-Caveat Lector-

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: RECLAIM THE MEDIA -- BUILDING DEMOCRATIC MASS-MEDIA
Date: Fri, 8 Dec 2000 18:15:00 -0600 (CST)
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: ?
To: undisclosed-recipients:;

Corporate-owned, profits-driven, advertisement-based,
hierarchically-run mass media will NEVER give us fair,
accurate, quality reporting.

Let alone, give us space to air our own voices.

They are not in the business of "informing" -- they are large
corporations in the business of selling mass audiences to client
advertisers who are themselves huge corporations.

The point is not that they are "behaving badly" -- they are behaving
in the only way they can, given their structure. If the CEO quit
today, he'd be replaced with someone who would do the same thing. If
they didn't do the same thing, if they tried to run things in the
interest of the public rather than profits, the shareholders could
throw out the CEO. It's the structure (not "greedy people" -- true though
that is) that is the problem.

In any case, democracy deserves and indeed demands that
the airwaves be democratically controlled and run by the public.
Thus, we must create "alternative" media in the sense of
the bottom-up, democratic structure, but not if "alternative"
means having a small, "preaching to the converted" audience.

Reproduced below is an article from Z about one possible program.
Those of you who feel this is a worthy goal, might be interested in
coming to EconomicDemocracy.org for another, but related project which
works towards accomplishing the same basic goals as outlined in the
FAMAS program below, though a project that makes critical use of the
internet (RECLAIM THE MEDIA: http://EconomicDemocracy.org/reclaim.html)

Below is Mike Albert's FAMAS, followed by the link again to our
related, EconomicDemocracy.org project. We hope many readers will be
committed to taking action, to not just complain about, but to do
something about the current media landscape, and to create a new one..

Harel Barzilai
                                   FAMAS

                               Michael Albert

For four days this March, The Institute for Alternative Journalism
hosted a Media and Democracy Congress in San Francisco. Hundreds of
progressive media people attended, including representatives from
periodicals, newspapers, newsletters, radio stations, watchdog
groups, video projects, production companies, and
telecommunications projects, plus independent media workers,
writers, journalists, producers, cartoonists, photographers, and so
on. It was a unique turnout with an impressive agenda, including:
* Help alternative media meet, talk together, and develop better
ties
* Share lessons to help those present improve their own projects
* Begin collaborations to make the world of independent and
alternative media greater than the sum of its many parts

The Congress was immediately successful regarding point (1). There
was plenty of time to meet and talk with people. Point (2) depends
on the ingenuity and energy participants at applying lessons
learned to their own efforts around the country. Point (3) requires
serious organizational follow-up, but also offers the greatest
promise.

"Consumers" of progressive media often ask its producers, why not
get under one roof? Why not share and cooperate? Why duplicate
effort?

Of course, this sentiment can be taken too far. Magazines have
different readerships, resources, agendas, and political aims.
Ditto for other media projects. Also, there is no single correct
answer on how to do things. There needs to be diverse projects and
approaches, and many efforts rather than few.

What is not good, however, is that each of these diverse efforts
sees the others as unconnected, or, even worse, as competitors for
resources, consumers, and content. Somehow, those committed to
speaking truth to power must all benefit from each other's efforts.
This was the impetus of many people at the conference, and is the
promise of point (3). Indeed, an explicit instruction of the
conference was that participants should go home, distill what
they'd heard, and make suggestions for forthcoming collaborations.
We decided to fulfill our "assignment" in public, to air the views
and enlist new voices in the exchange.

As a vehicle for alternative media collaborations, we suggest
creating a Federation of Alternative Media Activists and Supporters
(FAMAS). We hope others will assess, refine, alter, amend, extend,
and generally improve the suggestions offered here for program and
structure.

FAMAS might include, we believe, producing organizations (such as
publishers, radio and recording production projects, film
companies, watch dog groups, media institutes), distributing
organizations (such as alternative book stores, speaker's bureaus,
radio stations, activist organizations and conferences, etc.),
producing individuals (such as writers, film producers,
cartoonists, reporters, researchers, web spinners, public speakers,
photographers, rock performers, folk artists, comedians, etc.), and
also progressive and alternative media "consumers" (such as
readers, listeners, viewers).

Membership would presumably be based on support for the
Federation's aims and on agreement to fulfill relevant
responsibilities.

The Federation could have a decision making board composed of
representatives from a rotating, sample of member organizations and
communities. Policy could be proposed by this board or by members,
voted on by the board and then the membership, and implemented by
paid staff. In ballots of the membership, institutional and
individual members might each vote only on the policies that
directly affect them. Campaigns and projects could be implemented
by the FAMAS staff, with assistance from the board. Electronic
media could be used to tie all members into an online community for
discussion, debate, agenda development, polling, and information
exchange, with assistance to all member organizations in setting
up, linking, and training for use, etc.

As its on-going goal, the Federation could seek to enlarge and
enhance alternative journalism and media communication of all
kinds, within the mainstream or via alternative structures. FAMAS
could affirm that alternative media institutions (and individuals)
should strive, as possible, not to replicate cultural, economic,
and gender dependencies or structural biases common to mainstream
institutions and that all Federation members should be committed,
as possible, to acting on behalf of the entire alternative media
community. How much and what this aim would include (eliminating
racial and sexual bias, incorporating multicultural lessons,
reducing income and job quality disparities among staff, increasing
internal democracy, making way for younger participants, reducing
or eliminating dependence on commercial ads, etc., would be matters
of organization policy as FAMAS evolved). At a minimum, FAMAS could
provide tools and training to enrich members' understandings of
democracy and justice in media, of available media options and
opportunities, and of both technical and organizational methods for
avoiding elite biases and for doing research and production
valuable to the broader social communities we serve.

But to make the entire FAMAS community larger and stronger, as well
as more than just the sum of the many parts, another project could
be to promote the community of institutions in a collaborative
manner. For example, FAMAS might initiate a campaign to educate
audiences to the general importance of supporting alternative media
by purchasing its products, donating to its campaigns, spreading
the word about its existence, improving its content through
submissions and critique, writing letters to promote debate, etc.
Second, FAMAS could sponsor mass mailings, ads, and events to
publicize lots of alternative media services at once, with options
to subscribe to or purchase multiple offerings at discounts.

Another related effort could be to urge (or perhaps require as a
condition of membership) all member institutions to make their
mailing lists available free to all other member institutions (the
actual cost of providing these lists is minuscule), and to enact a
parallel campaign to (1) educate the progressive public that
progressive mailings are essential to building alternative media
institutions, and (2) educate existing alternative media
organizations that it is in everyone's collective interest that
each organization and project benefit from the outreach of all. (3)
FAMAS could also urge that at public events--concerts, conferences,
public talks, rallies, etc. there is always an alternative media
presence, and could even organize and mobilize that presence in a
collaborative fashion.

Similarly, FAMAS could urge that every member organization make its
content available free to significantly smaller member
organizations with non-overlapping audiences. Thus, monthly
periodicals like MJ, the Nation, the Progressive would make their
articles available to local weekly newspapers and newsletters or
other smaller publications not in the same genre. Major radio
stations and producers like Pacifica could make their shows
available to smaller stations in other regions, free, after some
delay. FAMAS could serve as or could work with existing service
bureaus, having all the appropriate materials, written and audio,
available to be faxed, e-mailed, or sent on disk, paper, or any
appropriate medium, to any appropriate media outlet wanting it.
Writers would get the initial payment, from the first (largest)
publisher (which is all they would have gotten otherwise) as well
as great visibility from additional appearances of their work. The
increasing size of the alternative media community that FAMAS would
promote in this and other ways would, additionally, mean more funds
available to pay better fees to writers, program producers, and so
on. Issues like these would of course have to be assessed more
widely, and worked out in practice, to develop an institution like
FAMAS.

FAMAS could also act as an agent for freelance writers,
photographers, audio production people, film makers, performers,
web page spinners, artists, etc. Individual freelance producers
could submit their materials to be made visible in some simple and
indexed manner to all FAMAS member organizations. Member
organizations could then request material from the freelance
providers and conduct payments straight to them. This could be done
in many ways, of course, and the task FAMAS would face, as in other
facets of its operation, would be to find a collaborative approach
beneficial to all involved.

Another role of FAMAS could be to facilitate mutual support
alliances. These could be within a single type media, with the
Federation bringing print publishers like Z, the Nation, In These
Times, Dollars and Sense, Covert Action Quarterly, Labor Notes, and
local weeklies, etc., into mutual contact, say (an effort that is
already underway), or bringing into alliances film and TV producers
like Global Vision, Flying Focus, and Paper Tiger, etc. Or it could
occur across media. In this latter case, FAMAS could try, for
example, to get radio like Pacifica or progressive college stations
or Alternative Radio to promote alternative print media in their
area, and to get the alternative print media to run the station's
program schedule. Or to get speakers bureaus like Speak Out to
promote FAMAS members and media offerings, and vice versa. Or to
get progressive music performers to have alternative media presence
at their shows, and alternative media to review their work. Or to
get information providers and creators in touch with
telecommunications projects like the Institute for Global
Communications, IGC, LBBS and the new ShareWorld, and vice versa.
More generally, FAMAS could facilitate each member bringing other
member's offerings to the attention of their readers, listeners, or
viewers by referencing, reviewing, reporting on, and otherwise
promoting their offerings.

FAMAS could work with alternative publishers, bookstores, and
distributors to try to enlarge and strengthen the network of
alternative outlets for political material through stores and
agencies, or at events, conferences, and talks, etc.

FAMAS could provide a way for activist organizations like NARAL,
Citizen Action, Act Up, Food Not Bombs, the Center for Campus
Organizing, the Center for Third World Organizing, the SEIU, the
New Party, NOW, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, DC SCAR,
the Green Party or Greenpeace, etc., etc. as well as more local,
community and grassroots projects to communicate their needs to
researchers, periodicals, or other information providers like
Political Research Associates, the Center for New Democracy, URPE,
the Institute for Policy Studies, etc., and the various relevant
magazines, newspapers, and radio shows, as well as a way for the
providers to get reports and stories/interviews from the grass
roots efforts.

FAMAS could also serve as a clearing house for interns and as a
bulletin board for jobs. And, more, it could act as a channeling
mechanism for each producer like FAIR, MJ, WBAI, Sojourners,
Solidarity Magazine, Third Force Magazine, The Women's Review of
Books, etc., to provide lessons to others and learn from the
technical, organizational, and social lessons and innovations of
others, or even to share technical resources, when appropriate.

Another possibility would be for FAMAS to undertake fund-raising
for its membership, globally, in one package. No member would go to
foundations like New World or Veatch, for example, or even to large
donors who weren't directly affiliated with them. Rather, the
Federation would go to the funding community at large and say
support alternative media, support truth in the mainstream media,
here, now, through us--or not at all. FAMAS would then channel the
donor support in accord with the specific desires of the community
of media activists. It is one-stop grant making. The Federation
would be responsible to disperse moneys raised according to some
internally agreed norms, bylaws, or votes, etc.

As to content, the Federation could propose areas of focus or
information campaigns such as keying on affirmative action, or on
corporate responsibility for poverty, etc., so that there could be
a degree of coherence in the member organization's communicative
efforts.

FAMAS could also promote free exchange of ideas, fight censorship,
fight media monopolization and particular Congressional bills, such
the recent telecommunications bill and other reactionary media
policy at the national level, and could provide defense for FAMAS
members under attack by the Right.

FAMAS's work could be funded by payments from member institutions
and individuals. Each separate person joining as a freelance writer
or artist, reader or viewer, could have a yearly dues to pay. Each
organization could likewise have a fee, pegged to its size and
budget. As the agenda of FAMAS becomes larger, and its financial
needs greater, so too will its member organizations' and
individuals' benefits.

The Federation we are suggesting, in line with the ideas and
impetus of the Media and Democracy Congress, would act so that
folks now receptive to alternative media become more supportive, so
that folks who have yet to encounter alternative media hear about
it, and so that every alternative media project and institution,
from research groups, to media watch groups, to film projects, to
weekly radio shows, to recording artists and companies, to
telecommunications projects, to alternative bookstores and
distributors, to speaker's bureaus, to publishing houses and weekly
or monthly periodicals, etc., each benefit from the advancement of
all others and contribute to that advancement as part of its daily
agenda. Solidarity with autonomy.

It is a change in mindset, so that alternative media projects and
producers transform from competitors for audience or money to
allies in a broad consciousness raising project throughout society.

There were roughly 640 attendees at the Media and Democracy
Congress. If you asked what is an alternative media institution,
how should it be structured, what should be its agenda, where
should its funding come from, what is the relative importance of
different types of media activity, what should be the norms for
deciding content, etc., there would be many different answers for
each question. Z's answers, for example, would not be shared by
many other folks there, and vice versa. It is possible to have this
diversity sink us. But it is also possible to recognize, instead,
that we as a community have so many underlying needs and goals in
common that our diversity can become a strength rather than a
weakness, and can facilitate rather than obstruct collaboration.

FAMAS would not reduce all its members to some common denominator.
FAMAS would not be a coalition around a few shared sentiments.
FAMAS would instead promote the mutual support that all its members
need, making the whole much greater than just the sum of its parts.
This seems to us to be worth working for.

======end of FAMAS article=====

NOTE: our vision at EconomicDemocracy.org is not the same as the FAMAS
proposal, though related to it, and compatible with it.

Our vision is (currently) less detailed, but _more_ ambitious: to
reclaim the airwaves from corporate control.. Networks, something along
the lines proposed in this FAMAS article, certainly need to be *part* of
the answer, a part of the vision we at EconomicDemocracy.org promote.

While not a panacea, the use of the internet is also a key, powerful
tool emphasized at EconomicDemocracy.org

Please join us at:

RECLAIM THE MEDIA: http://EconomicDemocracy.org/reclaim.html

then sign up to the Announcement list, which will be the public
release of our own project/vision, followed by web-based forums
on EconomicDemocracy.org where activist discussion, and then,
planning and networking can take place to making it a reality!

Harel Barzilai
Co-founder, March 1991, UseNet's misc.activism.progressive
Author, "Electronic Activism" (1992), "Electronic Activism II" (1993)
Organizer, EconomicDemocracy.org (home of Electronic Activism Revisited (EAR))

--
RECLAIM THE MEDIA: http://EconomicDemocracy.org/reclaim.html

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