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At a time when news cycles bring us such portentous events as the
remarkable wedding of Britney Spears, the advent of Michael Jackson’s actual
trial proceedings and the start of the Democratic presidential primaries, it
is time to reflect upon the state of the media union.
The achievements are everywhere to be seen and heard.
On more than a thousand radio stations owned by the Clear Channel
conglomerate, the programming quality is as reliable as a Big Mac.
In cities and towns across the nation, an array of outspoken radio
talk-show hosts can be depended on to run the gamut from the mushy center to
the far right.
Television provides a wide variety of homogenized offerings. With truly
impressive (production) values, the major networks embody a consummate
multiplicity of sameness, with truncated imagination and consolidated
ownership. These days, there’s a captivatingly unadventurous cable channel
for virtually every niche market.
A few naysayers like to disparage our system of mass communications.
Yet overall, modern free-enterprise media outlets are the best that money
can buy.
In 2004, those who scoff at the transcendent future of new media
technologies are like those who greeted television several decades ago with
cries of “idiot box” and “vast wasteland.” The cynics failed to trust those
who would be enriched by the emerging medium.
Today, let us not be bound by old concepts of national boundaries. The
global village is being wired with fiber optics; the power to consume is now
in the hands of billions.
In an era of international understanding -- when everyone from Peoria
to Belgrade to Beijing knows the meaning of golden arches or a Nike-brand
swoosh -- commercial expression has become a kind of global lexicon in a
language gradually redefining what it means to be human. For the 21st
century, from one shining sea to another, a manifest corporate destiny is
upon us.
Leaving no pixel unturned, entrepreneurial genius has found endless
ways to innovate on behalf of the eternal quest for more capital. Just as
the highest monetary achievers among us have learned to seem to do good
while doing extraordinarily well for themselves, the TV networks teach us
that the most pristine values are to be achieved by, not coincidentally,
spending money. Every priceless moment, as MasterCard commercials have often
reminded us, somehow seems to coincide with financial expenditures.
To better live in a society that treasures individuality, you can learn
how to be more in step with everyone else who matters. Glancing at a TV
screen for scarcely more than a second, you have the potential to absorb the
latest data from key stock-market indicators as well as glimpse snippets of
headlines crawling across the bottom of the screen, absorb
computer-generated graphics, listen to voices, hear background music -- and,
of course, keep an eye on the big picture.
But with all media privileges, my fellow American consumers, come
responsibilities. Some technologies are being abused to bypass commercials
on television, suppress pop-up ads on line and resist legitimate efforts by
sponsors to replace your unduly iconoclastic sense of reality with lucrative
facades.
Yet let us be candid. The legends of corporate-driven community, laid
down by conventions of commerce and politics, are suitable for compliance
with never-never lands of public pretense. Contrived narratives that provide
maximum profits can have little to do with authentic experience. To guide
the expenditures of time and resources for enhancement of cash flow, our
powerful institutions must function as arbiters of social meaning.
First among equals of those institutions are the powerhouses of mass
media. As Marshall McLuhan observed, "All media exist to invest our lives
with artificial perceptions and arbitrary values."
These are revolutionary times, media outlets often remind us. All over
the planet, mass marketing boosts cultural products to digitize the future.
In the binary mode, you’re either with it or you’re not. Media consumers of
the world, unite! You have nothing to lose but your brains.
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Norman Solomon is co-author, with Reese Erlich, of “Target Iraq: What the
News Media Didn’t Tell You.”