By Chris Hedges
March 25, 2013 "Information Clearing House" -"Truthdig" - I am not sure exactly when the death of television news took place.
The descent was gradual—a slide into the tawdry, the trivial and the inane, into the charade on cable news channels such as Fox and MSNBC in which hosts hold up corporate political puppets to laud or ridicule, and treat celebrity foibles as legitimate news. But if I had to pick a date when commercial television decided amassing corporate money and providing entertainment were its central mission, when it consciously chose to become a carnival act, it would probably be Feb. 25, 2003, when MSNBC took Phil Donahue off the air because of his opposition to the calls for war in Iraq.
Donahue
and Bill Moyers, the last honest men on national television,
were the only two major TV news personalities who presented the
viewpoints of those of us who challenged the rush to war in
Iraq. General Electric and Microsoft—MSNBC’s founders and
defense contractors that went on to make tremendous profits from
the war—were not about to tolerate a dissenting voice. Donahue
was fired, and at PBS Moyers was subjected to tremendous
pressure. An internal MSNBC memo leaked to the press stated that
Donahue was hurting the image of the network. He would be a
“difficult public face for NBC in a time of war,” the memo read.
Donahue never returned to the airwaves.
The
celebrity trolls who currently reign on commercial television,
who bill themselves as liberal or conservative, read from the
same corporate script. They spin the same court gossip. They
ignore what the corporate state wants ignored. They champion
what the corporate state wants championed. They do not challenge
or acknowledge the structures of corporate power. Their role is
to funnel viewer energy back into our dead political system—to
make us believe that Democrats or Republicans are not corporate
pawns. The cable shows, whose hyperbolic hosts work to make us
afraid self-identified liberals or self-identified
conservatives, are part of a rigged political system, one in
which it is impossible to vote against the interests of Goldman
Sachs, Bank of America, General Electric or ExxonMobil. These
corporations, in return for the fear-based propaganda, pay the
lavish salaries of celebrity news people, usually in the
millions of dollars. They make their shows profitable. And when
there is war these news personalities assume their “patriotic”
roles as cheerleaders, as Chris Matthews—who makes an estimated
$5 million a year—did, along with the other MSNBC and Fox hosts.
It does
not matter that these celebrities and their guests, usually
retired generals or government officials, got the war terribly
wrong. Just as it does not matter that
Francis
Fukuyama and
Thomas
Friedman were wrong on the wonders of unfettered corporate
capitalism and globalization. What mattered then and what
matters now is likability—known in television and advertising as
the Q score—not honesty and truth. Television news celebrities
are in the business of sales, not journalism. They peddle the
ideology of the corporate state. And too many of us are buying.
The lie of
omission is still a lie. It is what these news celebrities do
not mention that exposes their complicity with corporate power.
They do not speak about Section 1021 of the National Defense
Authorization Act, a provision that allows the government to use
the military to hold U.S. citizens and strip them of due
process. They do not decry the trashing of our most basic civil
liberties, allowing acts such as warrantless wiretapping and
executive orders for the assassination of U.S. citizens. They do
not devote significant time to climate scientists to explain the
crisis that is enveloping our planet. They do not confront the
reckless assault of the fossil fuel industry on the ecosystem.
They very rarely produce long-form documentaries or news reports
on our urban and rural poor, who have been rendered invisible,
or on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan or on corporate
corruption on Wall Street. That is not why they are paid. They
are paid to stymie meaningful debate. They are paid to discredit
or ignore the nation’s most astute critics of corporatism, among
them Cornel West,
Medea
Benjamin, Ralph Nader and Noam Chomsky. They are paid to
chatter mindlessly, hour after hour, filling our heads with the
theater of the absurd. They play clips of their television
rivals ridiculing them and ridicule their rivals in return.
Television news looks as if it was lifted from Rudyard Kipling’s
portrait of the Bandar-log monkeys in “The Jungle Book.” The
Bandar-log, considered insane by the other animals in the jungle
because of their complete self-absorption, lack of discipline
and outsized vanity, chant in unison: “We are great. We are
free. We are wonderful. We are the most wonderful people in all
the jungle! We all say so, and so it must be true.”
When I
reached him by phone recently in New York, Donahue said of the
pressure the network put on him near the end, “It evolved into
an absurdity.” He continued: “We were told we had to have two
conservatives for every liberal on the show. I was considered a
liberal. I could have
Richard Perle on alone but not Dennis Kucinich. You felt the
tremendous fear corporate media had for being on an unpopular
side during the ramp-up for a war. And let’s not forget that
General Electric’s biggest customer at the time was Donald
Rumsfeld [then the secretary of defense]. Elite media features
elite power. No other voices are heard.”
Donahue
spent four years after leaving MSNBC making the movie
documentary “Body of War” with fellow director/producer Ellen
Spiro, about the paralyzed Iraq War veteran Tomas Young. The
film, which Donahue funded himself, began when he accompanied
Nader to visit Young in the Walter Reed National Military
Medical Center in Washington, D.C.
“Here is
this kid lying there whacked on morphine,” Donahue said. “His
mother, as we are standing by the bed looking down, explained
his injuries. ‘He is a T-4. The bullet came through the
collarbone and exited between the shoulder blades. He is
paralyzed from the nipples down.’ He was emaciated. His
cheekbones were sticking out. He was as white as the sheets he
was lying on. He was 24 years old. … I thought, ‘People should
see this. This is awful.’ ”
Donahue
noted that only a very small percentage of Americans have a
close relative who fought in Iraq or Afghanistan and an even
smaller number make the personal sacrifice of a Tomas Young.
“Nobody sees the pain,” he said. “The war is sanitized.”
“I said,
‘Tomas, I want to make a movie that shows the pain, I want to
make a movie that shows up close what war really means, but I
can’t do it without your permission,’ ” Donahue remembered.
“Tomas said, ‘I do too.’ ”
But once
again Donahue ran into the corporate monolith: Commercial
distributors proved reluctant to pick up the film. Donahue was
told that the film, although it had received great critical
acclaim, was too depressing and not uplifting. Distributors
asked him who would go to see a film about someone in a
wheelchair. Donahue managed to get openings in Chicago, Seattle,
Palm Springs, New York, Washington and Boston, but the runs were
painfully brief.
“I didn’t
have the money to run full-page ads,” he said. “Hollywood often
spends more on promotion than it does on the movie. And so we
died. What happens now is that peace groups are showing it. We
opened the Veterans for Peace convention in Miami. Failure is
not unfamiliar to me. And yet, I am stunned at how many
Americans stand mute.”
Chris Hedges, whose column is published Mondays on Truthdig,
spent nearly two decades as a foreign correspondent in
Central America, the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He
has reported from more than 50 countries and has worked for
The Christian Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The
Dallas Morning News and The New York Times, for which he was
a foreign correspondent for 15 years.
Copyright © 2012 Truthdig
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