-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Schechter / MEDIA DOWNPLAYS ANTI-WAR MARCH SIZE / Jan 31
Date:   Wed, 31 Jan 2007 20:00:42 -0800 (PST)
From:   ZNet Commentaries <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Sustainers PLEASE note:

--> You can change your email address or cc data or temporarily turn off mail 
delivery via: 
https://www.zmag.org/sustainers/members

--> If you pass this comment along to others -- periodically but not repeatedly 
-- please explain that Commentaries are a premium sent to Sustainer Donors of 
Z/ZNet and that to learn more folks can consult ZNet at http://www.zmag.org 

--> Sustainer Forums Login:
https://www.zmag.org/sustainers/forums

Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-01/31schechter.cfm

==================================

ZNet Commentary
MEDIA DOWNPLAYS ANTI-WAR MARCH SIZE January 31, 2007
By Danny Schechter 

New York: January 28: This past weekend's anti-war march was big, say the 
organizers and I have no reason to doubt them. They made this claim: 

"Washington, D.C. -- In a massive showing of public opposition to the Iraq war, 
500,000 people filled the streets around the Capitol today, completely 
surrounding the building.  Participants converged on the National Mall from all 
over the country to voice their support for an end to the conflict in Iraq.  

Three hundred buses rolled in early this morning, coming from more than 40 
states and including at least 20 buses filled by New York City trade unions. 
United For Peace & Justice, the march coordinator, called this one of the 
largest and most diverse demonstrations since the war began. 

According to UFPJ National Coordinator and veteran peace and justice leader 
Leslie Cagan,  "This is a decisive moment in the history of this country and of 
our peace movement. In November, the people of this nation voted for peace. We 
are here today, all ages, from all walks of life, to hold our elected officials 
to the mandate of the people."

Add in protests in the rest of the country and it was even bigger. 

But is that the picture most of America received? I didn't see any report 
Saturday night on the front page of the Sunday NY Times online but by the 
morning in the print edition, the Times wrote:

 "Tens of thousands of protesters converged on the National Mall on Saturday to 
oppose President Bush's plan for a troop increase in Iraq in what organizers 
hoped would be one of the largest shows of antiwar sentiment in the nation's 
capital since the war began." The story was carried as headline at the bottom 
of the page, not prominent positioning. No Photo. A story about tennis got 
bigger play. The article was pushed to page 21 (although it said P. 22 on p.1)  
It was written by Ian Urbina and was well done,  but the picture caption again 
said "Thousands."

There was no mention of "Hundreds of Thousands" or a Half million or even that 
was what organizers claimed.

This was hardly the coverage "organizers hoped" for. Actually the organizers 
said it WAS the largest show of force since the war began with 500,000. The 
Times only acknowledged "tens of thousands." Does this matter?

It doesn't if the numbers game doesn't matter, and sadly it does in  country 
where perception trumps reality. Years ago, the National Park Service which 
initially always underreported crowd sizes and then began having aerial photos 
taken that were analyzed by experts using grids, decided not to provide police 
estimates which were routinely reported. Perhaps that's why the march did its 
own count.

Yesterday, the March claimed a half million---which IS "one of the largest 
shows of anti-war sentiment" (although I seem to remember the number of 750,000 
used to quantify how many showed up in the big pre-war march of 2003). But the 
papers, maybe following the AP's earlier in the day estimated "tens of 
thousands." True to form, the Washington Post online edition reported 
"THOUSANDS." The Huffington Post headline: "Why That Anti-War March Won't 
Change Anything..."

Was this right on Or right off? I wasn't there this time. My first anti-war 
march was in l965 so I have burned up my share of shoe or sneaker leather over 
the years as well as energy cheering some of the same speakers who turned up 
Saturday. I wasn't feeling well enough to make the trip this time, but reported 
on it anyway. 

I support marches as PART of a bigger strategy, not as THE strategy. And at 
least this time, many activists were planning to lobby Congress. 

As readers know by now, I think its kind of important to get this message out 
to the people through the media, and not just the message that there's 
opposition to the war bit that there's a movement opposing it. We need to show 
activism in action as a way for citizens to try to hold politicians accountable 
and participate in the process. Did that double message get through? 

This approach requires a media strategy--and a challenge to the media--- beyond 
sending out press releases and getting on Pacifica radio outlets.

On Saturday morning, the United For Peace and Justice website announced  
"(Watch live on C-SPAN!) Wow, I thought, you could see the March and Rally LIVE 
on CSPAN.  At l:30, I tuned in just before the march was slated to start, and 
sure enough several cameras were in the crowed. The only commentary I heard 
then was that there were "thousands" there. Sounded small. All we saw was a 
rapper on the stage and people milling around, No interviews. No explanation. I 
guess I missed it.

Soon, a notice appeared on screen that CSPAN would switch away from the March 
to cover Hillary Clinton's first speech in Iowa. And so they did, off to East 
High School for a stump speech. I expected them to come back while the march 
was happening. They didn't. 

Instead they rebroadcast last Friday's coverage of a National Review Institute 
conference on conservatism. Was CSPAN that nervous, that they had to 
preemptively "balance" the anti-war march? Instead of the ongoing march, we 
heard righter than right columnist Michelle Malkin complaining that the media 
didn't show the "throngs" at a right to life march, but only a few counter 
demonstrators. (CNN had the 15 counter demonstrators at this one and an 
interview with a conservative critic-but also a song by the raging grannies and 
a sound bite or two from well-known speakers like Jane Fonda.)

CSPAN promised to show it later, but when I tuned in, CSPAN l was running a 
session from the Memphis Media Conference earlier this month  at 9:30 PM. 
(Later I received an email saying I was in it so I can't criticize that, can I?)

I am sure the anti-war rally will be rebroadcast but the format with its 
endless parade of speakers and torrent of rhetoric is not exactly a media or 
audience turn on. 

My point is that there was no real 'live" coverage on the main CSPAN channel 
that I saw in a culture with news channels that can't wait to go live. (When I 
worked at ABC, there was a term called SLR for Silly Live Remote referring to 
someone on freeway overpass "reporting live" on an ordinary rush hour where 
nothing was happening.) We have a media that will go "live" to the opening of 
an envelope, but not to anti-war marches.

Coverage is more than just showing it; it is reporting on it, commenting on it, 
interviewing people there etc. 

I flipped to Fox. If there was coverage I missed it. They were spinning a 
statement by John Kerry to the effect that world public opinion does not 
support the US war. This was being presented as "anti-American." What do you 
expect from Faux News?

CNN did have a report with a journalist who had been at the march discussing 
it, saying there were "tens of thousands," not a half million. He was in the 
studio, not on the Mall, with an anchor who patronizingly referred to 
protesters as "the kind of people we've seen before." The march was treated as 
ho-hummer with the only interest expressed about whether active duty soldiers 
were marching. The CNN man said he heard about there were but didn't see them.

It was then time for a standup from the White House lawn with a reporter 
discussing how the White House would respond to Congressional criticism of the 
war, as if the marchers didn't exist. And then there was a replay of a 
soundbyte from President Bush under a graphic banner that said, can you 
believe,  "THE SOUNDS OF DISSENT."

AP reported "tens of thousands" not half a million.

"Convinced this is their moment, tens of thousands marched Saturday in an 
anti-war demonstration linking military families, ordinary people and an icon 
of the Vietnam protest movement in a spirited call to get out of Iraq"

Andrea Hsu of NPR turned tens of thousands into: "Thousands of protesters 
gathered Saturday on the Mall in Washington, D.C." Thousands!

NPR reported January 27: "While some citizens have protested against the Iraq 
war ever since the invasion of March 2003, the movement has failed to mobilize 
large numbers of people in public spaces. Has that changed now that a majority 
of Americans oppose the war?" 
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7051538

For some reason, there seemed to be more movie stars speaking than usual. What 
signal does that send?  Of course CNN ran images of Jane Fonda now and in North 
Vietnam in l973.  There was a photo of Sean Penn marching. 

Headline in a newspaper in Komo Washington: "Middle America meets celebrity 
glitter in anti-war march."

Some outlets, but mostly on the West coast noted that there were protests there 
too: "WASHINGTON - Anti-war protesters from around the country converged on 
Washington, Los Angeles, San Francisco and other cities today, …"

Don't the anti-war organizers see this as a problem?  Don't they think they 
should try to do something about it as a porblem and protest this ritualistic 
treatment? Shouldn't they make the media coverage a issue. Are they only 
listening to themselves?

I was on Air America in LA on Saturday afternoon and feisty host Bree Walker, a 
former TV anchor agreed. But the anti-war movement continues to pay lipservice 
to this problem, perhaps for fear of "alienating" the press.

 Give me a break! This is a pattern, deliberate! Back in 2003, the Washington 
Post's own omsbudsman Michael Getler indicted his own newspaper for 
"downplaying protests." He now works for Public Television.

This coverage is deplorable, but worse: the anti-war movement has not made it 
an issue. With more than half the country opposing the war, the movement is 
still being under-reported and marginalized! And not doing much about it.

We still need a march on the media. Anyone with me?

News Dissector Danny Schechter edits Mediachannel.org. He wrote "WHEN NEWS 
LIES" condemning the coverage of the war. (WmdtheFilm.com) Comments to [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]




_______________________________________________
FRIENDS mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.sffreaks.org/mailman/listinfo/friends

Reply via email to