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Archive for the ‘Media Reform’ Category

What really went down at the National Conference on Media Reform

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

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Since I know some readers here are also fans of Fox News and Bill O’Reilly, and since I’ve been talking up the NCMR like crazy, I thought I should note that O’Reilly’s characterization of the event and the people attending was pretty inaccurate. Others agree. 

Minnesota reporter Paul Schmelzer notes that O’Reilly’s report failed to mention

. . . views from the kind of people I met, from mainstream reporters to church-based peace advocates to activists working to get accurate representations of rural life into corporate media.

 Attendee Larry Hollon reports

. . . I heard humane values and a concern for social justice and human dignity that was solid and deeply moving, and I believe this is where progressive faith and media reform intersect.

A young, fourteen-year-old female spoke of her concern about a misogynist print ad for a Latino radio station that she believed promoted both violence and sexual abuse of women. When she showed the bus card for the ad, it was clear she had a genuine complaint.

Her recounting of the efforts of a group of young women to get the ad pulled was harrowing. The full force of a corporate media headquarters was brought against these teenagers in an effort to discourage them and scare them away. Yet they persisted and eventually the ad was withdrawn.

As she spoke, I don’t think she was aware of the tears in the eyes of many who’ve been in such struggles and know the costs firsthand.

And from Josh Silver, Free Press executive director: 

The conference . . . was about the failure of corporate media to inform and reflect our communities and our democracy. It is about consolidated TV, radio and newspapers turning the news into sound bites, trivializing critical issues like elections and war, and failing to hold power accountable.

It is a free speech movement at its core, calling for a stronger democracy. We want more channels and more opportunities for voices and views of all kinds.

This is the conference that I saw. I heard some terrific stories and concerns — and questions.

If we own the airwaves, and broadcasters are required to serve the public interest, why are parents always being told to just turn off the television if we don’t like it? How do we trust journalists to tell us the truth about, say, a multi-billion dollar toy company’s problems with lead paint if that company is also a huge source of the owner’s revenue through advertising? If we get ninety percent of our news from only six companies, how will we get a diversity of opinions?

My complaint about the conference was that there was not one session dedicated to how these problems are affecting children and how we raise them. Not one. Several speakers mentioned, in passing, the problems with advertising to kids — Robert McChesney called it obscene — yet no panel formally addressed it.

The conference organizers were taping attendees and asking them to describe why they were there in five words. My five would have been I’m Raising Citizens Not Consumers. 

Is it accurate for O’Reilly to call me “unstable” and a threat to America?

(And was O’Reilly referring to me when he says that “these people” don’t want “dissent in America?” I guess he hasn’t been reading Corporate Babysitter.)

The back and forth of the left and right is tiresome. There really are some values that we all hold as important. I believe that media reform is one of them.

Photo courtesy edkohler

Media reform and why it matters to kids

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

It’s a Big Media Week here in Minneapolis. 

Tomorrow, Thursday, is the ACME Teach-In. Josh Golin (CCFC) will be presenting Using Big Media’s Exploitation of Children to Motivate Parents and Others Toward Media Reform (more here). 

The National Conference for Media Reform starts Friday. I’m a conference volunteer (work eight hours, get in free!). While I had fantasies that my volunteer assignment would be to keep Dan Rather supplied with bourbons-straight-up, I’ve been asked to be a regular old room monitor. Just like fourth grade. Good news: I learned at the volunteer training last night that there will be at least one table in the exhibit area where attendees can drop their own literature. What a way to get our name in front of 3,000 people!

Here’s an Interview with Free Press’s Josh Silver via Minnesota Monitor.

Friday night is the opening for Project Girl: A Multimedia Exhibition and Guide to Un-Mediafying Your Life at Intermedia Arts. Lyn Mikel Brown will be speaking.

Sunday night is the Anne Elizabeth Moore reading at Arise! Bookstore. Is it enough to know that Pamela Anderson has read Unmarketable? No? Then if you need to become more familiar with Anne Elizabeth Moore, read Rob Walker’s interview with Anne Elizabeth Moore. Or read Anne Elizabeth Moore’s interview with Rob Walker. (Note to self: keep short name.)

Hello to anyone who has come to Parents for Ethical Marketing and the Corporate Babysitter through one of these events!

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And why does all this media reform matter to those of us concerned with marketing to children?

Television broadcasters are supposed to serve the public interest — that’s why they have free use of the airwaves. But since media companies were allowed to consolidate, children’s educational programming has decreased — dramatically. That’s one reason why Parents for Ethical Marketing is taking a stand against media consolidation. (Big Media, Little Kids 2: Examining the Influence of Duopolies on Children’s Television Programming)

Right now phone and cable companies would like to be able to control what you — and your kids — see and do on the internet. If corporations decide what web content to provide, would children still have access to the advertising-free educational sites like Starfall? Would you be able to read blogs critical of corporate power (like this one)? Probably not as easily. That’s why Parents for Ethical Marketing supports net neutrality.

Do I even have to mention what mainstream media is doing to kids?

Media reform means more voices, more options, more ideas, more knowledge — creating informed, healthy kids who become informed, healthy adults.

Photo courtesy woodleywonderworks