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December 17, 2007 1:17 PM

What We Talk About When We Talk About Politics

(AP)
If you're interested in sharpening your media criticism skills, you could do worse than running for president.

Consider Barack Obama. On Friday, in an interview with the New York Times, Obama neatly summed up the prevailing press narrative about his campaign.

“A month ago, I was an idiot,” he said, according to a story published Sunday. “This month, I’m a genius.”

The implication is that the chattering classes have reversed their opinion about Obama even though the candidate himself hasn't much changed. And while his statement may be something of an exaggeration, there's clearly some truth in it. Has Obama really become a better candidate after spending much of the campaign as a bumbler? Or does the press corps now see him that way simply because he has moved up in the polls?

The Times suggests that the press corps' change of heart is justified:
The campaign of Mr. Obama, which slogged uncertainly through a period in the late summer and fall, alarming contributors who feared that he might have missed his moment, is now brimming with confidence as he delivers a closing argument to Iowa voters. His speeches are noticeably crisper, his poise is more consistent and many supporters say they no longer must rely upon a leap of faith to envision him winning the nomination.
Perhaps – although Mr. Obama himself might beg to differ. When it comes to something as messy and difficult to measure as the performance of a presidential candidate, it's difficult to determine to what degree the media follow reality, and to what degree they creates their own. Many of the same commentators crowing about Obama's ascent are the same ones who told us Hillary Clinton was the "inevitable" democratic nominee. Now it seems she was only inevitable until she wasn't.

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Tags:
campaign ,
obama
Topics:
Mega-Media Trends
September 25, 2007 6:26 PM

Us Versus Ads

(CBS/AP)
There are some rivalries that are interesting and fruitful to watch: Good vs. Evil; Dan vs. Dave; Jason vs. Freddy.

Then there are those that are downright scary: Internet News Consumers vs. Internet News Sites.

We all know the reality nowadays of online news: Ads are ubiquitous. Because of shrinking circulation numbers and ratings cutting into their bottom line, everybody is trying to figure out how to bring in ad revenue on their Web sites. They do banner ads, they do pop-up ads, they do those mostly-irritating ads that float onto your screen. (Including, ahem, this site.)

So, in the interest of getting the news you’re looking for, we – us news consumers, that is – roll with it. We deal. As I told a friend years ago: That’s the price you pay for paying no price.

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Tags:
Pop up ads ,
CNet ,
On The Media
Topics:
Mega-Media Trends
September 24, 2007 11:15 AM

All The News That Fits?

(CBS)
Ours is an age of multi-tasking and split-attention and texting-while-driving, and it’s only getting worse – even when you’re sitting at home, purportedly ‘relaxing’ and watching TV. Just watching a program has become a somewhat stressful exercise in concentration.

And it’s not just the cable news networks, where they barrage you with stock tickers and scrolling headlines and graphics and “News Alerts” (that really aren’t). The cable networks seem to have twisted the New York Times slogan “All The News That’s Fit To Print” into an odd sensory-overloading “All The News We Can Fit!” philosophy.

No, it’s also the entertainment channels. I remember watching the NBA playoffs earlier this year on TNT as Dirk Nowitzki pulled up for a 20-foot jumper and thinking “Whoa, Dirk. Watch out for Kyra Sedgwick. Not only is her show airing tomorrow at 9, but she’s about to block your shot.” Apparently, TNT had super-imposed some moving advertisement for an upcoming episode of Sedgwick’s “The Closer” on top of the game broadcast.

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Tags:
NewsHour ,
Snipe ,
The Closer
Topics:
Mega-Media Trends
August 20, 2007 1:02 PM

The "Real" Deal

(CBS)
Hard news. No advertising dollars. No government support.

Sound interesting? So how much is it worth to you?

In our constant survey of new ideas for the news, Public Eye came across a news outlet with grand visions that is ramping up online. Nearly unremarked upon to this point in American media – with an exception here or there -- is The Real News Network. The details, from last week's Sydney Morning Herald:
A few years ago, documentary maker Paul Jay decided to stop producing his long-running political debate show for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and write a movie. The result was a political conspiracy thriller set in 2020.

When the full horror of his futuristic plot revealed itself, however, he realised there was no time for fiction after all. He recommitted himself to telling the truth with new urgency.

The result is The Real News (therealnews.com), an internet-based news service with an old-fashioned uncompromising ethos and a revolutonary way of maintaining it.

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Tags:
The Real Deal ,
Phil Donahue ,
Gore Vidal ,
Paul Jay
Topics:
Mega-Media Trends
August 10, 2007 11:47 AM

The Debate Debate

(AP/Mary Ann Chastain)
So, uh: Does anyone else have debate fatigue?

We sure have had a lot of these things so far. And they're early. For a little context, consider this: Bill Clinton didn't even formally enter the race for President until October of 1991; Republican Fred Thompson, expected to be a serious contender for the nomination next year, still isn't in.

And yet we seem to have a new debate just about every week, if not more frequently – this week has brought us two, with the Logo debate about gay and lesbian issues and the AFL-CIO debate on MSNBC, both featuring Democrats. Master of understatement Newt Gingrich, complaining that the campaign season is now much too long, recently said the debates have become “almost unendurable” -- "a cross between ‘The Bachelor,’ ‘American Idol’ and ‘Who’s Smarter than a Fifth-Grader.’”

Is there a better way to do this? The ratings for the debates have been relatively high this time around, but the key word there is "relatively" – even the much-hyped YouTube debate, certainly the most publicized debate thus far, only attracted 2,622,000 viewers, and Tuesday's debate attracted less than a million. There are legitimate concerns emerging that we may be getting too an overkill point: As Matt Foreman, executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, told the Times: “Most of us worry that doing all this so early on will wear out the electorate."

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Tags:
debates ,
joe biden ,
newt gingrich
Topics:
Mega-Media Trends
August 7, 2007 10:44 AM

The Lows of High-Def

(Dell Inc.)
All-around great guy and fellow “New Edition” aficionado Eric Deggans from the St. Petersburg Times has an amusing piece this morning, titled “Live at 11: Today's Top News, and the Anchors' Pores.” In it he discusses how local station WFTS upgraded its news programming to high-definition.
It was an unspoken horse race among local TV stations: Who would be the first to go high definition in the country's 12th-largest TV market? And WFTS indulged its bragging rights immediately, splashing news of its high definition debut across promotional advertisements and stories within its newscasts…

Viewable only on HD-capable TV sets, high definition broadcasts offer sharper visual detail and audio, transmitted on a different frequency than old-school, analog broadcasts.
I’m a big HD fan. Things have actually gotten to the point where I have forgotten that other channels on my cable box exist, since I’m perpetually in the “200 level” where all the HD channels live. I watch more stuff on the Mojo channel – where apparently all they do is drink, watch sports and go to concerts – than I do on CNN. (But hey, I get my news fix at work … right?)

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Tags:
Eric Deggans ,
high-definition
Topics:
Mega-Media Trends
August 3, 2007 4:46 PM

The Love-Fest

(AP Photo)
Here's a dispatch from CBS News intern Eric Kuhn, who we brought in to examine this weekend's goings on in Chicago...

As bloggers and netroot activists gathered at this year's YearlyKos Convention, Public Eye was wondering how the mainstream media would cover their new media friends – and how the blogging community would react to the presence of the traditional media folks they so often criticize.

In an interview, YearlyKos executive director Gina Cooper told us that there were 250 credentialed media covering the event, with at least 75 percent (a conservative guess) of them being from traditional media outlets. “We are at frickin’ capacity,” she said. “We are overwhelmed. It is really an honor to have so many people.”

Abdon M. Pallasch from the Chicago Sun-Times said that upon arriving at the convention, he joked, “I am with the dinosaur press!” Pallasch said he "found no animosity or resentment” and that the participants welcomed him with open arms.

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Tags:
eric kuhn ,
yearlykos
Topics:
Mega-Media Trends
July 30, 2007 3:23 PM

There's Something You Should Know...

(AP)
Remember the uproar a few weeks ago, when an MSNBC study identified 143 journalists who had contributed to political campaigns? My colleague discussed the study in this space, I took to the airwaves, and the debate even led a Washington Post reader to ask Howard Kurtz if movie reviewer Stephen Hunter – who donated some coin to the GOP – should have recused himself from a review of Michael Moore’s “Sicko.”

I don’t know if this has anything to do with the study and its repercussions in the news business, but one single page in yesterday’s Washington Post “Outlook” section stood out to me. Two different people contributing to the weekly opinion section shared their own personal disclosures, coincidentally both on page B5.

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Tags:
outlook ,
disclosure ,
washington post
Topics:
Mega-Media Trends
July 30, 2007 3:08 PM

There's Something You Should Know...

Remember the uproar a few weeks ago, when an MSNBC study identified 143 journalists who had contributed to political campaigns? My colleague discussed the study in this space, I took to the airwaves, and the debate even led a Washington Post reader to ask Howard Kurtz if movie reviewer Stephen Hunter – who donated some coin to the GOP – should have recused himself from a review of Michael Moore’s “Sicko.”

I don’t know if this has anything to do with the study and its repercussions in the news business, but one single page in yesterday’s Washington Post “Outlook” section stood out to me. Two different people contributing to the weekly opinion section shared their own personal disclosures, coincidentally both on page B5.

Read full post…

Tags:
outlook ,
disclosure ,
washington post
Topics:
Mega-Media Trends
July 30, 2007 3:08 PM

There's Something You Should Know...

Remember the uproar a few weeks ago, when an MSNBC study identified 143 journalists who had contributed to political campaigns? My colleague discussed the study in this space, I took to the airwaves, and the debate even led a Washington Post reader to ask Howard Kurtz if movie reviewer Stephen Hunter – who donated some coin to the GOP – should have recused himself from a review of Michael Moore’s “Sicko.”

I don’t know if this has anything to do with the study and its repercussions in the news business, but one single page in yesterday’s Washington Post “Outlook” section stood out to me. Two different people contributing to the weekly opinion section shared their own personal disclosures, coincidentally both on page B5.

Read full post…

Tags:
outlook ,
disclosure ,
washington post
Topics:
Mega-Media Trends

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