Sam Smith – The
other day I came across a poem I wrote about a week after the first
Kennedy-Nixon debate (probably for Roll Call newspaper where I was working at
the time):
I’ll Take My Candidate Without Cream or
Sugar, Thank You
Pollster, spare that candidate
Give him a chance to run
Give him a chance to run
Free from all percentage points
Safe from statistics’ gun.
Makeup men, leave them alone
Stop your foolish fixin’
Just look at the mess you made
Painting Mr. Nix’n
Television man, you goofed,
You made the Veep too hot,
You brought poor Dick more
age with
A misdirected spot.
Ghostwriters, I do not care
How you’d run the states;
Just let me hear the views
of
Unhaunted candidates.
But Dick and John are hidden
A glance is all I see
With too damn many people
Between those two and me.
It
turned out that what I would much later describe as the beginning of show
business politics I had already sensed at the time. And as the pollsters
reported, Nixon won the debates among radio listeners while Kennedy won it on
TV.
Now,
some 58 years later, we are experiencing the dismal effects of having declared politics and show business to be soulmates. And our
major mentor, the TV news media, is one that can’t even differentiate its own
role from that of Hollywood or Broadway. Compare clips of a TV news shouter of today
and, say, Walter Cronkite and you’ll see what I mean.
This
has been long time coming, and while Trump is clearly the worst beneficiary, it
is an old story that just hasn’t been covered well. For example, when the Post in
the 1960s changed its woman’s section into “Style” –a concept with which
Washington wasn’t all that familiar – politicians found themselves becoming
stars rather than servants of the people. And soon the Washington media followed.
In
reality, stars don’t exist. They are an act both on screen and in media
coverage. You have to read things like
Radar or In Touch to get a feeling for what they are like off screen. And since the Washington media increasingly has
become a participant in the illusion, it can not offer much relief.
I
first became conscious of the true cost of this illusion when during the 1992
primaries I began finding an extraordinary amount of dirt in the Clinton story. Neither the Clintons nor Arkansas were how they were described
in the mainstream media. What was even more startling was the lack of interest
in any of this information by the regular media. I even got banned from a
couple of CSPAN appearances and from a Washington public radio station because
of what I had reported.
When
Trump came along there was a much greater separation of fact and image, with
the latter favored in this case not because the media liked him as they did
Clinton, but because Trump was a media star whom you couldn’t really expose
without raising questions about the media itself.
And
there was something else, Clinton had actually run a government and so had some important qualifications that Trump
did not.
And
what happened in the latter’s first year? Another star, Oprah Winfrey, was widely
promoted in the media as a leading Democratic alternative. Admittedly, Winfrey
was infinitely more decent, intelligent and honest than Trump, but neither of
the two had any experience in building highways or preventing a war.
But
we had reached a point where stardom surpassed all other virtues and
failures. And even if there was no real
business like show business – and certainly not politics – it no longer
mattered.
Fortunately,
there are still journalists covering news like it is still news rather than
entertainment but we must learn to differentiate between such real coverage and
that which seems to think that Donald Trump is still hosting a TV show.
1 comment:
"Admittedly, Winfrey was infinitely more decent, intelligent and honest than Trump, but neither of the two had any experience in building highways or preventing a war."
Building highways and preventing wars are not usually on the job description of American presidents.
The R & D job descriptions call for the prez to be a prick and pain in the ass to ordinary American people.
It doesn't have to be that way.
The people could vote Green, but they don't because they, in their infinite wisdom, know that nobody else will vote Green, so it's better to vote for the prick and the pain in the ass than for someone who will conduct the government in their favor.
If you understand this logic, you are a typical America.
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