people what they want" is
unconvincing. The firms have enough market power to dictate the
content that is most profitable for them. And the easy route to
profit comes from increasing commercialism-larger numbers of ads,
greater say for advertisers over non-advertising content, programming
that lends itself to merchandising, and all sorts of cross promotions
with non-media firms. Consumers may not want such hyper-commercialism,
but they have little say in the matter. So we have a 50 percent
increase in the number of commercials on network TV in the past
decade; the development of commercially-saturated kids' programming
as arguably the fastest-growing and most profitable branch of
the TV industry in the 1990s; becoming standard in motion pictures.
The flip side of this commercialism is the decline of public service-of
the notion that there is any purpose to our media except to make
money for shareholders.
Under such conditions, journalistic norms
can hardly be expected to stem the commercial tide. Contemporary
commercial journalism is essentially a mix of crime stories, celebrity
profiles, consumer news pitched at the upper middle class, and
warmed over press releases. Bookstores are filled with dispirited
reports by former editors and journalists bemoaning the brave
new world of corporate journalism. Journalist unions are very
important in this regard, by protecting journalistic norms from
the commercial interests of the owners. But without other measures
to weaken corporate media power, unions are not likely to be able
to resist pressures from the current media system.
For democrats, then, media competition and
journalistic norms do not suffice for deliberation, diversity,
and accountability. If media are central to the formation of a
participating and informed citizenry, and if media organization
influences media performance, then issues about ownership, regulation,
and subsidy need to be matters of public debate. But such debate
has been almost non-existent in the United States. Even in broadcasting,
where the publicly owned airwaves are licensed to private users,
the public has never had any meaningful participation in the formation
of policy.
Consider the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
The law it replaced, the Communications Act of 1934, regulated
telephony, radio, and television. The 1996 Act provides the basis
for determining the course of radio, television, telephony, the
Internet-indeed virtually all aspects of communication as we shift
over to digital technologies. Its guiding premise is that the
market should rule communication, with government assistance.
The politics of the Act consisted largely of powerful corporate
communication firms and lobbies fighting behind the scenes to
get the most favorable wording. That the corporate sector would
control all communication was a given; the only fight was over
which sectors and which firms would get the best deals. The public
was for the most part unaware of these debates. The drafting and
struggles over the Telecommunications Act of 1996 were hardly
discussed in the news media, except in the business and trade
press, where the legislation was covered as a story of importance
to investors and managers, not citizens, or even consumers.
The results of the Telecommunications Act,
with its relaxation of ownership restrictions to promote competition
across sectors, have been little short of disastrous. Rather then
produce competition, a far-fetched notion in view of the concentrated
nature of these markets, the law has paved the way for the greatest
period of corporate concentration in US media and communication
history. The seven Baby Bells are now four-if the SBC Communications
purchase of Ameritech goes through-with more deals on the way.
In radio, where ownership restrictions were relaxed the most,
the entire industry has been in upheaval, with 4,000 of the 11,000
commercial stations being sold since 1996. In the 50 largest markets,
three firms now control access to over half the radio audience.
In 23 of those 50 markets, the three largest firms control 80
percent of the radio audience. The irony is that radio, which
is relatively inexpensive and thus ideally suited to local independent
control, has become perhaps the most concentrated and centralized
medium in the United States.
No doubt the United States needed
a new communications law. Digital technologies are undermining
the traditional distinctions between media and communication sectors
that formed the basis for earlier communication regulation. But
the legislation we ended up with reflects the failed process that
produced it.
False Starts
Because corporate control and the
role of advertising are effectively off-limits to public discussion,
reformers have faced limited options. Hence they have tended to
press for mild reforms that do not threaten corporate and advertiser
hegemony. And because these mild reforms generate little enthusiasm
from the broad public, media activists have put little effort
into organizing popular support for their efforts. The result
is an "inside-the-beltway," low-political-stakes style
of public interest lobbying. For example, in 1997 some media activists
claimed victory when the Federal Communications Commission began
requiring broadcasters to do three hours a week of educational
programming for kids. The problem with this "victory"
was that these educational programs would all remain commercially
sponsored with ultimate control in the hands of business interests.
Other reformers have turned to "civic"
or "public" journalism, a well- intentioned attempt
to reduce the sensationalism and blatant political manipulation
of mainstream journalism. Unfortunately, the movement completely
ignores the structural factors of ownership and advertising that
have led to the attack on journalism. Public journalism, not surprisingly,
is averse to "ideological" approaches to the news, and
therefore encourages a boringly "balanced" and soporific
newsfare. Claiming to give readers news they think is important
to their lives, advocates of public journalism may in fact be
assisting in the process of converting journalism into the type
of consumer news and information that delights the advertising
community.
Still others have joined the media literacy
movement. The idea here is to educate people to be skeptical and
knowledgeable users of the media. Media literacy has considerable
potential so long as it involves explaining how the media system
actually works, and leads people to work for a better system.
But a more conventional wing of the movement implicitly accepts
that commercial media "give the people what they want."
So the media literacy crowd's job is to train people to demand
better fare. The resulting strategy may simply help to prop up
the existing system. "Hey, don't blame us for the lousy stuff
we provide," the corporate media giants will say. "We
even bankrolled media literacy to train people to demand higher
quality fare. The morons simply demanded more of what we are already
doing."
While media literacy has an important role
to play in media reform, civic journalism has been at best a mixed
blessing. Some observers credit civic journalism, which is widespread
in North Carolina, with helping in Jesse Helms's 1996 re-election.
Why? Because civic journalism was ill-equipped to generate tough
questions, or press politicians to answer them. So Helms got a
cakewalk from the press, barely having to defend his record.
The evidence is clear: if we want a media
system that produces fundamentally different results, we need
solutions that address the causes of the problems; have to address
issues of media ownership, management, regulation, and subsidy.
Our goal should be to craft a media system that reduces the power
of a handful of enormous corporations and advertisers to dominate
the media culture. But no one will press for reform until we have
some ideas worth debating. The ultimate trump card of the status
quo is the claim that any change in our media system will invariably
lead to darkness at noon. The purpose of the balance of this article
is to establish that there are indeed several workable proposals
for media reform that will expand, not contract, freedom and will
energize our culture and democracy.
Media Reform Proposals
Building nonprofit and noncommercial
media. The starting point for media reform is to build up
a viable nonprofit, noncommercial media sector. Such a sector
currently exists in the United States, and produces much of value,
but it is woefully small and underfunded. It can be developed
independent of changes in laws and regulations. For example, foundations
and organized labor could and should contribute far more to the
develop of nonprofit and noncommercial media. Labor, in particular,
has to be willing to subsidize radio, television, Internet, and
print media. Moreover, labor cannot seek to micromanage these
media and have them serve as its PR agents. For independent media
to flourish, they must have editorial integrity.
Sympathetic government policies could also
help foster a nonprofit media sector, and media reform must work
to this end. Government subsidies and policies have played a key
role in establishing lucrative commercial media. Since the 19th
century, for example, the United States has permitted publications
to have quality, high speed mailing at relatively low rates. We
could extend this principle to lower mailing costs for a wider
range of nonprofit media, and/or for media that have little or
no advertising. Likewise we could permit all sorts of tax deductions
or write-offs for contributions to nonprofit media. Dean Baker
of the Economic Policy Institute has developed a plan for permitting
taxpayers to take up to $150 off their federal tax bill, if they
donate the money to a nonprofit news medium. This would permit
almost all Americans to contribute to nonprofit media-not just
those with significant disposable incomes-and help create an alternative
to the dominant Wall Street/Madison Avenue system.
Public Broadcasting.
Establishing a strong nonprofit sector to complement the
commercial giants is not enough. The costs of creating a more
democratic media system simply are too high. Therefore, it is
important to establish and maintain a noncommercial, nonprofit,
public radio and television system. The system should include
national networks, local stations, public access television, and
independent community radio stations. Every community should also
have a stratum of low-power television and micropower radio stations.
The United States has never experienced
public broadcasting in the manner of Japan, Canada, and Western
Europe. In contrast to the US, public broadcasting there has been
well funded and commissioned to serve the entire population. In
the United States, public broadcasting has always been underfunded,
and effectively required to provide only programming that is not
commercially viable. As a result, public broadcasters typically
provide relatively unattractive programming to fringe audiences,
hardly a strategy for institutional success. Moreover, Congress
has been a watchdog to see that public broadcasting did not expand
the range of ideological discourse beyond that provided by the
commercial broadcasters. In sum, public broadcasting in the United
States has been handcuffed since its inception. Still, it has
developed a devoted following. This following has provided enough
vocal political support to keep US public broadcasting from being
effectively privatized, but most of this toothpaste is now out
of the tube. Public radio and television are increasingly dependent
upon corporate grants and "enhanced underwriting," a
euphemism for advertising. The federal subsidy only accounts for
some 15 percent of public broadcasting revenues. Indeed, public
broadcasting, by the standard international definition, no longer
exists in the United States. Instead, we have nonprofit commercial
broadcasting, closely linked to the corporate sector, with the
constant threat of right-wing political harassment if public stations
step out of line.
We need a system of real public broadcasting,
with no advertising, that accepts no grants from corporations
or private bodies, and that serves the entire population, not
merely those who are disaffected from the dominant commercial
system and have to contribute during pledge drives. Two hurdles
stand in the way of such a system. The first is organizational:
How can public broadcasting be structured to make the system accountable
and prevent a bureaucracy impervious to popular tastes and wishes,
but to give the public broadcasters enough institutional strength
to prevent implicit and explicit attempts at censorship by political
authorities? The second is fiscal: Where will the funds come from
to pay for a viable public broadcasting service? At present, the
federal government provides $260 million annually. The public
system I envision-which would put per capita US spending in a
league with, for example, Britain and Japan-may well cost $5-10
billion annually.
There is no one way to resolve the organizational
problem, and perhaps an ideal solution can never be found. But
there are better ways, as any comparative survey indicates. One
key element in preventing bureaucratic ossification or government
meddling will be to establish a pluralistic system, with national
networks, local stations, community and public access stations,
all controlled independently. In some cases direct election of
officers by the public and also by public broadcasting employees
may be appropriate, whereas in other cases appointment by elected
political bodies may be preferable. As for funding, I have no
qualms about drawing the funds for fully public radio and television
from general revenues. There is an almost absurd obsession with
generating funds for public broadcasting from everywhere but the
general budget, on the bogus premise that public broadcasting
cannot be justified as a public expense. In view of radio and
television's importance in our lives, it clearly deserves a smidgen
of the money we use to build entirely unnecessary weapons systems.
We subsidize education, but the government now subsidizes media
only on behalf of owners. We should seek to have a stable source
of funding, one that cannot be subject to manipulation by politicians
with little direct interest in the integrity of the system.
A powerful public radio and television system
could have a profound effect on our entire media culture. It could
lead the way in providing the type of public service journalism
that commercialism is now killing off. This might in turn give
commercial journalists the impetus they need to pursue the hard
stories they now avoid. It could have a similar effect upon our
entertainment culture. A viable public TV system could support
a legion of small independent filmmakers. It could do wonders
for reducing the reliance of our political campaigns upon expensive
commercial advertising. It is essential to ensuring the diversity
and deliberation that lie at the heart of a democratic public
sphere.
Regulation.
A third main plank is to increase regulation of commercial broadcasting
in the public interest. Media reformers have long been active
in this arena, if only because the public ownership of the airwaves
gives the public, through the FCC, a clear legal right to negotiate
terms with the chosen few who get broadcast licenses. Still, even
this form of media activism has been negligible, and broadcast
regulation has been largely toothless, with the desires of powerful
corporations and advertisers rarely challenged.
Experience in the United States and abroad
indicates that if commercial broadcasters are not held to high
public service standards, they will generate the easiest profits
by resorting to the crassest commercialism, and will overwhelm
the balance of the media culture. Moreover, standard-setting will
not work if commercial broadcasters are permitted to "buy"
their way out of public service obligations; the record shows
that they will eventually find a way to reduce or eliminate these
payments. Hence the most successful mixed system of commercial
and public broadcasting in the world was found in Britain from
the 1950s to the 1980s. It was successful because the commercial
broadcasters were held to public service standards comparable
to those employed by the BBC; some scholars even argue that the
commercial system sometimes outperformed the BBC as a public service
broadcaster. The British scheme worked because commercial broadcasters
were threatened with loss of their licenses if they did not meet
public service standards. (Regrettably, Thatcherism, with its
mantra that the market can do no wrong, has undermined the integrity
of the British broadcasting system.)
In three particular areas, broadcast regulation
can be of great importance. First, advertising should be strictly
regulated or even removed from all children's programming (as
in Sweden). We must stop the commercial carpetbombing of our children.
Commercial broadcasters should be required to provide several
hours per week of ad-free kids' programming, to be produced by
artists and educators, not Madison Avenue hotshots.
Second, television news should be taken
away from the corporate chiefs and the advertisers and turned
over to journalists. Exactly how to organize independent ad-free
children's and news programming on commercial television so that
it is under the control of educators, artists, and journalists
will require study and debate. But we should be able to set up
something that is effective.
As for funding this public service programming,
I subscribe to the principle that it should be subsidized by the
beneficiaries of commercialized communication. This principle
might be applied in several ways. We could charge commercial broadcasters
rent on the electromagnetic spectrum they use to broadcast. Or
we could charge them a tax whenever they sell the stations for
a profit. In combination these mechanisms could generate well
over a billion dollars annually. Or we could tax advertising.
Some $200 billion will be spent to advertise in the United States
in 1998, $120 billion of which will be in the media. A very small
sales tax on this or even only on that portion that goes to radio
and television could generate several billion dollars. It might
also have the salutary effect of slowing down the commercial onslaught
on American social life. And it does not seem like too much to
ask of advertisers who are permitted otherwise to marinate most
of the publicly owned spectrum in commercialism.
Third, political candidates should receive
considerable free airtime on television during electoral campaigns.
In addition, paid TV advertising by candidates should either be
strictly regulated or banned outright, as the exorbitant cost
of these ads (not to mention their lame content) has virtually
destroyed the integrity of electoral democracy here. If they cannot
be banned, or even reduced by regulation, then perhaps a provision
should be made that if a candidate purchases a TV ad, his or her
opponents will all be entitled to free ads of the same length
on the same station immediately following the paid ad. This would
prevent rich candidates from buying elections. I suspect it would
pretty much eliminate the practice altogether.
Even in these pro-market times, the corporate
media have been unable to rid the public of its notion that commercial
broadcasters should be required to serve the public as well as
shareholders and advertisers. Hence, when commercial broadcasters
were able to force the FCC in 1997 to give them (at no cost) massive
amounts of new spectrum so they could begin digital TV broadcasting,
the Clinton administration established the Gore Commission to
recommend public service requirements to be met by broadcasters
in return for this gift. Following the contours of US media politics,
the Gore Commission has been little short of a farce, with several
industry members stonewalling all but the lamest proposals. But
we can hope that the Gore Commission will generate some more serious
public service proposals, and provide the basis for a public education
campaign and subsequent legislation to give them the force of
law.
Antitrust.. The fourth strategy for
creating a more democratic media system is to break up the largest
firms and establish more competitive markets, thus shifting some
control from corporate suppliers to citizen consumers. By all
accounts, the current antitrust statutes are not satisfactory,
and if antitrust is ever to be applied to media it will require
a new statute, similar in tone to the seminal Clayton and Sherman
Acts, that lays out the general values to be enforced by the Justice
Department and the Federal Trade Commission. The objective should
be to break up such media conglomerates as Time Warner, News Corporation,
and Disney, so that their book publishing, magazine publishing,
TV show production, movie production, TV stations, TV networks,
amusement parks, retail store chains, cable TV channels, cable
TV systems, etc. all become independent firms. With reduced barriers-to-entry
in these specific markets, new firms could enter.
The media giants claim that their market
power and conglomeration make them more efficient and therefore
able to provide a better product at lower prices to the consumer.
There is not much evidence for these claims, though it is clear
that market power and conglomeration make these firms vastly more
profitable. Moreover, even if one accepts that antitrust would
lead to a less efficient economic model, perhaps we should pay
that price to establish a more open and competitive marketplace.
In view of media's importance for democratic politics and culture,
they should not be judged by purely commercial criteria.
Antitrust is the wild card in the media
reform platform. It has tremendous appeal across the population
and is usually the first idea citizens suggest when they are confronted
with the current media scene. But it is unclear whether antitrust
legislation could be effectively implemented. And even if it does
prove effective, the system would remain commercial, albeit more
competitive. It would not, in other words, reduce the need for
the first three proposals.
Not to Worry?
The fundamental flaws in our corporate-dominated,
commercial media system are widely appreciated. Unfortunately,
there is also a rush to assert that the Internet should silence
our fears. Because the Internet is open to all at relatively low
prices, the hegemony of media giants and advertisers will soon
end, to be replaced by a wide-open, decentralized, diverse, fast-changing,
and competitive media culture. Best of all, this result is implicit
in the Internet's digital network technology, and will not require
government regulation. Indeed, the mainstream consensus-strongly
endorsed by the Clinton administration's Internet policy-is that
government regulation alone could prevent the Internet from working
its magic.
Though the Internet and digital communication
in general are certainly creating a radical change in our media
and communication systems, the results may not be a more competitive
market or more democratic media. Indeed, the evidence to date
suggests that as the Internet becomes a commercial medium, the
largest media firms are most likely to succeed. The media giants
can plug digital programming from their other ventures into the
Web at little extra cost. To generate an audience, they can promote
their Web sites incessantly on their traditional media holdings.
The leading media "brands" have been the first to charge
subscription fees for their Web offerings; indeed, they may be
the only firms for which this is even an alternative. The media
giants can (and do) arrange to have their advertisers agree to
advertise on their Web sites. The media giants can also use their
market power and brand names to get premier position in Web browser
software. The new Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0 offers 250 highlighted
channels, and the "plum positions" belong to Disney
and Time Warner. Netscape and Pointcast are making similar arrangements.
Moreover, approximately half the venture capital for Internet
content start-up companies comes from established media firms;
they want to be able to capitalize on profitable new applications
as they emerge. In addition, the evidence suggests that in the
commercialized Web, advertisers will have increased leverage over
content because of the number of choices before them.
When these market considerations are taken
together, it is difficult to imagine the growth of a competitive
digital media marketplace in which small suppliers overwhelm corporate
giants. Digital communication will cause considerable dislocation,
but not a revolution. And in the end, the content of the digital
communication world will appear quite similar to the content of
the pre-digital world.
Ironically, the most striking feature of
digital communication may well be not that it opened up competition
in communication markets, but that it has promoted consolidation
by undermining traditional distinctions between radio, television,
telecommunication, and computer software. In the 1990s, almost
all the media giants have entered into joint ventures or strategic
alliances with the largest telecom and software firms. Time Warner
is connected to several of the US regional (Bell) telephone giants,
as well as to AT&T and Oracle. It has a major joint venture
with US West. Disney, likewise, is connected to several major
US telecommunication companies, as well as to America Online.
News Corp. is partially owned by WorldCom (MCI) and has a joint
venture with British Telecom. Microsoft, as one analyst noted,
seems to be in bed with everyone. In due course the global media
cartel may become something of a global communication cartel.
So how does the rise of the Internet alter
my proposals for structural media reform? Very little. There are,
of course, some specific policy reforms we should seek for the
Internet: for example, guaranteeing universal public access at
low rates, perhaps for free, and assuring links for nonprofit
Web sites on the dominant browsers and commercial sites. But in
general terms, we might do better to regard the Internet as the
corporate media giants regard it: as part of the emerging media
landscape, not its entirety. So when we create more and smaller
media firms, when we create public and community radio and television
networks and stations, when we create a strong public service
component to commercial news and children's programming, when
we use government policies to spawn a nonprofit media sector,
all these efforts will have a tremendous effect on the Internet's
development as a mass medium. Why? Because Web sites will not
be worth much if they do not have the resources to provide a quality
product. And all the new media that result from media reform will
have Web sites as a mandatory aspect of their operations, much
like the commercial media. By creating a vibrant and more democratic
"traditional" media culture, we will go a long way toward
doing the same with the Web.
Conclusion
Imagine a world in which scores, even hundreds,
of media firms operate in markets competitive enough to permit
new entrants. Imagine a world with large numbers of public, community,
and public access radio and television stations and networks,
with enough funding to produce high quality products. Imagine
a world where the public airwaves provide compelling journalism,
children's programming, and political candidate information, with
control vested in people dedicated to public service. Imagine
a world where creative government fiscal policies enable small
nonprofit and noncommercial media to sprout and prosper, providing
some semblance of a democratic public sphere.
Though imaginable, this world seems wholly
implausible-and not only because of the political muscle of the
corporate media and communications lobbies. Over the past generation,
"free market" neoliberals have understood the importance
of media as an instrument of social control far better than anyone
else. The leading conservative foundations have devoted considerable
resources to reducing journalistic autonomy and ideological diversity
and pushing media in a more explicitly pro-business direction.
The pro-market political right understood that if big business
dominated the main fora for political education and debate, then
public scrutiny of business would be markedly reduced. These same
"free market" foundations fight any public interest
component to media laws and regulations, oppose any form of noncommercial
and nonprofit media, and lead the battle to ensure that public
broadcasting stays within narrow ideological boundaries. In short,
we had a major political battle over media for the past generation,
but only one side showed up. The results are clear, and appalling.
But now there are signs that the battle
for the control of our media is about to be joined. Organizations
such as Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), the media
watch group, have boomed in the 1990s, and local media watch/media
activism groups have blossomed in Denver, New York, Chicago, Los
Angeles, Seattle and elsewhere since 1995. In 1998 the Rainbow/PUSH
coalition made media reform one of its two major organizing drives,
holding regional conferences on the subject across the nation.
Members of the Congressional Black Caucus and the Congressional
Progressive Caucus have agreed to draft and sponsor legislation
in each of the areas mentioned earlier. Organized labor, especially
media unions, have shown increased interest in and support for
the issue. All of this would have been unthinkable only five years
ago. It follows the trend around the world in the late 1990s,
where media reform has become an indispensable part of democratic
political movements. But we still have a long way to go. Large
sectors of the population that are disadvantaged by the media
status quo and who should be among media reform's strongest advocates-educators,
librarians, parents, journalists, small businesses, laborers,
artists, kids, political dissidents, progressive religious people,
minorities, feminists, environmentalists-are scarcely aware that
the issue even exists to be debated. The corporate media lobby
is so strong that victory seems farfetched in the current environment,
especially when the corporate news media show little interest
in publicizing the issue.
Winning major media reform, then,
will require the sort of political strength that comes with a
broader social movement to democratize our society. We need to
see that media reform is a staple of all progressive politics,
not just a special interest cause. And media reform may have broad
political appeal. Some "cultural conservatives" may
be open to calls to reduce the hyper-commercialism of our media
culture. And strongly pro-market democrats may recognize that
media is an area where the crude application of market principles
has produced disastrous "externalities." In sum, the
train of media reform is leaving the station. If we value democracy
we have no choice but to climb aboard. <
Originally published in the summer
1998 issue of Boston Review
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