Manufacturing Consent
A Propaganda Model
excerpted from the book
Manufacturing Consent
by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky
Pantheon Books, 1988
The mass media serve as a system for communicating
messages and symbols to the general populace. It is their function
to amuse, entertain, and inform, and to inculcate individuals
with the values, beliefs, and codes of behavior that will integrate
them into the institutional structures of the larger society.
In a world of concentrated wealth and major conflicts of class
interest, to fulfill this role requires systematic propaganda.
In countries where the levers of power
are in the hands of a state bureaucracy, the monopolistic control
over the media, often supplemented by official censorship, makes
it clear that the media serve the ends of a dominant elite. It
is much more difficult to see a propaganda system at work where
the media are private and formal censorship is absent. This is
especially true where the media actively compete, periodically
attack and expose corporate and governmental malfeasance, and
aggressively portray themselves as spokesmen for free speech and
the general community interest. What is not evident (and remains
undiscussed in the media) is the limited nature of such critiques,
as well as the huge inequality in command of resources, and its
effect both on access to a private media system and on its behavior
and performance.
A propaganda model focuses on this inequality
of wealth and power and its multilevel effects on mass-media interests
and choices. It traces the routes by which money and power are
able to filter out the news fit to print, marginalize dissent,
and allow the government and dominant private interests to get
their messages across to the public. The essential ingredients
of our propaganda model, or set of news "filters," fall
under the following headings: (I) the size, concentrated ownership,
owner wealth, and profit orientation of the dominant mass-media
firms; (~) advertising as the primary income source of the mass
media; (3) the reliance of the media on information provided by
government, business, and "experts" funded and approved
by these primary sources and agents of power; (4) "flak"
as a means of disciplining the media; and (5) "anticommunism"
as a national religion and control mechanism. These elements interact
with and reinforce one another. The raw material of news must
pass through successive filters, leaving only the cleansed residue
fit to print. They fix the premises of discourse and interpretation,
and the definition of what is newsworthy in the first place, and
they explain the basis and operations of what amount to propaganda
campaigns.
The elite domination of the media and
marginalization of dissidents that results from the operation
of these filters occurs so naturally that media news people, frequently
operating with complete integrity and goodwill, are able to convince
themselves that they choose and interpret the news "objectively"
and on the basis of professional news values. Within the limits
of the filter constraints they often are objective; the constraints
are so powerful, and are built into the system in such a fundamental
way, that alternative bases of news choices are hardly imaginable.
In assessing the newsworthiness of the U.S. government's urgent
claims of a shipment of MIGs to Nicaragua on November 5, I984,
the media do not stop to ponder the bias that is inherent in the
priority assigned to government-supplied raw material, or the
possibility that the government might be manipulating the news,
imposing its own agenda, and deliberately diverting attention
from other material. It requires a macro, alongside a micro- (story-by-story),
view of media operations, to see the pattern of manipulation and
systematic bias.
SIZE, OWNERSHIP, AND PROFIT ORIENTATION
OF THE MASS MEDIA: THE FIRST FILTER
In their analysis of the evolution of
the media in Great Britain, James Curran and Jean Seaton describe
how, in the first half of the nineteenth century, a radical press
emerged that reached a national working-class audience. This alternative
press was effective in reinforcing class consciousness: it unified
the workers because it fostered an alternative value system and
framework for looking at the world, and because it "promoted
a greater collective confidence by repeatedly emphasizing the
potential power of working people to effect social change through
the force of 'combination' and organized action." This was
deemed a major threat by the ruling elites. One MP asserted that
the workingclass newspapers "inflame passions and awaken
their selfishness, contrasting their current condition with what
they contend to be their future condition-a condition incompatible
with human nature, and those immutable laws which Providence has
established for the regulation of civil society." The result
was an attempt to squelch the working-class media by libel laws
and prosecutions, by requiring an expensive security bond as a
condition for publication, and by imposing various taxes designed
to drive out radical media by raising their costs. These coercive
efforts were not effective, and by mid-century they had been abandoned
in favor of the liberal view that the market would enforce responsibility.
Curran and Seaton show that the market
did successfully accomplish what state intervention failed to
do. Following the repeal of the punitive taxes on newspapers between
I853 and I869, a new daily local press came into existence, but
not one new local working-class daily was established through
the rest of the nineteenth century. Curran and Seaton note that
Indeed, the eclipse of the national radical
press was so total that when the Labour Party developed out of
the working-class movement in the first decade of the twentieth
century, it did not obtain the exclusive backing of a single national
daily or Sunday paper.
One important reason for this was the
rise in scale of newspaper enterprise and the associated increase
in capital costs from the mid-nineteenth century onward, which
was based on technological improvements along with the owners'
increased stress on reaching large audiences. The expansion of
the free market was accompanied by an "industrialization
of the press." The total cost of establishing a national
weekly on a profitable basis in I837 was under a thousand pounds,
with a break-even circulation of 6,200 copies. By I867, the estimated
start-up cost of a new London daily was 50,000 pounds. The Sunday
Express, launched in I9I8, spent over two million pounds before
it broke even with a circulation of over 200,000.
Similar processes were at work in the
United States, where the start-up cost of a new paper in New York
City in I85I was $69,000; the public sale of the St. Louis Democrat
in I872 yielded $456,000; and city newspapers were selling at
from $6 to $I8 million in the I920s. The cost of machinery alone,
of even very small newspapers, has for many decades run into the
hundreds of thousands of dollars; in I945 it could be said that
"Even small-newspaper publishing is big business . . . [and]
is no longer a trade one takes up lightly even if he has substantial
cash-or takes up at all if he doesn't."
Thus the first filter-the limitation on
ownership of media with any substantial outreach by the requisite
large size of investment-was applicable a century or more ago,
and it has become increasingly effective over time. In I986 there
were some I,500 daily newspapers, 11,000 magazines, 9,000 radio
and I,500 TV stations, Z,400 book publishers, and seven movie
studios in the United States-over 25,000 media entities in all.
But a large proportion of those among this set who were news dispensers
were very small and local, dependent on the large national companies
and wire services for all but local news. Many more were subject
to common ownership, sometimes extending through virtually the
entire set of media variants.
Ben Bagdikian stresses the fact that despite
the large media numbers, the twenty-nine largest media systems
account for over half of the output of newspapers, and most of
the sales and audiences in magazines, broadcasting, books, and
movies. He contends that these "constitute a new Private
Ministry of Information and Culture" that can set the national
agenda.
Actually, while suggesting a media autonomy
from corporate and government power that we believe to be incompatible
with structural facts (as we describe below), Bagdikian also may
be understating the degree of effective concentration in news
manufacture. It has long been noted that the media are tiered,
with the top tier-as measured by prestige, resources, and outreach-comprising
somewhere between ten and twenty-four systems. It is this top
tier, along with the government and wire services, that defines
the news agenda and supplies much of
the national and international news to
the lower tiers of the media, and thus for the general public.
Centralization within the top tier was substantially increased
by the post-World War II rise of television and the national networking
of this important medium. Pre-television news markets were local,
even if heavily dependent on the higher tiers and a narrow set
of sources for national and international news; the networks provide
national and international news from three national sources, and
television is now the principal source of news for the public.
The maturing of cable, however, has resulted in a fragmentation
of television audiences and a slow erosion of the market share
and power of the networks.
... the twenty-four media giants (or their
controlling parent companies) that make up the top tier of media
companies in the United States. This compilation includes: (I)
the three television networks: ABC (through its parent, Capital
Cities), CBS, and NBC (through its ultimate parent, General Electric
[GE]); (2) the leading newspaper empires: New York Times, Washington
Post, Los Angeles Times (Times-Mirror), Wall Street Journal (Dow
Jones), Knight-Ridder, Gannett, Hearst, Scripps-Howard, Newhouse
(Advance Publications), and the Tribune Company; (3) the major
news and general-interest magazines: Time, Newsweek (subsumed
under Washington Post), Reader's Digest, TV Guide (Triangle),
and U.S. News ~ World Report; (4) a major book publisher (McGraw-Hill);
and (5) other cable-TV systems of large and growing importance:
those of Murdoch, Turner, Cox, General Corp., Taft, Storer, and
Group W (Westinghouse). Many of these systems are prominent in
more than one field and are only arbitrarily placed in a particular
category (Time, Inc., is very important in cable as well as magazines;
McGraw-Hill is a major publisher of magazines; the Tribune Company
has become a large force in television as well as newspapers;
Hearst is important in magazines as well as newspapers; and Murdoch
has significant newspaper interests as well as television and
movie holdings).
These twenty-four companies are large,
profit-seeking corporations, owned and controlled by quite wealthy
people. It can be seen in table I-I that all but one of the top
companies for whom data are available have assets in excess of
$I billion, and the median size (middle item by size) is $z.6
billion. It can also be seen in the table that approximately three-quarters
of these media giants had after-tax profits in excess of $100
million, with the median at $I83 million.
Many of the large media companies are
fully integrated into the market, and for the others, too, the
pressures of stockholders, directors, and bankers to focus on
the bottom line are powerful. These pressures have intensified
in recent years as media stocks have become market favorites,
and actual or prospective owners of newspapers and television
properties have found it possible to capitalize increased audience
size and advertising revenues into multiplied values of the media
franchises-and great wealth. This has encouraged the entry of
speculators and increased the pressure and temptation to focus
more intensively on profitability. Family owners have been increasingly
divided between those wanting to take advantage of the new opportunities
and those desiring a continuation of family control, and their
splits have often precipitated crises leading finally to the sale
of the family interest.
This trend toward greater integration
of the media into the market system has been accelerated by the
loosening of rules limiting media concentration, cross-ownership,
and control by non-media companies. There has also been an abandonment
of restrictions-previously quite feeble anyway-on radio-TV commercials,
entertainment mayhem programming, and "fairness doctrine"
threats, opening the door to the unrestrained commercial use of
the airwaves.
The greater profitability of the media
in a deregulated environment has also led to an increase in takeovers
and takeover threats, with even giants like CBS and Time, Inc.,
directly attacked or threatened. This has forced the managements
of the media giants to incur greater debt and to focus ever more
aggressively and unequivocally on profitability, in order to placate
owners and reduce the attractiveness of their properties to outsiders.
They have lost some of their limited autonomy to bankers, institutional
investors, and large individual investors whom they have had to
solicit as potential "white knights."
While the stock of the great majority
of large media firms is traded on the securities markets, approximately
two-thirds of these companies are either closely held or still
controlled by members of the originating family who retain large
blocks of stock. This situation is changing as family ownership
becomes diffused among larger numbers of heirs and the market
opportunities for selling media properties continue to improve,
but the persistence of family control is evident in the data shown
in table I-Z. Also evident in the table is the enormous wealth
possessed by the controlling families of the top media firms.
For seven of the twenty-four, the market value of the media properties
owned by the controlling families in the mid-I980s exceeded a
billion dollars, and the median value was close to half a billion
dollars. These control groups obviously have a special stake in
the status quo by virtue of their wealth and their strategic position
in one of the great institutions of society. And they exercise
the power of this strategic position, if only by establishing
the general aims of the company and choosing its top management.
The control groups of the media giants
are also brought into close relationships with the mainstream
of the corporate community through boards of directors and social
links. In the cases of NBC and the Group W television and cable
systems, their respective parents, GE and Westinghouse, are themselves
mainstream corporate giants, with boards of directors that are
dominated by corporate and banking executives. Many of the other
large media firms have boards made up predominantly of insiders,
a general characteristic of relatively small and owner-dominated
companies. The larger the firm and the more widely distributed
the stock, the larger the number and proportion of outside directors.
The composition of the outside directors of the media giants is
very similar to that of large non-media corporations. ... active
corporate executives and bankers together account for a little
over half the total of the outside directors of ten media giants;
and the lawyers and corporate-banker retirees (who account for
nine of the thirteen under "Retired") push the corporate
total to about two-thirds of the outside-director aggregate. These
95 outside directors had directorships in an additional 36 banks
and 255 other companies (aside from the media company and their
own firm of primary affiliation).
In addition to these board linkages, the
large media companies all do business with commercial and investment
bankers, obtaining lines of credit and loans, and receiving advice
and service in selling stock and bond issues and in dealing with
acquisition opportunities and takeover threats. Banks and other
institutional investors are also large owners of media stock.
In the early I980s, such institutions held 44 percent of the stock
of publicly owned newspapers and 35 percent of the stock of publicly
owned broadcasting companies. These investors are also frequently
among the largest stockholders of individual companies. For example,
in I980-8I, the Capital Group, an investment company system, held
7.I percent of the stock of ABC, 6.6 percent of KnightRidder,
6 percent of Time, Inc., and z.8 percent of Westinghouse. These
holdings, individually and collectively, do not convey control,
but these large investors can make themselves heard, and their
actions can affect the welfare of the companies and their managers.
If the managers fail to pursue actions that favor shareholder
returns, institutional investors will be inclined to sell the
stock (depressing its price), or to listen sympathetically to
outsiders contemplating takeovers. These investors are a force
helping press media companies toward strictly market (profitability)
objectives.
So is the diversification and geographic
spread of the great media companies. Many of them have diversified
out of particular media fields into others that seemed like growth
areas. Many older newspaper-based media companies, fearful of
the power of television and its effects on advertising revenue,
moved as rapidly as they could into broadcasting and cable TV.
Time, Inc., also, made a major diversification move into cable
TV, which now accounts for more than half its profits. Only a
small minority of the twenty-four largest media giants remain
in a single media sector.
The large media companies have also diversified
beyond the media field, and non-media companies have established
a strong presence in the mass media. The most important cases
of the latter are GE, owning RCA, which owns the NBC network,
and Westinghouse, which owns major television-broadcasting stations,
a cable network, and a radio station network. GE and Westinghouse
are both huge, diversified multinational companies heavily involved
in the controversial areas of weapons production and nuclear power.
It may be recalled that from I965 to I967, an attempt by International
Telephone and Telegraph (ITT) to acquire ABC was frustrated following
a huge outcry that focused on the dangers of allowing a great
multinational corporation with extensive foreign investments and
business activities to control a major media outlet. The fear
was that ITT control "could compromise the independence of
ABC's news coverage of political events in countries where ITT
has interests." The soundness of the decision disallowing
the acquisition seemed to have been vindicated by the later revelations
of ITT's political bribery and involvement in attempts to overthrow
the government of Chile. RCA and Westinghouse, however, had been
permitted to control media companies long before the ITT case,
although some of the objections applicable to ITT would seem to
apply to them as well. GE is a more powerful company than ITT,
with an extensive international reach, deeply involved in the
nuclear power business, and far more important than ITT in the
arms industry. It is a highly centralized and quite secretive
organization, but one with a vast stake in "political"
decisions. GE has contributed to the funding of the American Enterprise
Institute, a right-wing think tank that supports intellectuals
who will get the business message across. With the acquisition
of ABC, GE should be in a far better position to assure that sound
views are given proper attention. The lack of outcry over its
takeover of RCA and NBC resulted in part from the fact that RCA
control over NBC had already breached the gate of separateness,
but it also reflected the more pro-business and laissez-faire
environment of the Reagan era.
The non-media interests of most of the
media giants are not large, and, excluding the GE and Westinghouse
systems, they account for only a small fraction of their total
revenue. Their multinational outreach, however, is more significant.
The television networks, television syndicators, major news magazines,
and motion-picture studios all do extensive business abroad, and
they derive a substantial fraction of their revenues from foreign
sales and the operation of foreign affiliates. Reader's Digest
is printed in seventeen languages and is available in over I60
countries. The Murdoch empire was originally based in Australia,
and the controlling parent company is still an Australian corporation;
its expansion in the United States is funded by profits from Australian
and British affiliates.
Another structural relationship of importance
is the media companies' dependence on and ties with government.
The radio-TV companies and networks all require government licenses
and franchises and are thus potentially subject to government
control or harassment. This technical legal dependency has been
used as a club to discipline the media, and media policies that
stray too often from an establishment orientation could activate
this threat. The media protect themselves from this contingency
by lobbying and other political expenditures, the cultivation
of political relationships, and care in policy. The political
ties of the media have been impressive. ... fifteen of ninety-five
outside directors of ten of the media giants are former government
officials, and Peter Dreier gives a similar proportion in his
study of large newspapers. In television, the revolving-door flow
of personnel between regulators and the regulated firms was massive
during the years when the oligopolistic structure of the media
and networks was being established.
The great media also depend on the government
for more general policy support. All business firms are interested
in business taxes, interest rates, labor policies, and enforcement
and nonenforcement of the antitrust laws. GE and Westinghouse
depend on the government to subsidize their nuclear power and
military research and development, and to create a favorable climate
for their overseas sales. The Reader's Digest, Time, Newsweek,
and movie- and television-syndication sellers also depend on diplomatic
support for their rights to penetrate foreign cultures with U.S.
commercial and value messages and interpretations of current affairs.
The media giants, advertising agencies, and great multinational
corporations have a joint and close interest in a favorable climate
of investment in the Third World, and their interconnections and
relationships with the government in these policies are symbiotic.
In sum, the dominant media firms are quite large businesses; they
are controlled by very wealthy people or by managers who are subject
to sharp constraints by owners and other market-profit-oriented
forces; and they are closely interlocked, and have important common
interests, with other major corporations, banks, and government.
This is the first powerful filter that will affect news choices.
THE ADVERTISING LICENSE TO DO BUSINESS:
THE SECOND FILTER
In arguing for the benefits of the free
market as a means of controlling dissident opinion in the mid-nineteenth
century, the Liberal chancellor of the British exchequer, Sir
George Lewis, noted that the market would promote those papers
"enjoying the preference of the advertising public.'' Advertising
did, in fact, serve as a powerful mechanism weakening the working-class
press. Curran and Seaton give the growth of advertising a status
comparable with the increase in capital costs as a factor allowing
the market to accomplish what state taxes and harassment failed
to do, noting that these "advertisers thus acquired a de
facto licensing authority since, without their support, newspapers
ceased to be economically viable."
Before advertising became prominent, the
price of a newspaper had to cover the costs of doing business.
With the growth of advertising, papers that attracted ads could
afford a copy price well below production costs. This put papers
lacking in advertising at a serious disadvantage: their prices
would tend to be higher, curtailing sales, and they would have
less surplus to invest in improving the salability of the paper
(features, attractive format, promotion, etc.). For this reason,
an advertising-based system will tend to drive out of existence
or into marginality the media companies and types that depend
on revenue from sales alone. With advertising, the free market
does not yield a neutral system in which final buyer choice decides.
The advertisers' choices influence media prosperity and survival
The ad-based media receive an advertising subsidy that gives them
a price-marketing-quality edge, which allows them to encroach
on and further weaken their ad-free (or ad-disadvantaged) rivals.
Even if ad-based media cater to an affluent ("upscale")
audience, they easily pick up a large part of the "downscale"
audience, and their rivals lose market share and are eventually
driven out or marginalized.
In fact, advertising has played a potent
role in increasing concentration even among rivals that focus
with equal energy on seeking advertising revenue. A market share
and advertising edge on the part of one paper or television station
will give it additional revenue to compete more effectively-promote
more aggressively, buy more salable features and programs-and
the disadvantaged rival must add expenses it cannot afford to
try to stem the cumulative process of dwindling market (and revenue)
share. The crunch is often fatal, and it helps explain the death
of many large-circulation papers and magazines and the attrition
in the number of newspapers.
From the time of the introduction of press
advertising, therefore, working-class and radical papers have
been at a serious disadvantage. Their readers have tended to be
of modest means, a factor that has always affected advertiser
interest. One advertising executive stated in I856 that some journals
are poor vehicles because "their readers are not purchasers,
and any money thrown upon them is so much thrown away." The
same force took a heavy toll of the post-World War II social-democratic
press in Great Britain, with the Daily Herald, News Chronicle,
and Sunday Citizen failing or absorbed into establishment systems
between I960 and I967, despite a collective average daily readership
of 9.3 million. As James Curran points out, with 4.7 million readers
in its last year, "the Daily Herald actually had almost double
the readership of The Times, the Financial Times and the Guardian
combined." What is more, surveys showed that its readers
"thought more highly of their paper than the regular readers
of any other popular newspaper," and "they also read
more in their paper than the readers of other popular papers despite
being overwhelmingly working class...." The death of the
Herald, as well as of the News Chronicle and Sunday Citizen, was
in large measure a result of progressive strangulation by lack
of advertising support. The Herald, with 8.I percent of national
daily circulation, got 3.5 percent of net advertising revenue;
the Sunday Citizen got one-tenth of the net advertising revenue
of the Sunday Times and one-seventh that of the Observer (on a
per-thousand-copies basis). Curran argues persuasively that the
loss of these three papers was an important contribution to the
declining fortunes of the Labor party, in the case of the Herald
specifically removing a mass-circulation institution that provided
"an alternative framework of analysis and understanding that
contested the dominant systems of representation in both broadcasting
and the mainstream press." A mass movement without any major
media support, and subject to a great deal of active press hostility,
suffers a serious disability, and struggles against grave odds.
The successful media today are fully attuned
to the crucial importance of audience "quality": CBS
proudly tells its shareholders that while it "continuously
seeks to maximize audience delivery," it has developed a
new "sales tool" with which it approaches advertisers:
"Client Audience Profile, or CAP, will help advertisers optimize
the effectiveness of their network television schedules by evaluating
audience segments in proportion to usage levels of advertisers'
products and services." In short, the mass media are interested
in attracting audiences with buying power, not audiences per se;
it is affluent audiences that spark advertiser interest today,
as in the nineteenth century. The idea that the drive for large
audiences makes the mass media "democratic" thus suffers
from the initial weakness that its political analogue is a voting
system weighted by income!
The power of advertisers over television
programming stems from the simple fact that they buy and pay for
the programs-they are the "patrons" who provide the
media subsidy. As such, the media compete for their patronage,
developing specialized staff to solicit advertisers and necessarily
having to explain how their programs serve advertisers' needs.
The choices of these patrons greatly affect the welfare of the
media, and the patrons become what William Evan calls "normative
reference organizations," whose requirements and demands
the media must accommodate if they are to succeed.
For a television network, an audience
gain or loss of one percentage point in the Nielsen ratings translates
into a change in advertising revenue of from $80 to $100 million
a year, with some variation depending on measures of audience
"quality." The stakes in audience size and affluence
are thus extremely large, and in a market system there is a strong
tendency for such considerations to affect policy profoundly.
This is partly a matter of institutional pressures to focus on
the bottom line, partly a matter of the continuous interaction
of the media organization with patrons who supply the revenue
dollars. As Grant Tinker, then head of NBC-TV, observed, television
"is an advertising supported medium, and to the extent that
support falls out, programming will change."
Working-class and radical media also suffer
from the political discrimination of advertisers. Political discrimination
is structured into advertising allocations by the stress on people
with money to buy. But many firms will always refuse to patronize
ideological enemies and those whom they perceive as damaging their
interests, and cases of overt discrimination add to the force
of the voting system weighted by income. Public-television station
WNET lost its corporate funding from Gulf + Western in I985 after
the station showed the documentary "Hungry for Profit,"
which contains material critical of multinational corporate activities
in the Third World. Even before the program was shown, in anticipation
of negative corporate reaction, station officials "did all
we could to get the program sanitized" (according to one
station source). The chief executive of Gulf + Western complained
to the station that the program was "virulently anti-business
if not anti-American," and that the station's carrying the
program was not the behavior "of a friend" of the corporation.
The London Economist says that "Most people believe that
WNET would not make the same mistake again."
In addition to discrimination against
unfriendly media institutions, advertisers also choose selectively
among programs on the basis of their own principles. With rare
exceptions these are culturally and politically conservative.
Large corporate advertisers on television will rarely sponsor
programs that engage in serious criticisms of corporate activities,
such as the problem of environmental degradation, the workings
of the military-industrial complex, or corporate support of and
benefits from Third World tyrannies. Erik Barnouw recounts the
history of a proposed documentary series on environmental problems
by NBC at a time of great interest in these issues. Barnouw notes
that although at that time a great many large companies were spending
money on commercials and other publicity regarding environmental
problems, the documentary series failed for want of sponsors.
The problem was one of excessive objectivity in the series, which
included suggestions of corporate or systemic failure, whereas
the corporate message "was one of reassurance."
Television networks learn over time that
such programs will not sell and would have to be carried at a
financial sacrifice, and that, in addition, they may offend powerful
advertisers.' With the rise in the price of advertising spots,
the forgone revenue increases; and with increasing market pressure
for financial performance and the diminishing constraints from
regulation, an advertising-based media system will gradually increase
advertising time and marginalize or eliminate altogether programming
that has significant public-affairs content.
Advertisers will want, more generally,
to avoid programs with serious complexities and disturbing controversies
that interfere with the "buying mood." They seek programs
that will lightly entertain and thus fit in with the spirit of
the primary purpose of program purchases-the dissemination of
a selling message. Thus over time, instead of programs like "The
Selling of the Pentagon," it is a natural evolution of a
market seeking sponsor dollars to offer programs such as "A
Bird's-Eye View of Scotland," "Barry Goldwater's Arizona,"
"An Essay on Hotels," and "Mr. Rooney Goes to Dinner"-a
CBS program on "how Americans eat when they dine out, where
they go and why." There are exceptional cases of companies
willing to sponsor serious programs, sometimes a result of recent
embarrassments that call for a public-relations offset. But even
in these cases the companies will usually not want to sponsor
close examination of sensitive and divisive issues-they prefer
programs on Greek antiquities, the ballet, and items of cultural
and national history and nostalgia. Barnouw points out an interesting
contrast: commercial-television drama "deals almost wholly
with the here and now, as processed via advertising budgets,"
but on public television, culture "has come to mean 'other
cultures.' . . . American civilization, here and now, is excluded
from consideration.''
Television stations and networks are also
concerned to maintain audience "flow" levels, i.e.,
to keep people watching from program to program, in order to sustain
advertising ratings and revenue. Airing program interludes of
documentary-cultural matter that cause station switching is costly,
and over time a "free" (i.e., ad-based) commercial system
will tend to excise it. Such documentary-cultural-critical materials
will be driven out of secondary media vehicles as well, as these
companies strive to qualify for advertiser interest, although
there will always be some cultural-political programming trying
to come into being or surviving on the periphery of the mainstream
media.
SOURCING MASS-MEDIA NEWS: THE THIRD FILTER
The mass media are drawn into a symbiotic
relationship with powerful sources of information by economic
necessity and reciprocity of interest. The media need a steady,
reliable flow of the raw material of news. They have daily news
demands and imperative news schedules that they must meet. They
cannot afford to have reporters and cameras at all places where
important stories may break. Economics dictates that they concentrate
their resources where significant news often occurs, where important
rumors and leaks abound, and where regular press conferences are
held. The White House, the Pentagon, and the State Department,
in Washington, D.C., are central nodes of such news activity.
On a local basis, city hall and the police department are the
subject of regular news "beats" for reporters. Business
corporations and trade groups are also regular and credible purveyors
of stories deemed newsworthy. These bureaucracies turn out a large
volume of material that meets the demands of news organizations
for reliable, scheduled flows. Mark Fishman calls this "the
principle of bureaucratic affinity: only other bureaucracies can
satisfy the input needs of a news bureaucracy."
Government and corporate sources also
have the great merit of being recognizable and credible by their
status and prestige. This is important to the mass media. As Fishman
notes,
Newsworkers are predisposed to treat bureaucratic
accounts as factual because news personnel participate in upholding
a normative order of authorized knowers in the society. Reporters
operate with the attitude that officials ought to know what it
is their job to know.... In particular, a newsworker will recognize
an official's claim to knowledge not merely as a claim, but as
a credible, competent piece of knowledge. This amounts to a moral
division of labor: officials have and give the facts; reporters
merely get them.
Another reason for the heavy weight given
to official sources is that the mass media claim to be "objective"
dispensers of the news. Partly to maintain the image of objectivity,
but also to protect themselves from criticisms of bias and the
threat of libel suits, they need material that can be portrayed
as presumptively accurate. This is also partly a matter of cost:
taking information from sources that may be presumed credible
reduces investigative expense, whereas material from sources that
are not prima facie credible, or that will elicit criticism and
threats, requires careful checking and costly research.
The magnitude of the public-information
operations of large government and corporate bureaucracies that
constitute the primary news sources is vast and ensures special
access to the media. The Pentagon, for example, has a public-information
service that involves many thousands of employees, spending hundreds
of millions of dollars every year and dwarfing not only the public-information
resources of any dissenting individual or group but the aggregate
of such groups. In I979 and 1980, during a brief interlude of
relative openness (since closed down), the U.S. Air Force revealed
that its public-information outreach included the following:
I40 newspapers, 690,000 copies per week
Airman magazine, monthly circulation I25,000 34 radio and I7 TV
stations, primarily overseas 45,000 headquarters and unit news
releases 6I5,000 hometown news releases 6,600 interviews with
news media 3,200 news conferences 500 news media orientation flights
50 meetings with editorial boards 11,000 speeches
This excludes vast areas of the air force's
public-information effort. Writing back in I970, Senator J. W.
Fulbright had found that the air force public-relations effort
in I968 involved I,305 full-time employees, exclusive of additional
thousands that "have public functions collateral to other
duties." The air force at that time offered a weekly film-clip
service for TV and a taped features program for use three times
a week, sent to I,I39 radio stations; it also produced I48 motion
pictures, of which 24 were released for public consumption. There
is no reason to believe that the air force public-relations effort
has diminished since the I960s.
Note that this is just the air force.
There are three other branches with massive programs, and there
is a separate, overall public-information program under an assistant
secretary of defense for public affairs in the Pentagon. In I97I,
an Armed Forces Journal survey revealed that the Pentagon was
publishing a total of 37I magazines at an annual cost of some
$57 million, an operation sixteen times larger than the nation's
biggest publisher. In an update in I982, the Air Force Journal
International indicated that the Pentagon was publishing I,203
periodicals. To put this into perspective, we may note the scope
of public-information operations of the American Friends Service
Committee (AFSC) and the National Council of the Churches of Christ
(NCC), two of the largest of the nonprofit organizations that
offer a consistently challenging voice to the views of the Pentagon.
The AFSC's main office information-services budget in I984-85
was under $500,000, with eleven staff people. Its institution-wide
press releases run at about two hundred per year, its press conferences
thirty a year, and it produces about one film and two or three
slide shows a year. It does not offer film clips, photos, or taped
radio programs to the media. The NCC Office of Information has
an annual budget of some $350,000, issues about a hundred news
releases per year, and holds four press conferences annually.
The ratio of air force news releases and press conferences to
those of the AFSC and NCC taken together are I50 to I (or 2,200
to 1, if we count hometown news releases of the air force), and
94 to I respectively. Aggregating the other services would increase
the differential by a large factor.
Only the corporate sector has the resources
to produce public information and propaganda on the scale of the
Pentagon and other government bodies. The AFSC and NCC cannot
duplicate the Mobil Oil company's multimillion-dollar purchase
of newspaper space and other corporate investments to get its
viewpoint across. The number of individual corporations with budgets
for public information and lobbying in excess of those of the
AFSC and NCC runs into the hundreds, perhaps even the thousands.
A corporate collective like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce had a
I983 budget for research, communications, and political activities
of $65 million. By I980, the chamber was publishing a business
magazine (Nation's Business) with a circulation of I.3 million
and a weekly newspaper with 740,000 subscribers, and it was producing
a weekly panel show distributed to 400 radio stations, as well
as its own weekly panel-discussion programs carried by I28 commercial
television stations.
Besides the U.S. Chamber, there are thousands
of state and local chambers of commerce and trade associations
also engaged in public relations and lobbying activities. The
corporate and trade-association lobbying network community is
"a network of well over I50,000 professionals," and
its resources are related to corporate income, profits, and the
protective value of public-relations and lobbying outlays. Corporate
profits before taxes in I985 were $295.5 billion. When the corporate
community gets agitated about the political environment, as it
did in the I970s, it obviously has the wherewithal to meet the
perceived threat. Corporate and trade-association image and issues
advertising increased from $305 million in I975 to $650 million
in I980. So did direct-mail campaigns through dividend and other
mail stuffers, the distribution of educational films, booklets
and pamphlets, and outlays on initiatives and referendums, lobbying,
and political and think-tank contributions. Aggregate corporate
and trade-association political advertising and grass-roots outlays
were estimated to have reached the billion-dollar-a-year level
by I978, and to have grown to $I.6 billion by I984.
To consolidate their preeminent position
as sources, government and business-news promoters go to great
pains to make things easy for news organizations. They provide
the media organizations with facilities in which to gather; they
give journalists advance copies of speeches and forthcoming reports;
they schedule press conferences at hours well-geared to news deadlines;
they write press releases in usable language; and they carefully
organize their press conferences and "photo opportunity"
sessions. It is the job of news officers "to meet the journalist's
scheduled needs with material that their beat agency has generated
at its own pace."
In effect, the large bureaucracies of
the powerful subsidize the mass media, and gain special access
by their contribution to reducing the media's costs of acquiring
the raw materials of, and producing, news. The large entities
that provide this subsidy become "routine" news sources
and have privileged access to the gates. Non-routine sources must
struggle for access, and may be ignored by the arbitrary decision
of the gatekeepers. It should also be noted that in the case of
the largesse of the Pentagon and the State Department's Office
of Public Diplomacy, the subsidy is at the taxpayers' expense,
so that, in effect, the citizenry pays to be propagandized in
the interest of powerful groups such as military contractors and
other sponsors of state terrorism.
Because of their services, continuous
contact on the beat, and mutual dependency, the powerful can use
personal relationships, threats, and rewards to further influence
and coerce the media. The media may feel obligated to carry extremely
dubious stories and mute criticism in order not to offend their
sources and disturb a close relationship. It is very difficult
to call authorities on whom one depends for daily news liars,
even if they tell whoppers. Critical sources may be avoided not
only because of their lesser availability and higher cost of establishing
credibility, but also because the primary sources may be offended
and may even threaten the media using them.
Powerful sources may also use their prestige
and importance to the media as a lever to deny critics access
to the media: the Defense Department, for example, refused to
participate in National Public Radio discussions of defense issues
if experts from the Center for Defense Information were on the
program; Elliott Abrams refused to appear on a program on human
rights in Central America at the Kennedy School of Government,
at Harvard University, unless the former ambassador, Robert White,
was excluded as a participant; Claire Sterling refused to participate
in television-network shows on the Bulgarian Connection where
her critics would appear. In the last two of these cases, the
authorities and brand-name experts were successful in monopolizing
access by coercive threats.
Perhaps more important, powerful sources
regularly take advantage of media routines and dependency to "manage"
the media, to manipulate them into following a special agenda
and framework (as we will show in detail in the chapters that
follow). Part of this management process consists of inundating
the media with stories, which serve sometimes to foist a particular
line and frame on the media (e.g., Nicaragua as illicitly supplying
arms to the Salvadoran rebels), and at other times to help chase
unwanted stories off the front page or out of the media altogether
(the alleged delivery of MIGs to Nicaragua during the week of
the I984 Nicaraguan election). This strategy can be traced back
at least as far as the Committee on Public Information, established
to coordinate propaganda during World War I, which "discovered
in I9I7-I8 that one of the best means of controlling news was
flooding news channels with 'facts,' or what amounted to official
information."
The relation between power and sourcing
extends beyond official and corporate provision of day-to-day
news to shaping the supply of "experts." The dominance
of official sources is weakened by the existence of highly respectable
unofficial sources that give dissident views with great authority.
This problem is alleviated by "co-opting the experts"-i.e.,
putting them on the payroll as consultants, funding their research,
and organizing think tanks that will hire them directly and help
disseminate their messages. In this way bias may be structured,
and the supply of experts may be skewed in the direction desired
by the government and "the market." As Henry Kissinger
has pointed out, in this "age of the expert," the "constituency"
of the expert is "those who have a vested interest in commonly
held opinions; elaborating and defining its consensus at a high
level has, after all, made him an expert." It is therefore
appropriate that this restructuring has taken place to allow the
commonly held opinions (meaning those that are functional for
elite interests) to continue to prevail.
This process of creating the needed body
of experts has been carried out on a deliberate basis and a massive
scale. Back in I972, Judge Lewis Powell (later elevated to the
Supreme Court) wrote a memo to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce urging
business "to buy the top academic reputations in the country
to add credibility to corporate studies and give business a stronger
voice on the campuses." One buys them, and assures that-in
the words of Dr. Edwin Feulner, of the Heritage Foundation-the
public-policy area "is awash with in-depth academic studies"
that have the proper conclusions. Using the analogy of Procter
& Gamble selling toothpaste, Feulner explained that "They
sell it and resell it every day by keeping the product fresh in
the consumer's mind." By the sales effort, including the
dissemination of the correct ideas to "thousands of newspapers,"
it is possible to keep debate "within its proper perspective.''
In accordance with this formula, during
the I970s and early I980s a string of institutions was created
and old ones were activated to the end of propagandizing the corporate
viewpoint. Many hundreds of intellectuals were brought to these
institutions, where their work was funded and their outputs were
disseminated to the media by a sophisticated propaganda effort.
The corporate funding and clear ideological purpose in the overall
effort had no discernible effect on the credibility of the intellectuals
so mobilized; on the contrary, the funding and pushing of their
ideas catapulted them into the press.
As an illustration of how the funded experts
preempt space in the media, table I-4 describes the "experts"
on terrorism and defense issues who appeared on the "McNeil-Lehrer
News Hour" in the course of a year in the mid-I980s. We can
see that, excluding journalists, a majority of the participants
(54 percent) were present or former government officials, and
that the next highest category (I5.7 percent) was drawn from conservative
think tanks. The largest number of appearances in the latter category
was supplied by the Georgetown Center for Strategic and International
Studies (CSIS), an organization funded by conservative foundations
and corporations, and providing a revolving door between the State
Department and CIA and a nominally private organization. On such
issues as terrorism and the Bulgarian Connection, the CSIS has
occupied space in the media that otherwise might have been filled
by independent voices.
The mass media themselves also provide
"experts" who regularly echo the official view. John
Barron and Claire Sterling are household names as authorities
on the KGB and terrorism because the Reader's Digest has funded,
published, and publicized their work; the Soviet defector Arkady
Shevchenko became an expert on Soviet arms and intelligence because
Time, ABC-TV, and the New York Times chose to feature him (despite
his badly tarnished credentials). By giving these purveyors of
the preferred view a great deal of exposure, the media confer
status and make them the obvious candidates for opinion and analysis.
Another class of experts whose prominence
is largely a function of serviceability to power is former radicals
who have come to "see the light." The motives that cause
these individuals to switch gods, from Stalin (or Mao) to Reagan
and free enterprise, is varied, but for the establishment media
the reason for the change is simply that the ex-radicals have
finally seen the error of their ways. In a country whose citizenry
values acknowledgement of sin and repentance, the turncoats are
an important class of repentant sinners. It is interesting to
observe how the former sinners, whose previous work was of little
interest or an object of ridicule to the mass media, are suddenly
elevated to prominence and become authentic experts. We may recall
how, during the McCarthy era, defectors and ex-Communists vied
with one another in tales of the imminence of a Soviet invasion
and other lurid stories. They found that news coverage was a function
of their trimming their accounts to the prevailing demand. The
steady flow of ex-radicals from marginality to media attention
shows that we are witnessing a durable method of providing experts
who will say what the establishment wants said.
FLAK AND THE ENFORCERS: THE FOURTH FILTER
"Flak" refers to negative responses
to a media statement or program. It may take the form of letters,
telegrams, phone calls, petitions, lawsuits, speeches and bills
before Congress, and other modes of complaint, threat, and punitive
action. It may be organized centrally or locally, or it may consist
of the entirely independent actions of individuals.
If flak is produced on a large scale,
or by individuals or groups with substantial resources, it can
be both uncomfortable and costly to the media. Positions have
to be defended within the organization and without, sometimes
before legislatures and possibly even in courts. Advertisers may
withdraw patronage. Television advertising is mainly of consumer
goods that are readily subject to organized boycott. During the
McCarthy years, many advertisers and radio and television stations
were effectively coerced into quiescence and blacklisting of employees
by the threats of determined Red hunters to boycott products.
Advertisers are still concerned to avoid offending constituencies
that might produce flak, and their demand for suitable programming
is a continuing feature of the media environment. If certain kinds
of fact, position, or program are thought likely to elicit flak,
this prospect can be a deterrent.
The ability to produce flak, and especially
flak that is costly and threatening, is related to power. Serious
flak has increased in close parallel with business's growing resentment
of media criticism and the corporate offensive of the I970s and
I980s. Flak from the powerful can be either direct or indirect.
The direct would include letters or phone calls from the White
House to Dan Rather or William Paley, or from the FCC to the television
networks asking for documents used in putting together a program,
or from irate officials of ad agencies or corporate sponsors to
media officials asking for reply time or threatening retaliation.
The powerful can also work on the media indirectly by complaining
to their own constituencies (stockholders, employees) about the
media, by generating institutional advertising that does the same,
and by funding right-wing monitoring or think-tank operations
designed to attack the media. They may also fund political campaigns
and help put into power conservative politicians who will more
directly serve the interests of private power in curbing any deviationism
in the media.
Along with its other political investments
of the I970s and I980s, the corporate community sponsored the
growth of institutions such as the American Legal Foundation,
the Capital Legal Foundation, the Media Institute, the Center
for Media and Public Affairs, and Accuracy in Media (AIM). These
may be regarded as institutions organized for the specific purpose
of producing flak. Another and older flak-producing machine with
a broader design is Freedom House. The American Legal Foundation,
organized in I980, has specialized in Fairness Doctrine complaints
and libel suits to aid "media victims." The Capital
Legal Foundation, incorporated in I977, was the Scaife vehicle
for Westmoreland's $I20-million libel suit against CBS.
The Media Institute, organized in I972
and funded by corporate-wealthy patrons, sponsors monitoring projects,
conferences, and studies of the media. It has focused less heavily
on media failings in foreign policy, concentrating more on media
portrayals of economic issues and the business community, but
its range of interests is broad. The main theme of its sponsored
studies and conferences has been the failure of the media to portray
business accurately and to give adequate weight to the business
point of view, but it underwrites works such as John Corry's expose
of the alleged left-wing bias of the mass media. The chairman
of the board of trustees of the institute in I985 was Steven V.
Seekins, the top public-relations officer of the American Medical
Association; chairman of the National Advisory Council was Herbert
Schmertz, of the Mobil Oil Corporation.
The Center for Media and Public Affairs,
run by Linda and Robert Lichter, came into existence in the mid-I980s
as a "non-profit, nonpartisan" research institute, with
warm accolades from Patrick Buchanan, Faith Whittlesey, and Ronald
Reagan himself, who recognized the need for an objective and fair
press. Their Media Monitor and research studies continue their
earlier efforts to demonstrate the liberal bias and anti-business
propensities of the mass media.
AIM was formed in I969, and it grew spectacularly
in the I970s. Its annual income rose from $5,000 in I97I to $I.5
million in the early I980s, with funding mainly from large corporations
and the wealthy heirs and foundations of the corporate system.
At least eight separate oil companies were contributors to AIM
in the early I980s, but the wide representation in sponsors from
the corporate community is impressive. The function of AIM is
to harass the media and put pressure on them to follow the corporate
agenda and a hard-line, right-wing foreign policy. It presses
the media to join more enthusiastically in Red-scare bandwagons,
and attacks them for alleged deficiencies whenever they fail to
toe the line on foreign policy. It conditions the media to expect
trouble (and cost increases) for violating right-wing standards
of bias.
Freedom House, which dates back to the
early I940s, has had interlocks with AIM, the World Anticommunist
League, Resistance International, and U.S. government bodies such
as Radio Free Europe and the CIA, and has long served as a virtual
propaganda arm of the government and international right wing.
It sent election monitors to the Rhodesian elections staged by
Ian Smith in I979 and found them "fair," whereas the
I980 elections won by Mugabe under British supervision it found
dubious. Its election monitors also found the Salvadoran elections
of I982 admirable. It has expended substantial resources in criticizing
the media for insufficient sympathy with U.S. foreign-policy ventures
and excessively harsh criticism of U.S. client states. Its most
notable publication of this genre was Peter Braestrup's Big Story,
which contended that the media's negative portrayal of the Tet
offensive helped lose the war. The work is a travesty of scholarship,
but more interesting is its premise: that the mass media not only
should support any national venture abroad, but should do so with
enthusiasm, such enterprises being by definition noble. In I982,
when the Reagan administration was having trouble containing media
reporting of the systematic killing of civilians by the Salvadoran
army, Freedom House came through with a denunciation of the "imbalance"
in media reporting from El Salvador.
Although the flak machines steadily attack
the mass media, the media treat them well. They receive respectful
attention, and their propagandistic role and links to a larger
corporate program are rarely mentioned or analyzed. AIM head,
Reed Irvine's diatribes are frequently published, and right-wing
network flacks who regularly assail the "liberal media,"
such as Michael Ledeen, are given Op-Ed column space, sympathetic
reviewers, and a regular place on talk shows as experts. This
reflects the power of the sponsors, including the well-entrenched
position of the right wing in the mass media themselves.
The producers of flak add to one another's
strength and reinforce the command of political authority in its
news-management activities. The government is a major producer
of flak, regularly assailing, threatening, and "correcting"
the media, trying to contain any deviations from the established
line. News management itself is designed to produce flak. In the
Reagan years, Mr. Reagan was put on television to exude charm
to millions, many of whom berated the media when they dared to
criticize the "Great Communicator.''
ANTICOMMUNISM AS A CONTROL MECHANISM
A final filter is the ideology of anticommunism.
Communism as the ultimate evil has always been the specter haunting
property owners, as it threatens the very root of their class
position and superior status. The Soviet, Chinese, and Cuban revolutions
were traumas to Western elites, and the ongoing conflicts and
the well-publicized abuses of Communist states have contributed
to elevating opposition to communism to a first principle of Western
ideology and politics. This ideology helps mobilize the populace
against an enemy, and because the concept is fuzzy it can be used
against anybody advocating policies that threaten property interests
or support accommodation with Communist states and radicalism.
It therefore helps fragment the left and labor movements and serves
as a political-control mechanism. If the triumph of communism
is the worst imaginable result, the support of fascism abroad
is justified as a lesser evil. Opposition to social democrats
who are too soft on Communists and "play into their hands"
is rationalized in similar terms.
Liberals at home, often accused of being
pro-Communist or insufficiently anti-Communist, are kept continuously
on the defensive in a cultural milieu in which anticommunism is
the dominant religion. If they allow communism, or something that
can be labeled communism, to triumph in the provinces while they
are in office, the political costs are heavy. Most of them have
fully internalized the religion anyway, but they are all under
great pressure to demonstrate their anti-Communist credentials.
This causes them to behave very much like reactionaries. Their
occasional support of social democrats often breaks down where
the latter are insufficiently harsh on their own indigenous radicals
or on popular groups that are organizing among generally marginalized
sectors. In his brief tenure in the Dominican Republic, Juan Bosch
attacked corruption in the armed forces and government, began
a land-reform program, undertook a major project for mass education
of the populace, and maintained a remarkably open government and
system of effective civil liberties. These policies threatened
powerful internal vested interests, and the United States resented
his independence and the extension of civil liberties to Communists
and radicals. This was carrying democracy and pluralism too far.
Kennedy was "extremely disappointed" in Bosch's rule,
and the State Department "quickly soured on the first democratically
elected Dominican President in over thirty years." Bosch's
overthrow by the military after nine months in office had at least
the tacit support of the United States. Two years later, by contrast,
the Johnson administration invaded the Dominican Republic to make
sure that Bosch did not resume power. The Kennedy liberals were
enthusiastic about the military coup and displacement of a populist
government in Brazil in I964. A major spurt in the growth of neo-Fascist
national-security states took place under Kennedy and Johnson.
In the cases of the U.S. subversion of Guatemala, I947-54, and
the military attacks on Nicaragua, I98I-87, allegations of Communist
links and a Communist threat caused many liberals to support counterrevolutionary
intervention, while others lapsed into silence, paralyzed by the
fear of being tarred with charges of infidelity to the national
religion.
It should be noted that when anti-Communist
fervor is aroused, the demand for serious evidence in support
of claims of "communist" abuses is suspended, and charlatans
can thrive as evidential sources. Defectors, informers, and assorted
other opportunists move to center stage as "experts,"
and they remain there even after exposure as highly unreliable,
if not downright liars. Pascal Delwit and Jean-Michel Dewaele
point out that in France, too, the ideologues of anticommunism
"can do and say anything.'' Analyzing the new status of Annie
Kriegel and Pierre Daix, two former passionate Stalinists now
possessed of a large and uncritical audience in France, Delwit
and Dewaele note:
If we analyze their writings, we find
all the classic reactions of people who have been disappointed
in love. But no one dreams of criticizing them for their past,
even though it has marked them forever. They may well have been
converted, but they have not changed.... no one notices the constants,
even though they are glaringly obvious. Their best sellers prove,
thanks to the support of the most indulgent and slothful critics
anyone could hope for, that the public can be fooled. No one denounces
or even notices the arrogance of both yesterday's eulogies and
today's diatribes; no one cares that there is never any proof
and that invective is used in place of analysis. Their inverted
hyper-Stalinism-which takes the usual form of total manicheanism-is
whitewashed simply because it is directed against Communism. The
hysteria has not changed, but it gets a better welcome in its
present guise.
The anti-Communist control mechanism reaches
through the system to exercise a profound influence on the mass
media. In normal times as well as in periods of Red scares, issues
tend to be framed in terms of a dichotomized world of Communist
and anti-Communist powers, with gains and losses allocated to
contesting sides, and rooting for "our side" considered
an entirely legitimate news practice. It is the mass media that
identify, create, and push into the limelight a Joe McCarthy,
Arkady Shevchenko, and Claire Sterling and Robert Leiken, or an
Annie Kriegel and Pierre Daix. The ideology and religion of anticommunism
is a potent filter.
DICHOTOMIZATION AND PROPAGANDA CAMPAIGNS
The five filters narrow the range of news
that passes through the gates, and even more sharply limit what
can become "big news," subject to sustained news campaigns.
By definition, news from primary establishment sources meets one
major filter requirement and is readily accommodated by the mass
media. Messages from and about dissidents and weak, unorganized
individuals and groups, domestic and foreign, are at an initial
disadvantage in sourcing costs and credibility, and they often
do not comport with the ideology or interests of the gatekeepers
and other powerful parties that influence the filtering process.
Thus, for example, the torture of political
prisoners and the attack on trade unions in Turkey will be pressed
on the media only by human rights activists and groups that have
little political leverage. The U.S. government supported the Turkish
martial-law government from its inception in I980, and the U.S.
business community has been warm toward regimes that profess fervent
anticommunism, encourage foreign investment, repress unions, and
loyally support U.S. foreign policy (a set of virtues that are
frequently closely linked). Media that chose to feature Turkish
violence against their own citizenry would have had to go to extra
expense to find and check out information sources; they would
elicit flak from government, business, and organized right-wing
flak machines, and they might be looked upon with disfavor by
the corporate community (including advertisers) for indulging
in such a quixotic interest and crusade. They would tend to stand
alone in focusing on victims that from the standpoint of dominant
American interests were unworthy.
In marked contrast, protest over political
prisoners and the violation of the rights of trade unions in Poland
was seen by the Reagan administration and business elites in I98I
as a noble cause, and, not coincidentally, as an opportunity to
score political points. Many media leaders and syndicated columnists
felt the same way. Thus information and strong opinions on human-rights
violations in Poland could be obtained from official sources in
Washington, and reliance on Polish dissidents would not elicit
flak from the U.S. government or the flak machines. These victims
would be generally acknowledged by the managers of the filters
to be worthy. The mass media never explain why Andrei Sakharov
is worthy and Jose Luis Massera, in Uruguay, is unworthy-the attention
and general dichotomization occur "naturally" as a result
of the working of the filters, but the result is the same as if
a commissar had instructed the media: "Concentrate on the
victims of enemy powers and forget about the victims of friends.''
Reports of the abuses of worthy victims
not only pass through the filters; they may also become the basis
of sustained propaganda campaigns. If the government or corporate
community and the media feel that a story is useful as well as
dramatic, they focus on it intensively and use it to enlighten
the public. This was true, for example, of the shooting down by
the Soviets of the Korean airliner KAL 007 in early September
I983, which permitted an extended campaign of denigration of an
official enemy and greatly advanced Reagan administration arms
plans. As Bernard Gwertzman noted complacently in the New York
Times of August 3I, I984, U.S. officials "assert that worldwide
criticism of the Soviet handling of the crisis has strengthened
the United States in its relations with Moscow." In sharp
contrast, the shooting down by Israel of a Libyan civilian airliner
in February I973 led to no outcry in the West, no denunciations
for "cold-blooded murder,'' and no boycott. This difference
in treatment was explained by the New York Times precisely on
the grounds of utility: "No useful purpose is served by an
acrimonious debate over the assignment of blame for the downing
of a Libyan airliner in the Sinai peninsula last week.'' There
was a very "useful purpose" served by focusing on the
Soviet act, and a massive propaganda campaign ensued.
Propaganda campaigns in general have been
closely attuned to elite interests. The Red scare of I9I9-20 served
well to abort the union organizing drive that followed World War
I in the steel and other industries. The Truman-McCarthy Red scare
helped inaugurate the Cold War and the permanent war economy,
and it also served to weaken the progressive coalition of the
New Deal years. The chronic focus on the plight of Soviet dissidents,
on enemy killings in Cambodia, and on the Bulgarian Connection
helped weaken the Vietnam syndrome, justify a huge arms buildup
and a more aggressive foreign policy, and divert attention from
the upward redistribution of income that was the heart of Reagan's
domestic economic program. The recent propaganda-disinformation
attacks on Nicaragua have been needed to avert eyes from the savagery
of the war in E1 Salvador and to justify the escalating U.S. investment
in counterrevolution in Central America.
Conversely, propaganda campaigns will
not be mobilized where victimization, even though massive, sustained,
and dramatic, fails to meet the test of utility to elite interests.
Thus, while the focus on Cambodia in the Pol Pot era (and thereafter)
was exceedingly serviceable, as Cambodia had fallen to the Communists
and useful lessons could be drawn by attention to their victims,
the numerous victims of the U.S. bombing before the Communist
takeover were scrupulously ignored by the U.S. elite press. After
Pol Pot's ouster by the Vietnamese, the United States quietly
shifted support to this "worse than Hitler" villain,
with little notice in the press, which adjusted once again to
the national political agenda. Attention to the Indonesian massacres
of I965-66, or the victims of the Indonesian invasion of East
Timor from I975 onward, would also be distinctly unhelpful as
bases of media campaigns, because Indonesia is a U.S. ally and
client that maintains an open door to Western investment, and
because, in the case of East Timor, the United States bears major
responsibility for the slaughter. The same is true of the victims
of state terror in Chile and Guatemala, U.S. clients whose basic
institutional structures, including the state terror system, were
put in place and maintained by, or with crucial assistance from,
U.S. power, and who remain U.S. client states. Propaganda campaigns
on behalf of these victims would conflict with government-business-military
interests and, in our model, would not be able to pass through
the filtering system.
Propaganda campaigns may be instituted
either by the government or by one or more of the top media firms.
The campaigns to discredit the government of Nicaragua, to support
the Salvadoran elections as an exercise in legitimizing democracy,
and to use the Soviet shooting down of the Korean airliner KAL
007 as a means of mobilizing public support for the arms buildup,
were instituted and propelled by the government. The campaigns
to publicize the crimes of Pol Pot and the alleged KGB plot to
assassinate the pope were initiated by the Reader's Digest, with
strong follow-up support from NBC-TV, the New York Times, and
other major media companies. Some propaganda campaigns are jointly
initiated by government and media; all of them require the collaboration
of the mass media. The secret of the unidirectionality of the
politics of media propaganda campaigns is the multiple filter
system discussed above: the mass media will allow any stories
that are hurtful to large interests to peter out quickly, if they
surface at all.
For stories that are useful, the process
will get under way with a series of government leaks, press conferences,
white papers, etc., or with one or more of the mass media starting
the ball rolling with such articles as Barron and Paul's "Murder
of a Gentle Land" (Cambodia), or Claire Sterling's "The
Plot to Kill the Pope," both in the Reader's Digest. If the
other major media like the story, they will follow it up with
their own versions, and the matter quickly becomes newsworthy
by familiarity. If the articles are written in an assured and
convincing style, are subject to no criticisms or alternative
interpretations in the mass media, and command support by authority
figures, the propaganda themes quickly become established as true
even without real evidence. This tends to close out dissenting
views even more comprehensively, as they would now conflict with
an already established popular belief. This in turn opens up further
opportunities for still more inflated claims, as these can be
made without fear of serious repercussions. Similar wild assertions
made in contradiction of official views would elicit powerful
flak, so that such an inflation process would be controlled by
the government and the market. No such protections exist with
system-supportive claims; there, flak will tend to press the media
to greater hysteria in the face of enemy evil. The media not only
suspend critical judgment and investigative zeal, they compete
to find ways of putting the newly established truth in a supportive
light. Themes and facts-even careful and well-documented analyses-that
are incompatible with the now institutionalized theme are suppressed
or ignored. If the theme collapses of its own burden of fabrications,
the mass media will quietly fold their tents and move on to another
topic.
Using a propaganda model, we would not
only anticipate definitions of worth based on utility, and dichotomous
attention based on the same criterion, we would also expect the
news stories about worthy and unworthy victims (or enemy and friendly
states) to differ in quality. That is, we would expect official
sources of the United States and its client regimes to be used
heavily-and uncritically-in connection with one's own abuses and
those of friendly governments, while refugees and other dissident
sources will be used in dealing with enemies. We would anticipate
the uncritical acceptance of certain premises in dealing with
self and friends-such as that one's own state and leaders seek
peace and democracy, oppose terrorism, and tell the truth-premises
which will not be applied in treating enemy states. We would expect
different criteria of evaluation to be employed, so that what
is villainy in enemy states will be presented as an incidental
background fact in the case of oneself and friends. What is on
the agenda in treating one case will be off the agenda in discussing
the other. We would also expect great investigatory zeal in the
search for enemy villainy and the responsibility of high officials
for abuses in enemy states, but diminished enterprise in examining
such matters in connection with one's own and friendly states.
The quality of coverage should also be
displayed more directly and crudely in placement, headlining,
word usage, and other modes of mobilizing interest and outrage.
In the opinion columns, we would anticipate sharp restraints on
the range of opinion allowed expression. Our hypothesis is that
worthy victims will be featured prominently and dramatically,
that they will be humanized, and that their victimization will
receive the detail and context in story construction that will
generate reader interest and sympathetic emotion. In contrast,
unworthy victims will merit only slight detail, minimal humanization,
and little context that will excite and enrage.
Meanwhile, because of the power of establishment
sources, the flak machines, and anti-Communist ideology, we would
anticipate outcries that the worthy victims are being sorely neglected,
that the unworthy are treated with excessive and uncritical generosity,
that the media's liberal, adversarial (if not subversive) hostility
to government explains our difficulties in mustering support for
the latest national venture in counterrevolutionary intervention.
In sum, a propaganda approach to media
coverage suggests a systematic and highly political dichotomization
in news coverage based on serviceability to important domestic
power interests. This should be observable in dichotomized choices
of story and in the volume and quality of coverage... such dichotomization
in the mass media is massive and systematic: not only are choices
for publicity and suppression comprehensible in terms of system
advantage, but the modes of handling favored and inconvenient
materials (placement, tone, context, fullness of treatment) differ
in ways that serve political ends.
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