Sunday, March 22, 2009

from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals The Stories Behind the News










Stupid is as Stupid Does


Posted: 21 Mar 2009 07:44 PM PDT




Who decides who's smart anyway? Apparently the media does. The
same media decided that Obama, who can only speak from a
teleprompter, was a genius, and Sarah Palin, was a dunce. The same
media decided that Bush was a moron, and Al Gore, who recently
informed us that the pole would be gone in 5 years, was and is a
misunderstood prophet of our time.

This power of the press to anoint some as geniuses and others as fools,
would be slightly more credibile if the media itself didn't constantly
show off its own stupidity for all to see.

It's only natural that many anchormen would confuse Obama's
ability to get
fashionably dressed and read stuff off a teleprompter,
with intelligence. After all it's pretty much what they do for a living.

And embracing deficit spending is natural enough for news
corporations like the New York Times, which were busy spending
themselves into bankruptcy. No wonder the Times loves the idea
of "shovel ready" infrastructure projects, having built a white
elephant of a headquarters that they're now being forced to
unload
on anyone who will take it.

You can't expect media organizations which match Obama's
worst habits to criticize
his own faults, which are after all their
own faults as well. The problem of course is that the New York
Times can declare bankruptcy and sell its headquarters, but who
exactly can the United States sell its infrastructure too?

Thanks to the endless parade of bailouts, bad corporate behavior
has now morphed into bad government policy, and Obama's national
socialism allows him to promote the worst in both capitalism and
socialism. But corporations can go bankrupt, America can't.

The media that refused to question the same bad Wall Street
behavior that they're
now busy condemning, still doesn't have a clue.
Not even when it comes to their own future.

Network newscast viewership is down. Major newspapers are
folding, others are
scrambling to avoid oblivion. Online
viewership and ad revenues are not compensating for
the losses in circulation. The writing isn't on the front page
anymore, it's on the wall. And what it all means is that the
"smartest people in the room" can't even save their own
medium, but continue to presume that they're smarter
than the rest of us, and can tell us how to save America.

The media hydra's manifold pundits and editorial writers, talking
heads, anchormen and assorted smug know-it-alls, insist that
they have all the answers for us-- but as it turns out they don't
even have the answers for themselves.

Ask a New York Times columnist on what America needs to
do in foreign policy, economic policy, national health care or just
about anything, and he'll be happy to give you a detailed answer.
Ask him what the major print media papers need to do to survive
another decade, and you're likely to get a frustrated glare and
some mumbled comments about the importance of the internet.

In the 20th century, the fourth estate became a serious
proposition booming their message across a collection of mediums,
radio, newspapers and television. Their paternalistic and later
matriarchal voices told Americans what was best for
them, which by the latter half of the 20th century, was
inevitably what liberals felt was best. It was less Father Knows
Best, than Anchorman Knows Best.

Obama is at once their great triumph and their failure. His careful
management and control of the press is a reminder that the
revolution eats its own, and that a tyrant is most paranoid about
those who helped him reach power.

The 2008 election may be the last time that anyone seriously
listens to the press
anymore. With major newspapers going out
of business or switching to online only editions, the twilight of
the press is here. The picture isn't that much better for
network news.
CBS's Katie Couric gamble blew up in their faces, a gamble
symptomatic of a once prestigious newscast desperate to
salvage something from the looming spectre of its own irrelevance.

As network news viewership falls and age demographics rise,
CBS, NBC and ABC newscasts are to be marked by the same
tombstones currently rising over major newspapers.
And newsmagazines aren't far behind either. Especially
since Time Warner continues to be in big trouble.

When 2012 rolls around, it's unclear how many of the present
day media mega-corporations will even be around. Stupid is
as stupid does, and the same media giants which helped
bring down America into this disaster, will at the very
least achieve some measure of justice by pulling themselves
down as well.












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