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- <text id=91TT1728>
- <title>
- Aug. 05, 1991: The Media's Wacky Watchdogs
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 05, 1991 Was It Worth It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 54
- The Media's Wacky Watchdogs
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Press bashing, once just a spectator sport, has become a full-time
- profession for a growing cadre on both the left and right
- </p>
- <p>By Joe Queenan
- </p>
- <p> There are two kinds of media bashers in the U.S.: those
- who can't make a few bucks from it, and those who can. The
- first consists of millions of ordinary Americans who don't like
- journalists but do nothing more than moan about them. The second
- group is made up of full-time bashers who publish a lot of
- newsletters. Some of these professionals have a galling charm,
- a refreshing sassiness, perhaps even a mild sense of humor. Most
- don't.
- </p>
- <p> Their ranks have grown during the past decade, perhaps
- because of the dearth of mainstream press criticism and
- journalism reviews, but more likely because of the satisfaction
- that can come from exposing the press as an insidious
- conspiracy. These groups now abound on the left and the right,
- groups with such names as Morality in Media and Facts and Logic
- About the Middle East (FLAME). There are also aquatic watchdog
- publications such as Greenpeace Pundit Watch and watchdog books
- such as Unreliable Sources: A Guide to Detecting Bias in the
- News Media. One outfit even publishes an annual guide that rates
- journalists on a four-star basis, as if they were restaurants
- or portable vacuum cleaners. It is anybody's guess how much
- influence these groups have, but they're certainly a noisy
- bunch.
- </p>
- <p> The granddaddy is Accuracy in Media (AIM), a 22-year-old
- right-wing organization headed by Reed Irvine. A political
- gadfly who still blames the press for the U.S. defeat in
- Vietnam, Irvine reached prominence in the early 1980s when he
- lashed the press for not giving Ronald Reagan a fair shake.
- </p>
- <p> Irvine's twice-monthly newsletter, AIM Report, remains
- obsessed with persuading the New York Times and Washington Post
- to admit that they shape the news to fit a liberal political
- agenda. His tirades against the Times even extend to making
- suggestions on decor: he wants the paper to take down its plaque
- honoring its 1930s Moscow correspondent, Walter Duranty, whom
- he accuses of being a "Pulitzer prizewinning apologist for
- Stalin." Another Pulitzer prizewinner on Irvine's hit list is
- CNN's Desert Storm superstar, Peter Arnett, who, according to
- Irvine, "may have done more than any other single reporter to
- help make Ho Chi Minh's morale-sapping strategy work." Arnett,
- of course, does not have a plaque at the Times building.
- </p>
- <p> For quality, resources and sheer volume of output, the new
- star on the right is the Media Research Center, an Alexandria,
- Va., organization founded in 1987 by L. Brent Bozell III,
- former president of the National Conservative Political Action
- Committee. In addition to a monthly newsletter, MediaWatch, and
- the reference book And That's the Way It Isn't: A Reference
- Guide to Media Bias, the center also publishes TV, etc., a guide
- to left-wing influences in the entertainment business. Topics
- range from the plight of devout Christian actors forced to go
- undercover in atheistic Hollywood to the "radical
- environmentalist agenda" propagated by Ted Turner's cartoon
- program Captain Planet and the Planeteers.
- </p>
- <p> Twice a month the center publishes Notable Quotables, a
- compendium of sometimes embarrassing, often idiotic but always
- verbatim quotes from various journalists. It also confers such
- dubious honors as the Linda Ellerbee Awards for Distinguished
- Reporting on the journalists making the dumbest remark in
- various categories. Why did the watchdog group single out the
- TV newswoman and best-selling author for its scorn? Says Bozell:
- "She epitomizes a liberal blowhard who has nothing to say."
- </p>
- <p> Like Irvine, Bozell wants journalists to come clean about
- their true political orientation. "If TIME magazine wants to
- present a left-wing agenda, it has a responsibility to admit
- that," he states. "Objectivity is a myth." When asked how much
- influence liberal crusaders such as Margot Kidder and Susan
- Sarandon could possibly exert on the shaping of political debate
- in America, Bozell replies, "The entertainment medium is the
- strongest resource of the left today." This is not necessarily
- heartening news for the left.
- </p>
- <p> Challenging these groups from the left is Fairness &
- Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), founded in 1986. Headed by Jeff
- Cohen, a liberal commentator who is convinced that the media by
- and large favor the Establishment, FAIR seeks to focus "public
- awareness on the narrow corporate ownership of the press, the
- media's persistent cold war assumptions and their insensitivity
- to women, labor, minorities and other public interest
- constituencies." Its eclectic board includes writer Studs
- Terkel, pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Spock, renowned thespians
- Daryl Hannah and Edward Asner, singer Jackson Browne and
- third-tier rock star Steve Van Zandt, the former guitarist with
- Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band.
- </p>
- <p> FAIR's bimonthly magazine, Extra!, draws attention to
- controversial stories that have been killed by TV stations,
- newspapers and magazines. It is probably best known for its
- merciless scrutiny of the guest lists of programs such as The
- MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour and Ted Koppel's Nightline for evidence
- of cultural or political bias. One study determined that 90% of
- the U.S. guests on MacNeil/Lehrer were white and 87% were male,
- while the corresponding numbers for Koppel's show were 89% white
- and 82% male. Chris Ramsey, director of program marketing for
- MacNeil/Lehrer, defends the program by noting that it
- cross-examines the people in power, and that it's neither Robert
- MacNeil's nor Jim Lehrer's fault that by and large the people
- in power happen to be white males. Replies Jim Naureckas, editor
- of Extra!: "Not all opinions are represented in government
- circles. I don't think that the spectrum of opinion in America
- runs from one end of Pennsylvania Avenue to another."
- </p>
- <p> Some of the media watchdogs have an extremely narrow
- focus. Lies of Our Times is an ultra-left-wing monthly produced
- by the Institute for Media Analysis, based, not terribly
- surprisingly, in New York City's Greenwich Village. Established
- in 1990, it has as its particular focus the "lies" that appear
- in "the most cited news medium in the U.S."--the New York
- Times. As a bonus, the monthly also reports on "hypocrisies,
- misleading emphases and hidden premises," all for $2.50 an
- issue. Board members of the institute include such unapologetic
- leftists as Noam Chomsky, Alexander Cockburn and Ramsey Clark.
- </p>
- <p> Lies of Our Times seems to despise everything the Times
- does, says or thinks. It accuses the paper of going out of its
- way to kick Fidel Castro, of ignoring Yasser Arafat's efforts
- to promote peace in the Middle East, of deliberately being mean
- to Nicolae Ceausescu and of overlooking the testimony of a
- waitress who once worked for Lee Harvey Oswald's assassin, Jack
- Ruby. In recent issues, Lies has denounced as "outrageously,
- insultingly, totally false" the seemingly plausible contention
- that the elderly in the U.S. have a relatively well-organized
- political lobby, and blasted a Times reporter for advancing the
- subjective view that Ronald Reagan was generally "respected" by
- the French. A one-stop leftist wailing wall, it also criticizes
- photos, captions, book reviews, the positioning of stories and
- even letters to the editor. By and large, it tends to leave the
- Food section alone.
- </p>
- <p> If nothing else, the media hounds are a colorful group.
- The Washington newsletter Between the Lines bills itself as
- "your bi-weekly watchdog on the politics and personalities of
- the entertainment and news industries." Included among the
- menaces to the national well-being are Cher, Barbra Streisand,
- Martin Sheen, Debra Winger, Tom Cruise, Tyne Daly, David Crosby,
- Shirley MacLaine, Dennis Weaver and Morgan Fairchild.
- </p>
- <p> Lee Bellinger, the publisher, is the man who organized the
- 1985 blockade of the Mississippi River to free a Ukrainian
- sailor who had twice tried to defect to the U.S. by jumping
- ship. Alas, Bellinger's nautical skills far outstrip his
- editorial talents: Between the Lines is a disappointingly bland
- affair that lacks the right-wing vitriol of Accuracy in Media
- or the brass and savvy of the publications put out by the Media
- Research Center. A recent issue featured the entire text of a
- George Bush speech that the national media had unforgivably
- failed to reprint verbatim. It was no Gettysburg Address. In the
- same issue a story ran that chided Gloria Monty, executive
- producer of TV's General Hospital, for wanting to use the show
- to explore such issues as the environment and the plight of
- working-class people. The fiend.
- </p>
- <p> For sheer wackiness, the most intriguing watchdog
- publication is the Repap Media Guide, a mammoth annual affair
- that rates publications and journalists as if they were low-fat
- frozen yogurts. (Repap is the name of the Canadian paper company
- that underwrites the project.) The guide is compiled by former
- Wall Street Journal editorial writer Jude Wanniski, who helped
- convince Ronald Reagan of the merits of supply-side economics
- and has spent a good deal of time ever since trying to persuade
- the public that the deficits thus created do not really matter.
- </p>
- <p> Now president of his own Morristown, N.J., consulting
- firm, Polyconomics, Wanniski has tried to draw attention to his
- quirky brainchild by bashing a slew of famous journalists of
- both the left and right while fawning over the Washington Times,
- the right-leaning newspaper owned by members of the Rev. Sun
- Myung Moon's Unification Church. His attacks do not appear to
- have inflicted serious damage on the careers of either Lewis H.
- Lapham, liberal editor of Harper's, or William F. Buckley Jr.,
- conservative editor of National Review. But then, Wanniski has
- been putting out the guide for only six years.
- </p>
- <p> Wanniski, whose business clients include Michael Milken
- (who, although in prison, is in regular phone contact with
- Wanniski), refuses to divulge the identities of the mysterious
- "media junkies" who help him compile his ratings, but among them
- there are at least two alumni of Lyndon LaRouche's fanatical
- groups, as well as public relations flacks, a social worker, a
- playwright, typists, salesmen, a medical secretary and people
- who called in to a Denver talk-radio program and asked to be
- reviewers. A man who has accepted money from felon Milken, has
- gone on Asian junkets paid for by felon Moon and has relied on
- media ratings supplied by proteges of felon LaRouche, Wanniski
- is the media watchdog with the most serious credibility problem.
- </p>
- <p> Watchdog publications allow hobbyists and rank amateurs an
- opportunity to get their digs in at well-paid professionals.
- These periodicals bristle with jeremiads by professors from
- obscure universities, by authors whose books have been published
- by Asklepios/Pagan Press, and by unheralded theorists such as
- the project director of Redstockings Women's Liberation Archives
- for Action, whatever that may be.
- </p>
- <p> The sense that full-fledged journalists could perhaps do
- a better job than dilettantes as investigative reporters is
- reflected in the watchdogs' errors of omission. One issue of
- Extra! criticized Forbes magazine for publishing a bullish story
- on the Mexican economy without noting that the study from which
- the article was adopted had been funded by $10,000 contributions
- from 29 corporations--each with a financial interest in
- Mexico. A more thorough investigation by FAIR staffers might
- have unearthed the fact that one of those $10,000 contributions
- was from Milken, and that the report was prepared by
- Polyconomics, owned by none other than self-coronated media
- watchdog Wanniski. But nobody's perfect.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the material in these publications is interesting,
- and some of the criticism is justified. But the watchdogs
- frequently undercut their own credibility by their whininess,
- their grating tone of moral rectitude and their compulsive
- nit-picking. A case can be made that people who write articles
- critiquing photo captions in the New York Times really ought to
- get out more.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-