A good article here, confronting the inane ways that the media analysts, personalities, and journalists, are handling Al Gore's book.
I'm not sure how much the confusing fuzz of media idiocy drives governmental policy.
Mainly, I think, the media dysfunction allows bad policy to be cloaked, camoflaged, and stood by, far past the obviousness of the policy's bad effects.
Secondly, the media dysfunction can act as a enabler of trivia to disqualify policy (whether that policy is good or bad, trivia "about" that policy can act to disqualify it).
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Wednesday, June 13
by
ebuddha
on Wed 13 Jun 2007 03:38 PM PDT
Friday, June 8
by
ebuddha
on Fri 08 Jun 2007 01:45 PM PDT
Is now clearly on display. More silly Paris Hilton obsessions.
From Al Gore's book: It is simply no longer possible to ignore the strangeness of our public discourse. I know I'm not alone in feeling that something has gone fundamentally wrong. In 2001, I had hopes it was an aberration when polls showed that three-quarters of Americans believed that Saddam Hussein was responsible for attacking us on September 11. More than five years later, however, nearly half the American people still believes that Saddam was connected to the attack. At first I thought the exhaustive, nonstop coverage of the O.J. Simpson trial was just unfortunate excess --- an unwelcome departure from the normal good sense and judgment of our news media. Now we know that it was merely an early example of a new pattern of serial obsession that periodically take over the airwaves for weeks at a time. Late in the summer of 2006, American news coverage was saturated with the bizarre false confession of a man who claimed to have been present at the death of JonBenet Ramsey --- the six-year-old beauty queen whose unsolved murder eleven years before was responsible for another long-running obsession. A few months prior to John Mark Karr's arrest in Bangkok, the disappearance of a high school senior in Aruba and the intensive search for her body and her presumed murderer consumed thousands of hours of television coverage. Both cases remain unsolved as of this writing, and neither had any appreciable impact on the fate of the Republic. Like JonBenet Ramsey, O.J. has recently been back at the center of another fit of obsessive-compulsive news, when his hypothetical confession wasn't published and his interviews on television wasn't aired. This particular explosion of "news" was truncated only when a former television sitcom star used racist insults in a night club. And before that we focus on the "Runaway Bride" in Georgia. And before that there was the Michael Jackson trial and the Robert Blake trial, the Laci Peterson tragedy and the Chandra Levy tragedy. And of course we can't forget Britney and KFed, and Lindsay and Paris and Nicole, Tom Cruise jumped on Oprah's couch and married Katie Holmes, who gave birth to Suri. And Russell Crowe apparently threw a phone at a hotel concierge. In early 2007, the wall-to-wall coverage of Anna Nicole Smith's death, embalming, and funeral plans and the legal wrangling over the paternity and custody of her child and disposition of her estate, served as yet another particularly bizarre example of the new priorities in America's news coverage. And while American television watchers were collectively devoting a hundred million hours of their lives each week to these and other similar stories, our nation was in the process of more quietly making what future historians will certainly describe as a series of catastrophically mistaken decisions on issues of war and peace, the global climate and human survival, freedom and barbarity, justice and fairness. But of course, Al Gore is somehow a green post-modernist, empowering Karl Rove,being a Harvard grad, and all that. Now clearly, I'm making fun. I understand KW has a lot on his plate - he isn't an expert in a lot of fields. But his Integral Politics is clearly deeply deficient - so are there other integal analyses that are worthwhile, of the media situation? The banality and obsessiveness of the 24/7 news networks, really isn't a left/right issue - it comes in for mutual condemnation. But what is the integral analysis? Thursday, June 7
by
ebuddha
on Thu 07 Jun 2007 11:32 AM PDT
So I biked into work today. At around 8 AM, went into the gym to shower, prepare for work, and noticed that on the cable news channels, reporting about Paris Hilton.
And just now, 3 hours later, I go into a corner store to get a snack - I look up at the TV, and what is being reported on? Paris Hilton. 3 hours later. (Oh, by the way, Paris Hilton is out of jail, in case you haven't heard. I didn't know she was in jail, but apparently she was, and now she is out.) Which brings up, of course, the clear emptiness of current news reporting. Entertainment, rather than worthwhile news. What entertains, rather than what informs. It would be interesting to see an integral analysis of this. The financial and economic analysis is straightforward - the news companies are focused on ratings, there is a ratings bump from entertainment related news, so the editors at the news channels allow 24/7 insipid coverage, dominated by corporate interests on substantial issues, and fluff the rest of the time. Whatever gets the ratings up, within reason. The real question then, is where straight economic analysis is placed within the integral context? Economic analysis focuses, interestingly enough, focuses on most everything BUT the I-dimension. Mainly this type of analysis is IT and ITS focused, with a bit of WE analysis thrown in, for cultural dimensions. My one sentence analysis of the shallowness of news is mainly an "externalist" rendering of the situation, with rational actors in the news divisions acting in a behavioristic fashion, in pursuit of those ratings bumps. With the product then produced by that process being shallow tripe. It would be great to see a bit more of this in integral-land, with a focus on the reciprocity between the individual and cultural factors, that move in interdependence with the IT economic "hard" factors (actual resources), and ITS legal and economic structures that are in place. It seems to me that Wilber talks about the external factors, only to abandon them in "inner" cultural and personal factors, when push comes to shove. "The single greatest problem was stated this way. When green attacks orange, amber wins. And believe me, amber is winning, just ask Karl Rove. Despite a democratic victory here or there, the ranks of voters have downshifted towards amber, unmistakably and strongly. All of this thanks to the likes of green Harvard, which has finally succeeded in deconstructing it's own deconstructionists" I would say that the hollowing out of news reporting, does downshift power towards amber. The prizing of vapid fame over important issues means, that in the main news world, important information doesn't get reported until it bites "the people" in the rear-end. Too late to do anything about it. But how is that "green attacking orange?" The externalist factors I describe above - the search for ratings - account for the dumbing down of the news. That isn't green, correct? This is why Wilber's analysis fails so badly - so incredibly, awfully badly - on this point. "Green" because a magic talisman of sorts, the boogieman, to not actually engage what is happening in the "real world". |
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