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Saturday, November 17, 2001
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Article With Your Friends Published on Wednesday, November 14,
2001 by MediaChannel.org
Warning: Media Management Now In Effect
by Danny Schechter I am not sure when the Bush administration
realized it had a media problem. The White House was humming
along with a well-oiled media management machine. The president
was riding high in the polls. He clearly had the country behind him.
And yet, something wasn't working on the world stage, even after
savvy handlers turned a politician denigrated as a bumbler into a
more self-assured and even inspiring leader. Their media makeover
was as meticulous as the makeup applied to movie stars playing
monsters.
The turning point had come early on, with W.'s well-crafted speech
to the U.S. Congress, which plainly had been designed with
applause lines in mind and stirring but measured phrases. He had
mastered the TelePrompTer and was well-practiced in his delivery.
It worked: One day he was laughed at as a global village idiot, the
next he was hailed by the same pundits, on the strength of one
performance piece, as a statesman par excellence.

Hungry for a leader, the American people rallied behind his call for unity, alertness 
and patriotic patience. There were some murmurs about the mixed message that on the 
one hand counseled vigilance and, on the other, sho
pping as usual. Overseas, some eyebrows went down when phrases like "crusade" and 
"smoking out the evil ones" were dropped from his rhetorical lexicon.

But a serious communications problem remained, because of a more objective problem: 
Many realists, especially in other countries, weren't clear that bombing and bombast 
could bring terrorists to heel. Those issues began t
o be raised by skeptics and even comics.

Three Steps
In response, the White House seems to have taken three steps.

First, keep critics off the air. (And not just videos of bin Laden or Al-Jazeera, 
which "coincidentally" had its Kabul office bombed). It soon became clear that the 
media were allocating little space for domestic critics,
 much less harder-line opponents, of the policy. While administration officials 
condemned the ideological fundamentalism of the Taliban, a certain ideological 
intolerance began to be practiced in the homeland media. Fairn
ess and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), noted on November 2 that 44 columns in the 
Washington Post and New York Times stressed a military response, with only two that 
suggested diplomatic and international law approaches.


Second, bring the press on board. The American media empires soon seemed to be 
marching in lockstep with the government. Despite a tightening of information policies 
and the total exclusion of reporters from most battlefi
elds, nary a critical word heard from many of those who have been loudest in defense 
of freedom of the press. Even a champion of freedom of the press like Walter Cronkite 
said he was willing to countenance a censorship bo
ard of some kind, if camera crews were allowed in. (They weren't and his proposal went 
nowhere.)

The media is going along to get along. Will government media managers soon boast about 
what a great job they did as they did 10 years ago in the aftermath of Desert Storm? 
Then, Michael Deaver, President Reagan's PR honch
o, was ecstatic, contending, "If you were to hire a public relations firm to do the 
media relations for an international event, it couldn't be done any better than this 
is being done." Hodding Carter, President Jimmy Cart
er's former chief flack, seconded the emotion: "If I were the government, I'd be 
paying the press for the coverage it's getting."

Yet the press � and this was a television story above all else � did not have to be 
paid. Pete Williams, the man who "handled" media for the Pentagon during the Gulf War 
and was rewarded with a job on NBC News, put his fi
nger on it: "The reporting," he boasted to his superiors, "has been largely a 
recitation of what administration people have said, or an extension of it." Is this 
true today? Not totally. Happily, there are still some exce
ptions, like Seymour Hersh, who catch the Pentagon in blatant lies, as happened 
recently in conflicting stories about casualties U.S. troops suffered on the ground.

Third, get the West Coast studios to jump in. On the day this column was written, 
media moguls and movie studio heads strategized with White House aide Karl Rove on how 
they can do even more than they already have to boos
t the war effort. Tom Cruise, star of Mission: Impossible, and a sequel in the works, 
is just one star who has met with the CIA and according to MSNBC.com, "He was emphatic 
about presenting the CIA in as positive a light
as possible."

The military is quietly infiltrating Hollywood as well. The little-known
Institute for Creative Studies at the University of Southern California
brings top Hollywood talent into secret contact with top military
officials. The think tank received funding of $45 million from the
U.S. Army in 1999. According to The Sunday Herald, "One of the
few members named publicly, by the Hollywood newspaper Daily
Variety, is Steven de Souza, co-writer of the hit 1988 action movie
Die Hard." Michael Macedonia � of the Army's Simulation,
Training and Instrumentation Command � said: "You're talking
about screenwriters and producers. These are very brilliant, creative
people. They can come up with fascinating insights very quickly."

While movieland is key because of its global reach, the
cooperation of the TV networks is vital for the engineering of
consent on the domestic front. The networks have their own
reasons to cooperate. Remember that while war unleashes
devastation and death on people, it delivers ratings and brings life
to television. War is often the "big story" (when sex isn't) and a
defining moment for many journalists. It's the story that permits
news departments to mobilize their "troops" � that's what ABC
called employees when I worked there � and show off their high-
tech deployments. Many reporters who make it to the top do so
because of war reporting. Ask Peter Arnett, Cristianne Amanpour
or even Peter Jennings � no disrespect intended � if being under
fire helped or hurt their careers. The answer is obvious. Less
obvious is the relationship between our bloated defense budget and
war coverage. The Pentagon uses and manipulates TV's military
boosterism to hype adventures, secure appropriations and sell
weaponry.

World Views
The problem in an age of globalization is that harnessing domestic
media is no longer enough. The fact is that coverage outside the
United States seeps back in, and despite the government's media
strategists, is growing more critical and less cheerleading by the
day. Growing skepticism in influential media outlets overseas is
worrying to policy-makers here. On November 11, the front page of
The New York Times carried a long piece on "the battle to shape
opinion," reporting on the Bush administration's new strategies.
The article acknowledges that the administration has enforced
"policies ensuring that journalists have little or no access to
independent information about military strategies, successes and
failures."

But it also notes that public opinion worldwide, led in part by the
press, increasingly opposes U.S. policies. The Arab press is
hostile. The Asian media, unconvinced. Over 60 percent of the
people in Tony Blair's Britain, the only real partner the U.S. has in
its leaky coalition, say they want a bombing pause. Half of Italy
agrees. The German press is critical. I know because I have been
interviewed by many media outlets in that country. Reports the
Times, with understated candor way at the bottom of a story that
consumed an acre of print, "European journalists have also
become suspicious that the American news media have been co-
opted by the government or at least swept up by patriotism." One
German calls this a "Post Vietnam Patriotic Syndrome." To
massage this problem, the Bush administration has hired PR firms
and created a task force for coordinating U.S. and UK
communications directors with daily conference calls between the
White House, London and
Islamabad.

So far, there is no evidence that this PR offensive is working
internationally. In fact, a growing number of Americans are looking
for news and information elsewhere, from the very sources that
alarm Bush media strategists. NPR reports that American are
flocking to foreign web sites while England's BBC and Canada's
CBC report a big spike in viewing by Americans. Our own
Globalvision News Network is generating considerable traffic by
offering articles and analysis from other countries. Clearly, other
viewpoints are there for those willing to look for them. I was
delighted to find Vanity Fair this month quoting me on this very
issue (p.182). (Sadly, Brad Pitt, not your News Dissector, made
the cover, probably because of his more impressive abs.)

In the Soviet Union, most of its citizens didn't trust the state-
managed press, fully aware of its propaganda function. In the U.S.,
most people tend to trust the press, unaware of its role in what
Noam Chomsky and Ed Herman call "manufacturing consent." I
heard Max Robins of TV Guide report that news viewing is way up.
True enough, but skepticism is rising on both the right and the left
and is likely to erupt in the mainstream sooner rather than later.

I hope that it is not too late for the U.S. media establishment to get
the message, distance themselves from "official sources" and
"coded" propaganda and seek out more diverse sources of
information.

Danny Schechter is the executive editor of MediaChannel.org. His
latest book is "News Dissector: Passions, Pieces and Polemics,
1960-2000," from Akashic Books. Feedback to
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