Monday, May 18, 2009

Would You Rather?

Dan Rather Signs On To Produce, Host News Show

I forgot to mention that several weeks back, I heard Dan Rather speak at The City College of New York in a lecture called, "Democracy and the 24-Hour News Cycle." Rather's talk--which began and ended with two great anecdotes about his working life before he was one of the three "voices of God"--was, not surprisingly, critical of the fact that most mainstream media is owned and operated by major corporate interests that favor profit over content and who have a cozy relationships with government officials. (Sidebar: He did not once mention his $70 million lawsuit against CBS)

To his credit, Rather went to great lengths to take part of the blame for the dumbing down of the news, but he warned that those who believe newspapers are vestiges of the past or who think their proponents are merely waxing nostalgic should take heed: a healthy democracy depends on a strong and independent media. When newspapers go, Rather said, so goes what remains of original, investigative reporting. 

He spoke about the 20-minute news cycle that existed when he first started in the business (CBS and NBC carried 20 minutes of news at the end of the day) and the difference in coverage that was shorter, more vital, and not tied to profits. What a difference 40 years makes.  Many of us like to think of ourselves as extremely informed because we can go online or turn on the t.v. at any time and get the latest "news," but how much understanding can really be gleaned from a 15 second clip?  When does more actually become worse? 

You can listen to his entire speech here




2 comments:

Nicole Falcone said...

Wow! I can only imagine what it was like with only 20 minutes of nightly news. I think the nightly news programs do a pretty good job of keeping only to what is newsworthy and try to catch them when I can. The hard part is not getting sucked into another trashy program after. Do you think any of the big 3 nightly programs covered the Palin or Edwards issue you referenced earlier in your blog?

ELE said...

I am pretty sure they did cover the Edwards story, I definitely saw a commercial for it on nbc I think. She was even interviewed on NPR. Not sure about the Palin story though, I'd have to look into that. What's strange is that all those morning shows, Today and GMA are part of the news divisions for their network. Seems like a real stretch to me. I agree that that the evening news is not that bad, but if you notice they are all covering mostly the same stories, except at the end when they usually a profile or something original. Also, the demographic for these programs is over 60 (if you can't tell by the commercials) and I'm not sure if those programs will have any viewership in 20 years.