
(CBS)
On Friday night, CBS aired a
special celebrating the life of Walter Cronkite. It was an entertaining and informative affair, full of interviews with boldface names and fascinating video clips from Cronkite's prime.
It was also the kind of program that can't help but lead one to reflect on where things stand in the media business today. And not just because it was immediately followed by "A Dr. Phil Primetime Special: Caged?" (Which, to be fair, might have been perfectly fine. I didn't watch it.)
I'm not going to get into whether or not the news is better or worse than it used to be – we've
been there before. But I do want to discuss the impact of the rise of media criticism, which has become an ever-increasing part of the American media landscape. In the past 40 years, we've seen the debate over the
Pentagon Papers and the characterization of the press as "
nattering nabobs of negativism" (and worse), as well as the rise of mainstream media blogs like this one and the increasing influence of well-funded partisan
media criticism outfits and self-appointed
media watchdogs.
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