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Conversation | 05/02/2008 12:00 am

Marlo Thomas: The Media Steals Our Chances of a Fair Election

© Shutterstock

JOAN: Does the deliberate dumbing down of the news have the same effect as censorship, by cutting the public off from information that we need to make our decisions?

MARY: I say this as an old advertising pro: The news is for sale. The news is just a factor, like entertainment. The ultimate person who is responsible for whether the news is good, bad or indifferent is the viewer, because if the news is not good, fewer and fewer people will watch it.

LILY: People didn’t used to try to make money on the news. We lived through an era when the networks prided themselves on their news department.

MARY: Yes. That may be true.

LILY: Not because it was a money maker.

MARY: The news around this election has been particularly obnoxious, idiotic. But you’re getting the news that is essentially what most of the people are willing to pay for, or what they want. I know that sounds vastly oversimplified. But it is a fact.

LILY: Look how many good people they have destroyed just by petty humiliations. There’s nothing worse in this culture than being discounted or laughed at. They destroyed Gore. They destroyed Kerry as any kind of viable candidate, just by making fun of him windsurfing.

MARLO: Look what they did to Hillary, from the very beginning. With her headband, and her not wanting to bake cookies. My God, you would have thought this woman had robbed a bank.

JOAN: There was this great op-ed piece by Elizabeth Edwards where she wrote that what we’re getting, “what is left, is the Cliffs Notes of the news, or what I call strobe-light journalism.” As intelligent women, when you turn on the American news, do you desperately watch to try and find something? Or do you go on the Internet instead?

MARLO: I always think that if I read enough stuff, possibly somewhere in the middle I’ll find the truth. But the Joe Klein article in Time was so interesting. And he said we get this low-level information and use it as news. You know — what Barack’s bowling score is. All this foolish stuff — what Hillary was wearing and what Bill Clinton said to a guy on the street. But nothing about the issues, nothing about what’s happening to this country, nothing about the war. The war is now on page 18. Iraq is, I think, now on the back of the paper. And we’re not interested in it. And today Bush is all excited about his $600 rebate. A $600 rebate is going to make up, he says, for the gas prices. How far will $600 take you?

JOAN: About 20 miles.

MARLO: And people buy it.

JOAN: Do you think there’s a will behind this deliberate stupidity of information that we’re being given?

MARY: That it’s manipulative?

JOAN: Not only treating the public with contempt but actually —

MARLO: Withholding. Yes, I think they’re withholding.

JOAN: As in, “If we tell them all about Barack’s score – bowling score – they won’t pay attention to anything else.”

MARY: Why don’t we do something about it? I mean, it is possible to do something about it, if we’re really that interested. Why don’t we band together and simply stop it? After the last election, which was certainly questionable, we just accepted — I mean, we are an accepting country.

MARLO: I asked Bill Clinton, at a dinner party, why he and the first George Bush didn’t go to Steve Jobs and Bill Gates, and ask them to come up with a foolproof way that our elections would be fair and honest.

JOAN: Brilliant.

272 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Dona Howlett
Jenny, California is trying to get us to sign up for mail ballots. I don’t want to do that. I like actually going to the poll and marking my ballot, be it paper or computer buttons. Also the news media has already announced the outcome and the candidates have given their winning or withdrawn speeches before the the mail ballots have even been counted. That doesn’t make any sense to me.
By Dona Howlett on 05/02/2008 4:05 am
mary lou s
jenny, i like the idea of being able to vote when you can, not when you must. mail-in voting with a week or ten days from start to finish sounds good to me. it eliminates problems with parking, accessibility, day care, and making time for it. as for polls, arianna huffington’s web site led a movement to stop cooperating with pollsters. as for news, i agree with lily that we used to be able to count on a half hour newscast to fill us in on the essentials, but now we never get them. we get some of them some of the time by going digging online. remember that if i get my news from amy goodman and my brother gets his from rush limbaugh, we will never even be able to agree on what the facts are. we need a common source of news that actually delivers for contribution to the public discourse.
By mary lou s on 05/02/2008 3:21 pm
C A Rose
Excellent!!!! Speaking of dumbing down, I remember when I first enlisted in the Army Reserves in 1976. The training manuals were all written at an 8th grade reading level…I wonder what their target intelligence level is today. This is frightening! We are now recruiting convicted felons for the military, teaching them how to kill people for a living, and providing them with the best weapons that our tax dollars can buy. Does this bother anyone else besides me?
By C A Rose on 05/02/2008 12:27 am
zut alors
Cynthia…Not to mention the most lethal mercenary army on the planet, Blackwater, et al. And pray, just where is Bush’s Praetorian Guard disbanding to once the Halliburton War concludes?
By zut alors on 05/02/2008 3:03 am
mary lou s
good question, suzanne!
By mary lou s on 05/02/2008 3:41 pm
Ms. Dee
Bothers me…if it’s true.
By Ms. Dee on 05/02/2008 11:03 am
zut alors
Ms. Dee—-“Bothers me…if it’s true.” BLACKWATER? You’re kidding, right? Author of the shadow army: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqM4tKPDlR8 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJUEULWEP9c Blackwater watch: http://www.blackwaterwatch.com/ The Book: “Blackwater: Rise of the World’s Most Powerful Mercenary Army” http://www.blackwaterbook.com/
By zut alors on 05/02/2008 12:21 pm
Ms. Dee
Of course, I know about Blackwater. But are they really letting felons join the military? Are we gonna release the Guantanamo guys to Anwar…like the U.S. verson of Siberia? Make them work the new oil fields?
By Ms. Dee on 05/04/2008 6:57 pm
Emcye Edwards
It’s ancient, alright. Don’t you think it’s clear that the old guard power elite is making a last grab at natural resources, appealing via bread and circuses to delay an awakening? (Wiki: bread and circuses” (panem et circenses) is an ancient Roman metaphor for people choosing food and fun over freedom. It often appears in commentary that accuses people of giving up their of civic duty and following whichever political leader offers to satisfy their decadent desires.) It’s an entire geopolitical strategy: into Iran, Africa, Russia for all they can get. Bush is merely their Pony Boy. That’s why McCain projects that the war will go on for 100 years. They wish. OUR future (zero-point energy, natural healing, natural food and resources, open-source technology, brain trusts…how do you make money off all that? The basic spirit of the future is not commercial or profitable in the same tried and true ways they succeeded with. And their offspring are certainly not going to carry the old torch.) Someone’s been circling their wagons and we’re busy pitching ourselves into the campfire. The idea of consolidating this wOw-community to focus, laser-like on single issues and their solutions - now your’e talkin’. I mentioned Hazel Henderson’s revaluation of a macro-economy in another post, sure would like women to be hip to her. Get her into the fray! Don’t Think of An Elephant by Lakoff pretty much explains how the right has hijacked the media, because all the smarties were going left after Vietnam. Wagon-circling. You’re right-on - it’s high-time we womenize.
By Emcye Edwards on 05/02/2008 12:45 am
Jenny Oops
Hey, Emcye, WE IS WOMAN, HEAR US ROAR!
By Jenny Oops on 05/02/2008 1:03 am
Pamela Munro
Don’t you think the tax $ is the bread and American Idol is the circus?
By Pamela Munro on 05/02/2008 4:28 pm
Mugsy Peabody
All of the Rockridge Institute/Lakoff stuff is very useful. Thanks for bringing them to the table, Emcye.
By Mugsy Peabody on 05/02/2008 12:57 am
Esther Bradley-DeTally
it is totally disheartening and the press sold out long ago. There are always the few with integrity. Everything is now entertainment. Thank you for your article.
By Esther Bradley-DeTally on 05/02/2008 1:00 am
Jenny Oops
Marlo’s right. The media gets worse and worse in so many ways. Movies seem to get more and more violent. Ugly language thrown around so often that it mars any hope of civility returning as part of our culture. Some of the problem is that there are 24 hours/day to be filled — or so it’s thought. I find that some of the best TV is on between 1:00a.m. to 5:00a.m. The rest of the day it’s just so much useless, harmful ‘schluck’ being imprinted on our most very vulnerable, unsuspecting brains. Human brains, especially those of youngsters and teeners, ARE very susceptable to ‘imprinting’ — useful or useless — and we’re getting mostly useless. Someone, think it must have been Marlo, suggested that we take on the lack of balanced, more focused, accurate news as a cause. Good idea! I’m in!
By Jenny Oops on 05/02/2008 2:27 am
Bonnie Oliver
Excellent conversation except for Emyce’s incorrect quote that John McCain predicts (projects?) the Iraq war will go on for 100 years. He did not say that. While in college one my jobs was as a “cub reporter” for a local newspaper. I wrote mostly ‘little’ news, what the boy scouts were doing, the events taking place in the local park and on occasion I substituted as “The Man on the Street”. In any event, my desk was near the City Editor….the person who runs the newsroom, and even for a small town paper, the checks and double checks that were verified before a story was accepted by the City Editor was journalism as it should be. No editorializing…no little glib sentences were permitted within the story and no bias….no bias, I just wanted to repeat that last bit. Does the media interfere with our chances for a fair election? Of course. How many times have people on the West Coast heard the outcome of a Presidential election before they even got the polls? Many times, unfortunately. Their votes for the presidential race may not matter but all the other offices, and propositions or initiatives suffer if a person decides not to vote because he already knows the outcome of the big race.
By Bonnie Oliver on 05/02/2008 2:36 am