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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

Mahulda Fite
Years ago, you couldn’t tell what an anchor or reporter’s political affiliation was, they just gave the news. Now, it’s hard to separate personal commentary from actual news, they all present the news in the way they perceive it. A few comments back, I don’t remember where I saw it, but someone mentioned that Fox called the election in 2000 for GW Bush. Wasn’t that the second time? As I recall, didn’t most of the networks call Florida for Gore first, early in the evening and then have to retract that. The only reason I thought of that is I can still remember Dan Rather and his funny commentary—“Bush’s chances are as shaky as jello” or something like that.
By Mahulda Fite on 05/02/2008 8:34 am
E .
News. News organizations. Newsworthiness. Relevance. Objectivity. What happened? Where did it all fall apart? We’ve evolved from substance and fact to sensationalism and opinion. Even weather reporting has been diminished into mostly all hook so that the viewer will hang on for as long as possible. American minds like cattle on a feedlot are being fed on a steady diet of nutrient poor biased and sensationalized news calories meant to encourage us to passively stick around, fatten up and become addicted by swallowing whole the agenda or junk laced “news” being shoved down our throats. The most profitable way to get us fattened up and go gently into the slaughterhouse.
By E . on 05/02/2008 8:41 am
Diana T
What happened, Elizabeth? Dumbing down the public, and then, the ownership of our news sources by huge corporations. Apathy and complacence by most of us; how many people do you know that follow Paris & Britney, but don’t know anything about any issue?
By Diana T on 05/02/2008 2:24 pm
Liz Seger
Right on Lily. Most US news has become enternews a mix of entertainment and news with a little more heavy on the entertainment part. The Lehrer Report on PBS is still good analytical news, but with major corporations like Disney and GE owning the networks and the news divisions , news divisions have lost their ” integrity and independence” for the most part. Still think everyone should read Susan Jacoby’s book the Age of American Unreason, very relevant to what is going on now in the US and what has gone on in the past 40 years.
By Liz Seger on 05/02/2008 9:50 am
Marcia Stein
Excellent conversation and letters. I disagree with Marlo when she said, “And people buy it.” “They” don’t buy it: “we’re” sick of the lies, biased tidbits, lack of substance all around. People have dropped subscriptions to news magazines and newspapers, are watching less news than ever. It isn’t that there is a lack of interest - it’s disgust with poor reporting, rumors and opinions that are passed off as diligent investigation. Maybe the sect in Texas is bizarre and interesting, maybe Ms. Cyrus had a provocative photo, but is that more important and pressing than our economy, the war, and all our other issues?
By Marcia Stein on 05/02/2008 9:10 am
zut alors
Marcia- “I disagree with Marlo when she said, “And people buy it.” Half the people buy it, at least, look around at the results that prove it. The rest of us are: A) Activist in some manner. B) Get our news from International sources on the Web. C) Leaving the country. D) All of the above.
By zut alors on 05/02/2008 1:22 pm
Star Lawrence
I renewed my passport! Wasn’t going to.
By Star Lawrence on 05/04/2008 2:21 pm
Mugsy Peabody
The question was, is, and will be, what can we do about it? The “powers who be” also want to lock up the internet, but so far, they’ve not been able. This is one issue VP Gore was on some time before others woke up to the issue, BTW. Networking outside the net is one, but ear-to-ear communication is also notoriously unreliable. Thoughts?
By Mugsy Peabody on 05/02/2008 2:10 pm
Mugsy Peabody
We may not “buy” it, but we do bloody well pay for it.
By Mugsy Peabody on 05/03/2008 11:56 pm
G T
My goodness, you ladies are sure feeling negative this morning!! As they said in that old song, which most of you are probably too young to remember, “Accent the positive, eleminate the negative” We create the world we live in by the quality of our thoughts, which then stimulates emotions, which then manifests in our life as events, seeming to come from the outside. We can change the world, with the quality of positive thoughts about ourselves and our world.
By G T on 05/02/2008 9:23 am
Ms. Dee
Accent-u-ate the positive…” Is how it went. “Latch on to the affirmative. Don’t mess with Mr. In-Between.” That’s the point of the lyric. Personally, I think our kids are wiser than we know. And it’s gonna be their choice this time. That’s all I know.
By Ms. Dee on 05/02/2008 11:46 am
Mugsy Peabody
I do not understand why it is “negative” to talk about our very real problems. Sweeping them under the carpet and ignoring them hasn’t worked so very well, GT. BTW, would somebody please throw the Emperor a towel? GT, there is a discussion about shoes elsewhere on the web, if you want a “lighter” subject.
By Mugsy Peabody on 05/02/2008 2:14 pm
G T
It is “negative” because it is fear based. One can be positive and not sweep problems under the rug. Being focused in fear is almost a garantee that the solution you come up with won’t work, or won’t work for long.
By G T on 05/02/2008 3:13 pm
Deni G
Are you perceiving what you are reading as negative? Are you perceiving fear? Are you being negative about what you are perceiving? Perhaps it is not negative at all. Perhaps that is just your perception. Remember: We create the world we live in by the quality of our thoughts, which then stimulates emotions, which then manifests in our life and here you are seeing negativity in what you are reading.
By Deni G on 05/02/2008 6:10 pm
zut alors
Not fear based, reality based. Some of us can whistle a happy tune and enjoy our lives and also face things square in the face and say ‘this is wrong’ and why, and what are we going to do about it. Am quite familiar with and agree with quantum physics…but also loathe is air-headedness, apathy, or labeling others emotions and feelings.
By zut alors on 05/03/2008 12:03 am