Mega-corporations and the news (update)

hand-over-mouth-silenceIt seems to me that we can easily chart the decline of the evening news from the moment Walter Cronkite stepped down back in the early 1980s. Now, we get 10 minutes of “news”, 10 minutes of commercials and 10 minutes of goofy stuff — sports, entertainment news, what have you. Rarely do I see an interview with a real, honest to God, expert. Instead, we get interviews with commentators. We don’t ever get a clearer idea of what the issue is that instead we get a picture from the left and a picture from a right, like every issue only has two sides. It is completely ridiculous.

Last week, we learned that there was some deal made between General Electric, the parent company of MSNBC, and News Corp., the parent company of Fox News. Basically, a muzzle has been placed over the news anchors and commentators. Glenn Greenwald has much more to say on this:

I want to return to the subject of GE’s silencing of Keith Olbermann both because there are new facts I’ve obtained that shed light on what happened here and because this is one of the most blatant examples yet of pernicious corporate control over America’s journalism.  The most striking aspect of this episode is that GE isn’t even bothering any longer to deny the fact that they exert control over MSNBC’s journalism.  They’ve brazenly dispensed with the long-held fiction of the sanctity of journalistic independence from interference by the corporate parents that own America’s largest news organizations.

Instead, GE is now openly and proudly boasting of their editorial control over the news organizations they own, and publicly rubbing it in the faces of NBC News journalists that they’re subservient to GE’s corporate agenda.  Look at this smug, creepy quote from GE executive spokesman Gary Sheffer explaining in The New York Times why GE issued its gag order preventing Olbermann from criticizing Fox and O’Reilly, all but mocking NBC and MSNBC journalists as nothing more than GE’s office of corporate spokespeople:

“We all recognize that a certain level of civility needed to be introduced into the public discussion,” Gary Sheffer, a spokesman for G.E., said this week. “We’re happy that has happened.”

Why is GE even speaking for MSNBC’s editorial decisions at all?  Needless to say, GE doesn’t care in the slightest about “civility” in general.  Mika Brzezinski can spout that people who dislike Sarah Palin aren’t ”real Americans” and Chris Matthews can say about George Bush that “everybody sort of likes the president, except for the real whack-jobs,” and GE executives won’t (and didn’t) bat an eye.  What they mean by “civility” is:  ”thou shalt not criticize anyone who can harm GE’s business interests or who will report on our actions.”  Thus:  GE’s journalists will stop reporting critically on Fox and its top assets because Fox can expose actions of GE that we want to keep concealed.

Does anyone need it explained to them why it is so dangerous and destructive to have our political debates controlled by GE executives, sitting in their offices censoring the journalism of our leading media outlets in the name of “civility,” code for:  you will respect those who can harm us?  Our entire political culture is already designed to ensure corporate control of our political institutions.  Their lobbyists literally write the laws enacted by Congress and control their implementation.  The reason the journalism industry insisted for so long on the ludicrous fiction that corporate parents never violated the sanctity of journalistic independence is precisely because everyone understood why that would be so dangerous.  Apparently, they no longer feel a need to maintain that fiction. (more…)

Keith Olbermann has posted this at DK:

Primarily, there is no “deal” between MSNBC and Fox over what we can and cannot cover. This is part of a continuing strategy of blackmail by Rupert Murdoch and Roger Ailes, that reaches back to 2004, and has as its goal the cancellation of “Countdown.” This stuff has ebbed and flowed for five years, it’s part of my daily job to push it back with whichever strategy I think will best work at a given moment. For the last two months I’ve been employing “News Jujitsu.” If you watch tonight and catch the references to Fox and its rogues gallery you will know that the most recent tack has worked, but the fight is endless and there will be reversals in the future, I’m sure.

Ailes himself is tonight quoted as saying he tried to ‘broker peace’ by restraining his hosts. This is the same Ailes who insisted he would never interfere with what Bill O’Reilly said on the air. Even naked hypocrisy is not too much if Fox can make itself seem victimized, or can muzzle dissent.

But there is no “deal.” I would never consent, and, fortunately, MSNBC and NBC News would never ask me to. (more… )

This is of course great news but it makes me look at the NY Times and ask – What are y’all doing over there?  Are you just making stuff up?  Olbermann mentioned on his show that you (NYT) called him twice and he said that he wasn’t a party to any deal, twice.  Who were your sources for this story?