Audience Atomization Overcome:
Why the Internet Weakens the Authority of the Press
[excerpted]
by Jay Rosen
http://journalism.nyu.edu/, January
12, 2009
Daniel C. Hallin, in his 1986
book 'The Uncensored War', developed a scheme to describe the
range and biases of journalistic debate in the American mainstream
media
1.) Sphere of legitimate debate:
is the one journalists recognize as real,
normal, everyday terrain. They think of their work as taking place
almost exclusively within this space. (It doesn't, but they think
so.) Hallin: "This is the region of electoral contests and
legislative debates, of issues recognized as such by the major
established actors of the American political process."
Here the two-party system reigns, and
the news agenda is what the people in power are likely to have
on their agenda. Perhaps the purest expression of this sphere
is Washington Week on PBS, where journalists discuss what the
two-party system defines as "the issues." Objectivity
and balance are "the supreme journalistic virtues" for
the panelists on Washington Week because when there is legitimate
debate it's hard to know where the truth lies. There are risks
in saying that truth lies with one faction in the debate, as against
another- even when it does. He said, she said journalism is like
the bad seed of this sphere, but also a logical outcome of it.
2. ) Sphere of consensus:
is the "motherhood and apple pie"
of politics, the things on which everyone is thought to agree.
Propositions that are seen as uncontroversial to the point of
boring, true to the point of self-evident, or so widely-held that
they're almost universal lie within this sphere. Here, Hallin
writes, "journalists do not feel compelled either to present
opposing views or to remain disinterested observers." (Which
means that anyone whose basic views lie outside the sphere of
consensus will experience the press not just as biased but savagely
so.)
Consensus in American politics begins,
of course, with the United States Constitution, but it includes
other propositions too, like "Lincoln was a great president,"
and "it doesn't matter where you come from, you can succeed
in America." Whereas journalists equate ideology with the
clash of programs and parties in the debate sphere, academics
know that the consensus or background sphere is almost pure ideology:
the American creed.
3.) Sphere of deviance:
in which we find "political actors
and views which journalists and the political mainstream of society
reject as unworthy of being heard." As in the sphere of consensus,
neutrality isn't the watchword here; journalists maintain order
by either keeping the deviant out of the news entirely or identifying
it within the news frame as unacceptable, radical, or just plain
impossible. The press "plays the role of exposing, condemning,
or excluding from the public agenda" the deviant view, says
Hallin. It "marks out and defends the limits of acceptable
political conduct."
Anyone whose views lie within the sphere
of deviance-as defined by journalists-will experience the press
as an opponent in the struggle for recognition. If you don't think
separation of church and state is such a good idea; if you do
think a single payer system is the way to go; if you dissent from
the "lockstep behavior of both major American political parties
when it comes to Israel" (Glenn Greenwald) chances are you
will never find your views reflected in the news. It's not that
there's a one-sided debate; there's no debate.
Complications to keep in mind.
The three spheres are not really separate;
they create one another, like the public and private do. The boundaries
between regions are semi-porous and impermanent. Things can move
out of one sphere and into another-that's what political and cultural
change is, if you think about it-but when they do shift there
is often no announcement. One day David Brody of Christian Broadcasting
Network shows up on Meet the Press, but Amy Goodman of Democracy
Now never does.
This can be confusing. Of course, the
producers of Meet the Press could say in a press release, "We
decided that Pat Robertson's CBN is now to be placed within the
sphere of legitimate debate because " but then they would
have to complete the "because" in a plausible way and
very often they cannot. ("Amy Goodman, we decided, does not
qualify for this show because") This gap between what journalists
actually do as they arrange the scene of politics, and the portion
they can explain or defend publicly-the difference between making
news and making sense-is responsible for a lot of the anger and
bad feeling projected at the political press by various constituencies
that notice these moves and question them.
Within the sphere of legitimate debate
there is some variance. Journalists behave differently if the
issue is closer to the doughnut hole than they do when it is nearer
the edge. The closer they think they are to the unquestioned core
of consensus, the more plausible it is to present a single view
as the only view, which is a variant on the old saw about American
foreign policy: "Politics stops at the water's edge."
(Atrios: "I've long noticed a tendency of the American press
to take the side of official US policy when covering foreign affairs.")
Another complication: Journalists aren't
the only actors here. Elections have a great deal to do with what
gets entered into legitimate debate. Candidates-especially candidates
for president-can legitimize an issue just by talking about it.
Political parties can expand their agenda, and journalists will
cover that. Powerful and visible people can start questioning
a consensus belief and remove it from the "everyone agrees"
category. And of course public opinion and social behavior do
change over time.
Some implications of Daniel Hallin's model.
That journalists affirm and enforce the
sphere of consensus, consign ideas and actors to the sphere of
deviance, and decide when the shift is made from one to another-
none of this is in their official job description. You won't find
it taught in J-school, either. It's an intrinsic part of what
they do, but not a natural part of how they think or talk about
their job. Which means they often do it badly. Their "sphere
placement" decisions can be arbitrary, automatic, inflected
with fear, or excessively narrow-minded. Worse than that, these
decisions are often invisible to the people making them, and so
we cannot argue with those people. It's like trying to complain
to your kid's teacher about the values the child is learning in
school when the teacher insists that the school does not teach
values.
When (with some exceptions) political
journalists failed properly to examine George W. Bush's case for
war in Iraq, they were making a category mistake. They treated
Bush's plan as part of the sphere of consensus. But even when
Congress supports it, a case for war can never be removed from
legitimate debate. That's just a bad idea. Mentally placing the
war's opponents in the sphere of deviance was another category
error. In politics, when people screw up like that, we can replace
them: throw the bums out! we say. But the First Amendment says
we cannot do that to people in the press. The bums stay. And later
they are free to say: we didn't screw up at all, as David Gregory,
now host of Meet the Press, did say to his enduring shame.
"We are not allowing ourselves to
think politically."
Deciding what does and does not legitimately
belong within the national debate is-no way around it-a political
act. And yet a pervasive belief within the press is that journalists
do not engage in such action, for to do so would be against their
principles. As Len Downie, former editor of the Washington Post
once said about why things make the front page, "We think
it's important informationally. We are not allowing ourselves
to think politically." I think he's right. The press does
not permit itself to think politically. But it does engage in
political acts. Ergo, it is an unthinking actor, which is not
good. When it is criticized for this it will reject the criticism
out of hand, which is also not good.
Atrios, the economist and liberal blogger
with a big following, has a more colorful phrase for "maintaining
boundaries around the sphere of legitimate debate." He often
writes about the "dirty f*cking hippies," by which he
means the out-of-power or online left, and the way this group
is marginalized by Washington journalists, who sometimes seem
to define themselves against it. "In the late 90s, the dirty
f*cking hippies were the crazy people who thought that Bill Clinton
should neither resign nor be impeached," he writes. "In
the great wasteland of our mainstream media there was almost no
place one could turn to find someone expressing the majority view
of the American public, that this whole thing was insane."
Sometimes the people the press thinks of as deviant types are
closer to the sphere of consensus than the journalists who are
classifying those same people as "fringe."
How can that happen? Well, one of the
problems with our political press is that its reference group
for establishing the "ground" of consensus is the insiders:
the professional political class in Washington. It then offers
that consensus to the country as if it were the country's own,
when it's not, necessarily. This erodes confidence in a way that
may be invisible to journalists behaving as insiders themselves.
And it gives the opening to Jon Stewart and his kind to exploit
that gap I talked about between making news and making sense.
"Echo chamber" or counter-sphere?
Now we can see why blogging and the Net
matter so greatly in political journalism. In the age of mass
media, the press was able to define the sphere of legitimate debate
with relative ease because the people on the receiving end were
atomized- meaning they were connected "up" to Big Media
but not across to each other. But today one of the biggest factors
changing our world is the falling cost for like-minded people
to locate each other, share information, trade impressions and
realize their number. Among the first things they may do is establish
that the "sphere of legitimate debate" as defined by
journalists doesn't match up with their own definition.
In the past there was nowhere for this
kind of sentiment to go. Now it collects, solidifies and expresses
itself online. Bloggers tap into it to gain a following and serve
demand. Journalists call this the "echo chamber," which
is their way of downgrading it as a reliable source. But what's
really happening is that the authority of the press to assume
consensus, define deviance and set the terms for legitimate debate
is weaker when people can connect horizontally around and about
the news.
Home Page