Tripping On Reality In The Land Of Make Believe
“Journalism is the entertainment
business.” – Frank Herbert
By
Dom Stasi
08/11/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- Fantasyland, 2006:
It’s cool and dry this
workaday morning as I walk from my house to the car to begin my
morning drive. It’s cool and dry just about every morning
here. The weather makes this part of Los Angeles a very nice
but awfully pricey place to live. No worries, though. Over the
next few years, we’ll see big changes in both the weather and
the American real estate market.
Consider this. Since real
estate is mostly transacted with borrowed money, property values
vary in an inverse proportion to the cost of that money and the
property’s tax assessment. So, though they might appear
unconnected, property values like those in the hills above LA
will plummet when the annual federal deficit is no longer
servicable.1
When that happens – if it
hasn’t already - countries such as China, etc. can be expected
to call in America’s multi-trillion dollar loans. Then we’ll
have to either conquer China, etc. in one hell of a nuclear
holocaust or borrow more money from other faithful fast friends
– Saudi Arabia perhaps, or Kuwait. Of course that would come at
an even higher rate, siphon major bucks from the U.S. economy,
and require more diplomatic compromises. But beggars can’t be
choosers.
We have burgeoning debts to
pay. Borrowing from Peter to pay Paul would allow us to hold
some foreign creditors at bay while we ship them our jobs and
pay the other foreign creditors with their money.
Eventually we’ll get to where
we can only service the interest, and that will spill over to
all borrowers not just the big overextended ones such as the
federal government of the United States. Such a fiscal
dichotomy will surely send the prime interest rates through the
roof no matter how hard the Fed tries to keep them artificially
low as they did again this morning. But, since “Wall Street”
reacted just as expected, little else seems to matter. Empires
cost money.
However, what that means to
just plain folks is simple. When all these things come
together, we are effectively a nation in Chapter-11 bankruptcy.
We can’t fund any new happy wars to keep unemployment low while
we ship off jobs and kids to foreign lands, interest and taxes
go through the roof, housing prices and real incomes go through
the basement floor. Splat!
Oh, did you think the United
States should be solvent just because you contribute a third of
your salary to its government every week?
2 Puh-leez. Your
rationalism is so Nineties.
Get over it, the media
apologists tell us. Be of good cheer, they admonish, their
philosophies as bankrupt as their ideology. These behaviors
will keep the lights on here at home – at least until we’re all
dead and our kids can deal with the problem like the adults
we’ve failed to become.
I’m sorry, but like yourself,
I’m rational. I can’t get over it. The implication from an
economic failure is infuriating. Because, in my personal life,
I try hard to be fiscally responsible. I don’t attack or rob my
neighbors for a living, not even the small unarmed ones, and I
do not owe one red cent to anyone – not a penny. Yet my
supposedly “fiscally conservative” government holds me and my
family responsible for their armed plunder and skyrocketing
debts, while spending my tax money – and yours – as would a
stupid, irrational, criminally insane, serial-murdering addict.
Come to think of it, that’s
exactly what my “conservative” government is!
Then again, maybe I’m being
harsh. Because, after all, the business “editor” on the local
TV news this morning predicted only milk and honey for the real
estate market and everything else in the years ahead. He
foresees no interest explosion, no market collapse at all. He
references the Dow-Jones Industrial Average and predicts growth
– infinite, blissful economic growth.
But aside from quoting serious
looking people who sell real estate and stocks, he offered no
plausible economic basis for sustaining this growth. He only
spoke of a 1.2% increase in the gross domestic product.4
That’s a down trend, but he saw it as growth. He also made no
mention of how that reconciles against the 60,000 new
manufacturing plants he mentioned that have been built in
China. He seemed pleased with that, so I guess it’s a good
trend too. He also failed to mention just how many of those
factories were seeded with American corporate tax breaks during
that same period.
As the business “editor” he must
be aware of the Bush administration’s $70,000,000,000.00 in new
tax incentives for American businesses that move their
manufacturing facilities off shore.
1
I guess he forgot to mention
that.
So, if I understand this, our
tax money goes into corporations who take American jobs off
shore to foreign slave shops. This new kind of slavery is even
better than the old kind, because American corporations don’t
have to feed and clothe and house and whip the foreign slaves.
We just have to pretend we don’t know about them. The money
saved yields profits that fall to those corporations’ bottom
line. That in turn reflects positively on their stock prices,
and since they are industrial, it boosts the Dow-Jones
Industrial Average. The TV business editor then reads the day’s
Dow, and tells us how the economy and gross domestic product is
growing like Topsy.
Is this gross? Yes. Is it
domestic product? I don’t think so.
Let’s face it. The “business”
report was intended to pacify the TV station’s viewers, not to
enlighten them. In some quarters of the television business,
that’s a good thing. As a viewer, I’m reassured. Supposedly,
I’ll watch this channel without becoming upset about the economy
or child labor, and I’ll buy stuff the station is selling, most
of which is made offshore by economic slaves in places like
American Samoa.
5 That allows them
to “employ” indentured workers, and label the product “Made In
USA.”
It seems wrong somehow, but as
I said, who am I to question the business editor on the TV
“news.” I’m just a jerk with no debts. He knows best.
He knew best last season when
he was the weatherman. He knows best now.
I cannot help but wonder
though, if this guy were really able to predict the future of
America’s hottest real estate and economic trends, would he be
getting up at three o’clock every morning to go to work at a TV
station just so he could tell everyone else his secret?
Speaking of hot, my car’s
outside air temperature gauge reads 73 degrees as I pull out
onto Mulholland Drive. Perfect. The cool breeze coming up the
Cahuenga Pass gives no clue that before this day is done, the
temperature is forecast to reach a broiling 1190
Fahrenheit. If it does (and it did) that will be a first for
these parts. It doubt it will be a last.
Speaking of forecasts, the
situation leading to these temperatures has been building for
the past four decades. Still, our leaders in the Bush
administration felt justified in rolling back or removing
virtually all the sensibly imposed environmental protections and
regulations on utilities and coal burning power plants that
existed when they took office. Today – just this morning, in
fact - they reduced fuel consumption limits on automobiles. How
is that good? These restrictions in aggregate would have
prevented hundreds of millions of tons of CO2 and
acidics from being belched into the upper atmosphere during the
past five years alone. These were not draconian, but reasonable
restrictions, limits on carbons and acids that would have
prevented an environmental trap from being sprung on our kids,
and their kids.
But instead, in their
insatiable lust to reverse 30 years of progressive environmental
law, Bush and his slobs have replaced virtually every secretary
and sub secretary of such agencies as Superfund and EPA-air with
the most rapacious corporate lobbyists. Each is a creature
whose prior expertise was the defeating of government safeguards
for a price. Now they are simply removing those safeguards and
as taxpayers, we’re feathering their nests while they foul
ours.
The head of the air division
at Bush’s Environmental Protection Agency for example is a
utilities industry lobbyist who grew wealthy representing the
worst polluters in the nation prior to his being on the tax
rolls. Bush then appointed the infamous Maryann Horinko to head
EPA’s Superfund arm. Before “working” for us, Horinko made her
living teaching polluters how to avoid Superfund. The
list goes on and on and on. Just what environment are they
protecting?
Between them they can choke
the world, and will if we don’t kick them to the curb.
I know what some of you are
thinking. Please don’t say it. These are not business experts
of the spirit we need in government. They are nothing more than
plunderers who’ve made their way by poisoning our common habitat
– planet Earth. This administration and its corporate flacks
have rolled back an average of 80 environmental protection laws
per year for the past 5 dismally retrogressive American years
and they’ve done so on our dollar. Do the math. Watch the
tides. Track the temperatures. Measure the sunlight. Smell
the air. Enjoy the view. Taste the fish. Drink from the tap.
Take a swim. The mutant fruits of this government’s labors are
everywhere. And everywhere includes your children’s lungs and
bloodstreams and expected lifespans.
The Bushies remained free to
pollute and thus appease their corporate owners and deceive
their naïve constituents, all the while destroying our
children’s bodies and their world. They’ve remained free
because the same mainstream corporate media that now reports on
such things as climate change as if they’d discovered it
themselves this morning, had remained cowering and silent for
those same five years. Five years, I might add, during which
every credible scientist not speaking for a polluter or the
White House was forecasting exactly the mess we now have –
almost to the degree. The climatologists were spot-on. Yet
despite a 94% scientific consensus on climate change, an
indolent press left the public to figure things out for
ourselves. Meanwhile the “reporters” were chasing Brad and
Angelina around the ever warmer, stormier, smellier,
weirder-weathered globe.
Anyway, enough
unpleasantness. Right now my morning commute is taking me along
a ridgeline. Up here the sky is still clear and steel blue.
Just ahead, a pair of women jog along the cliff’s edge.
Cresting the hill, they pause to rest, hands on knees. Sweat
glistens from their not-quite-naked bodies. I wave. On the off
chance I might be a movie producer, they smile and wave back.
For the moment, all seems right with the world. Global warming
is not entirely without its advantages. Like the Randy Newman
song says, I love L.A.
However, as I round the last
switchback curve and start down, things change quickly. The San
Fernando Valley spreads before me, shrouded in what I like to
think is mist, but suspect is something else, something drier,
more carbonic than mist. The valley is where I’m bound, and
whatever that grey gas is, my lungs, like the gills of a fish,
will have to glean what oxygen they can from it for the rest of
this day. It’s tiring. It burns the eyes.
Pondering the noticeably
darker air toward which I’m headed, I wonder for a moment what
would happen if we all started driving hybrids. What would
happen if at the same time the power plants cleaned up their
act. Would the heavy opaque particulates that daily dim the
sunlight fall back to earth and not be replaced aloft. Would
this reduce the world’s visible smog, but leave the buoyant, and
transparent greenhouse gasses suspended in the air. Would that
be like removing the earth’s sunglasses? Would the temperatures
here climb to 130 degrees? What about everywhere else? The
Coriolis forces aloft have carried pollution all around the
globe, darkened every sky. Has this been masking the true
degree to which greenhouse effect will warm the orb as we bake
under suddenly clearer skies? Have we, through the Bush
administration’s cavalier disregard, finally passed the point of
no return. Have we snapped the environmental trip-wire? Have
we finally trapped ourselves into a damned if we do, damned if
we don’t biotic syndrome? No one really knows …yet.
What would result from a
brighter, and thus warmer world? What would be wrought by a
warmer melting Greenland? Alaska? Antarctica? Would the San
Fernando Valley become a lake?
I choose to not think about
that, either. In fact, enough unpleasantness. Perhaps the
other 6% of the scientists – most of whom work for the Bush
government and its contractors - will turn out to be right.
After all, it’s not like the Bush people are never right. Is
it?
I switch on the car radio.
I hear about a war, and
another, and another. Each of them seems to be pitting one bunch
of guys with uniforms, automatic rifles, tanks, helicopter
gunships, F-16s, and satellite guided bombs against another
bunch of raggedy guys who are shaking their fists or throwing
rocks and homemade explosive devices at the tanks. But the
“news” man speaks only of heroes and terrorists. The heroes are
the ones with the uniforms and tanks, etc. While the terrorists
(presumably when they’re not throwing rocks) are running back
into their own houses to develop nuclear weapons of mass
destruction. The news man says that very thing. He says the
terrorists are developing nuclear weapons. They’ll use them
against us too if we don’t stop them. Our president said that
too. And he was talking mushroom clouds, not dirty bombs. Just
how they’ll do it, how they’ll deliver them here, split the
nuclei, stimulate a chain reaction, stuff like that, neither the
newsman nor our president deigned to elaborate.
But, if I follow this logic to
a conclusion, it presumes the terrorists have figured out the
ways and means. They must have. Not only that, they’re trying
to fool us, these terrorists. They’re trying to fool us by
skipping past the whole rifle, tank, airplane, satellite kind of
fighting and going straight from rock throwing, to building and
launching atomic intercontinental exoatmospheric ballistic
guided missiles that will cross the oceans and release a
thermonuclear yield capable of blowing up an American city.
Now, while going from rocks to rockets, fists to fission might
seem a pretty broad technological leap – a leap that took the
rest of us hominids 250,000 years - let’s not forget, these are
terrorists. Just 19 of them scared the wits out of more
Americans than did the whole Nazi army back in the day. They
can do anything. They’re evildoers!
It all makes sense, too.
They’re targeting Wyoming. I know that, because our leaders -
our political leaders – have sent our Vice President’s home
state of Wyoming more money per capita for homeland security
every year since September 11, 2001, than they send to New York,
for example, or California, big (blue) states with vulnerable
ports of entry through which a fissionable pile could find its
way here (if it weren’t arriving by rocket or shampoo bottle).6
Coincidence? I don’t think
so.
After all, if this global
warming thing is true, New York and L.A. will be submerged
anyway, and Laramie might become our biggest port. It’ll need
protection. That costs money.
But just then, just when the
pieces all seem to fit, the newsman mentions that our leaders
have decided to do something else to protect us from omnipotent
terrorists. They’ve announced that they’re closing the Air
Force NORAD war room deep inside Colorado’s Cheyenne Mountain.
That’s the very place built to survive and respond to nuclear
missile attack. They’re closing it, the news guy says, because
Washington has decided that threat no longer exists. I don’t
get it. That contradicts the president. What happened to the
mushroom cloud? What about the inoperable Star Wars system?7
Why did he budget $17
billion a year to maintain our nuclear arsenal? How will we
know where to aim our 10,000 atomic bombs? What about the
nuclear wannabe terrorists? What about “Let’s kill ‘em over
there before them folks kills us over here!”
Oh, well. Maybe the Bush
people plan to have Haliburton build a new war room in Wyoming
after they close the old one in Colorado. The old one was
called Cheyenne mountain wasn’t it? That’s gotta be what
they’re thinking. They knew all along. Our leaders know stuff
that we don’t. God talks to some of them, even, and He knows
all.
Boy! I’m glad I figured that
one out. Cheyenne Mountain… in Colorado. That’s rich.
Anyway, I try not to think
about the “wars” so much these days. Eventually perhaps, I’ll
try not to think at all, about anything. It would be easier.
But I can’t.
Unlike the popular media, I
cannot ignore the threat of biotic self-destruction through
environmental abuse as have the escapists and criminals among
us. I cannot – I will not - believe stupid inbred politicians
while ignoring scientists and overwhelming scientific
consensus.
Yet, as a tutored society we
discount the very real possibility of nuclear war between
superpowers. We are not told by the empty talking heads on TV
about the 280 tons of highly enriched uranium that has
disappeared from old Soviet labs and is perhaps bound for our
unsecured ports. We don’t connect the repercussive dots of our
ceaseless aggression and brushfire wars for oil. Instead a
naïve public is kept focused on terrorists building fissionable
weaponry in their hovels. We’re dissuaded to believe that the
most dangerous explosive is the oil beneath those hovels. It
will someday kill us all unless our countrymen wake up and
behave more like reasoning humans and less like reactionary,
obedient beasts, cloven satyrs stomping out a danse macabre.
It’s all so complex, so
tragic. The constant train of excuses we’re given are too
simplistic, reactionary, confused, predictable. Moronic. Does
anyone actually believe this crap anymore?
As if on cue, my last question
is answered. A school-bus-like SUV cuts in front of me, sans
blinker. It’s bumper sticker reads, “Jeb Bush ’08.”
I follow this genius around
another curve, and somehow choose not to go over the edge. He
speeds off on his self-important way, thus restoring my forward
visibility. A hill appears in the distance. Large white
letters adorn its side. The letters hover in my windshield as
if floating above the mystery mist. The hillside letters spell
out, “Hollywood.” Ah, yes. Now that’s something I will choose
to think about.
Turning off Mulholland Drive,
I descend to the valley floor. There I make a slight detour to
pick up my assistant. Her car is in the shop for its annual
smog check. Too quickly, my thoughts come back to the
mystery mist.
Scrambling into the passenger
seat, Elysee asks me to drop the convertible top. As I do, she
points to a house across the street from her own and informs me
that it’s the home Marilyn Monroe once shared with Joe
DiMaggio. A born tour guide, minutes later she will point out
the house where Bob Hope lived until his recent passing. Then
I’m shown the home of the comic’s one time neighbor and long
time friend Bing Crosby.
Though I’ve made this trip at
least 1000 times, I’ve never once thought about whose homes I
might be passing. After all, driving past a celebrity’s home in
this town is about as remarkable as passing a farmhouse in
Nebraska.
We drive on, now passing the
studios of ABC, CBS, NBC, Universal Studios Hollywood, Warner
Brothers, and Technicolor. Another slight detour and we stop
at Elysee’s favorite coffee shop. Returning to the car, she
tells me Mel Gibson was in front of her in line, unaware no
doubt that before this week was out, Mr. Gibson would face his
own heat wave. Too bad, because if the newsman had had that
information he would not have wasted all that air time
depressing me with all his babble about wars and heroes. He
could have devoted the entire newscast to something real: a
drunk-driving movie star. Now that’s news!
Resuming our trip, we pass the
Walt Disney Studios. Approaching our office, we cross a street
named Hollywood Way and pass the offices of Clear Channel
radio.
Finally the glass tower where
we work rolls into view. Arrayed across the building’s roof and
courtyard are satellite dishes large and small, lots of ‘em.
All day, every day these devices send the products of the
surrounding studios to downlink locations across the globe where
they’ll be consumed by billions eager to be entertained, and
willing to be unduly influenced. I call the latter “America’s
Tutored Class.”
We cross the parking structure
to the main building’s lobby. Actor Mister T shares our
elevator. With a nod, he steps off on three. As we step off on
four, singer Josh Groban steps on. He smiles. Elysee too is
smiling, broadly; she has been since the coffee shop. She, too,
loves L.A.
Now, while my journey from
home to office is but a few short miles, perhaps five, you’ll
agree that as morning commutes go, mine is a real “trip.” So,
one might presume that I’m in Hollywood, right?
Not quite.
Despite encountering so many
Hollywood icons, so many engines of image and influence, my
short drive has taken me through the Southern California towns
of Studio City, Toluca Lake, and Burbank, but I did not pass
through downtown or cross into the actual city limits of
Hollywood at all. That berg is “over the hill” in Angelino
parlance, miles away beyond the “misty” Hollywood sign. In
fact, the only major TV network with studios in the fantasyland
of downtown Hollywood is CNN. The cable “news” network’s
building dominates the Hollywood skyline. A more fitting and
shameless gaffe than that, defies imagination.
It does, however, make the
point of this story. Hollywood is as much a state of mind as it
is an actual place. Just like the lines of demarcation that
once separated news from entertainment, border lines are
fabrications pure and simple. Few such lines are visible to the
casual observer. Fewer still are discerned by the tutored.
What is visible though,
visible to everyone who cares to look, can at times be inspiring
and other times frustrating. One thing is certain, though, the
landscape here is as uniquely American as is that Nebraska
farmhouse.
These places, these studios
that stretch for miles in all directions are where people such
as I - and others whom I prefer to think are not at all like me
- make and sell one of the country’s most successful and
therapeutic elixirs: escape from reality.
As elixirs go, escape is a
potent one.
But here’s the thing about
potent elixirs. If consumed to overdose, they often have
serious side effects. Escape is no exception.
Yet, as long as Americans are
buying escape from reality, the mythmakers in this town – myself
among them – will sell it to them. We’ll disguise reality as
entertainment, and we’ll disguise entertainment as news. Do it
too long and the American public becomes desensitized.
Do it “too well,” so well in
fact that the lines between fact and fiction become difficult to
find, disappear, or are deliberately hidden, and we cause an
already desensitized public to confuse perception with reality.
That’s where many of us draw a line – figuratively. But it is a
line no less, and one most of us do not cross.
But neither do we matter.
Because many more – many more! – do cross that line. Desperate
for fame, fortune, or just because they’re greedy and frightened
neurotics with their eyes fixed firmly on the bottom line
and no other, the latter’s numbers grow and grow, along with the
money they bring in, and the lies, treason, and garbage they put
out.
Their audience – America’s
Tutored Class – those who buy such garbage and cart it away in
their heads is growing too. So much so that today, Americans
are certainly the most entertained but perhaps
least informed industrial society on earth. Today
the Harris Poll reported that 50% of Americans believe that Iraq
has weapons of mass destruction again. That’s up from 36% last
year. The story cites Fox News as one source of such belief…
one among many.
As reality becomes less
commercial, the salesmen of media revise it. As reality becomes
less palatable, the popular American mind willingly turns its
attention to fantasy. But the void remains. And it is
precisely such widespread and willful ignorance that will be –
and might already have been – our national undoing. Far too
many Americans no longer think for themselves. The results are
evident to those of us who do.
The results are evident to any
who realize our democratic republic was founded upon knowledge
and wisdom. It cannot be sustained upon ignorance. No such
tutored populace can sustain a government of
self-determination. That takes maturity, courage, discretion,
and the capacity to think critically however unsettling such
thought might be.
That such qualities are
ever-less-broadly manifest in America’s private sector is
precisely why our democracy is slipping – some say flying – away
from us. And it’s slipping away from all of us, not just the
jerks, cowards, ignorati, true-believers, crooks, paranoids, and
sociopaths who’ve brought us to this sorry state of affairs, but
all of us. We’ve watched a president’s policies take us to peace
and public riches previously unimagined, then seen him
impeached, not for his policies, but for private transgression.
We’ve seen two subsequent
elections stolen right before our eyes. Then we watched as an
unelected buffoon allowed our nation to be attacked. His only
response: dragging her to the depths of bankruptcy and civic
turpitude. Yet we’ve done nothing. Our voice in government has
been muzzled by a crazy and fabricated majority and we’ve done
nothing. Nothing!
Living in today’s America is
like working for a company whose board of directors and company
policies are put in place by anyone and everyone - from genius
to jackass, competitor to contributor, everybody, every skilled
and honest stakeholder, yes, but also every jerk on the street,
every certifiable lunatic, every hoodlum gets to pick the board
by voting or choosing not to. It’s done with no prospectus, no
SEC oversight – no honest mainstream press to report the
transgressions.
Despite the darkness everybody
has a say in selecting, keeping or firing the board. Even in an
honest organization – something our government is not- that’s a
failure just waiting to happen. In America, the waiting is
over. And the mass media missed the story. Hell, they created
it!
To understand why they chose
to “miss” the story – and so did most Americans - one need but
consider the lingering effects of just one catastrophic
administration, that of Ronald Reagan. During his presidency,
Hollywood actor Ronald Reagan was willing to allow – in fact,
institutionalize - the deliberate deception of the American
public by the mass media. He knew the media’s power well, and
despite his canonization by the Right, was little more than a
disturbed and frightened ideologue. He struck down the Fairness
Doctrine from the U.S. Communications Act, thus making the mass
media a tool for whatever propagandists had the most money and
fewest reservations about using it to achieve their self-serving
anti-democratic ends. He also knew well who these traitors
were. He was – and remains - their poster boy. Simply stated,
Reagan abused our public trust and equally public airwaves to
advance his personal agenda. He succeeded.
The frequencies – channels –
that radio and television broadcasters rely upon to carry their
signals are not the property of those broadcasters. No. The
airwaves – just like the national parks – are the property of
the American people. It is for that reason that they have
historically been regulated. Just like there are no political
or religious billboards in Yellowstone Park, there are no
single-sided ideologies promoted on the air – or there were none
before Ronnie the Popular decided he knew what was best for us.
The airwaves – the PUBLIC
airwaves - have historically been forbidden from being used to
advance an exclusive ideology. The most effective tool for
maintaining a balance, for insuring against media bias was the
Fairness Doctrine. If one point of view was advanced by a
licensee as news, the opposing view must be given equal time and
exposure. That’s all gone now. It’s been replaced by Rush
Limbaugh, Michael Savage, Ann Coulter, and the foreign-owned
White House communications arm know as Fox “News.”
They’re neither well informed,
analytical, nor often correct. They don’t have to be. Their
audience is the Tutored Class. And they give the Tutored Class
exactly what the Tutored Class wants – someone to form opinions
for them.
Surprisingly, and well aware
of what Reagan did to our democratic republic by scrapping the
Fairness Doctrine, more aware no doubt than was Reagan himself,
a few years later president William Jefferson Clinton
inexplicably gutted the Communications Act further by relaxing
the provision known as the ownership cap. This provision
prohibited any one media corporation – such as foreign
propagandists Rupert Murdoch and Roger Ayles (News Corp, Fox
News), or massive government contractor, weapons builder
extraordinaire, and polluting grand master General Electric
(NBC) to own more than its fair share of stations in an American
market.
The reasons for an ownership
cap are as obvious as those behind a Fairness Doctrine.
Media has historically,
because of technical limitations, been divided into markets.
The larger a market, the more opportunity for
economically-sustainable fragmentation within it. In other
words, if there were enough people to support a station’s point
of view or program fare, that station would seek and maintain a
license, thus creating a hierarchy of popularity, ratings and
revenue share. New York City, for example has far more radio
and television licensees than does Fargo, ND. That’s because
among its 13 million viewers and listeners the New York market
can produce at least 500,000 people who might be interested in
virtually any topic at any given time. That half-million folks
is a major market in itself.
Most terrestrial broadcast
markets, however, cannot attract 500,000 listeners to all their
stations combined. That’s why traditionally only the most
widely popular fare was offered to mid-sized and smaller
markets. Not only that, but many “targets” were hard to reach
philosophically, or had no money. Every market, regardless of
size, also contains a large portion of those with resources, but
to whom it was hard to sell. Station automation and syndication
mitigated this, but only marginally. So, a huge portion of the
American public has been fed populist pabulum and little else
for the past seventy years.
All that changed with
communications satellites.
Truth?! You can’t handle the
truth! With
communications satellites a station can reach the entire
country. That’s a market of 80 million households. If you
tailor your fare to those to whom it is easy to sell, you’ve got
a market of the unprepared, the credulous that’s several times
larger than the entire New York City market of old. And it is,
by design, a market of people who will happily buy whatever
you’re selling – everything from soap to propaganda. Who are
these people, you ask?
How about an American
tertiary, C-contour, LPFM, rural media market that has been
weaned on populist fare, country music, and little else? The
carpetbaggers have fleeced these people before. Well, they’ve
done it again.
How about the Christian
Right? They shout their credulity and disdain for evidence to
the world and fairly beg to be fooled and parted from their
money.
How about their conjoined twin
the political constituency of the Republican Right? They
believe what daddy tells them despite a world of blood-soaked,
financially ruinous, demoralizing events, actions, and evidence
unfolding before their tightly closed eyes every second of very
day in Bush’s and Cheney’s and Rove’s and Norquists and Reed’s
and Gingritch’s and Frist’s new “America.”
How then I ask, can a
commercial mass media, a media that lives by its ratings, fail
to pander to this tutored, credulous, ignorant, biased, and
demonstrably foolable class?
Be reasonable. We cannot.
There is no mass liberal media in this country. Anyone who
believes there is, is as credulous as that herd I just
mentioned. At best we’re whores.
The Ministry Of Truth:
Though Hollywood will always
be identified with the movies, and movies will always be
identified with escape from reality, the razor’s edge separates
the healthy suspension of disbelief from the psychotic; the
entertained from the tutored in a target audience. When it
comes to the latter, when it comes to adults more willing to be
tutored by strangers than to think for themselves, it is not the
movies that feed them their pabulum. It is television and radio
and their no-nothing news and talk shows that are by far the
worst offenders in this game of escape.
Shrouded in a false milieu of
truth and unearned expertise, the pundits of hate radio and 24
hour “news” TV, with their parade of bow tied, bespectacled and
miniskirted “experts,” opine and opine and opine. That they do
this to the delight of their physically matured but mentally
juvenile fans – the tutored – is their charm. That their
opinions are absolutely predictable is at once their meal
ticket, and the absolute falsification of their babble as
opinion. The former goes uncriticized; the latter goes
unrecognized.
As evidence, consider that of
the 310 radio and television talk shows that have sprung up
between 1991 and 2001 only five have been progressive. This is
not entertainment. It’s not even politics. This is
salesmanship. Be it philosophy or soap products, it is easy to
sell to people who believe what they’re told without question.
If an audience tunes in to a pundit despite that it can be
demonstrated that he or she lies to them day after day, is
proven wrong year after year, chances are those people will buy
whatever else one might endeavor to sell them, such as soap.
It’s salesmanship.
My wife calls this a sign of
the times. I’m sure she’s right. She’s a realist.
Another realist, old time
Hollywood mogul Louis B. Mayer once observed, “In this town, art
makes for lousy business, and business makes for lousy art.” I
guess he was right too.
So today we have a media
– and a press -
that remains free, but is
devoid of the courage to be as truthful as that freedom
mandates. Not only does today’s mass media quiver at the very
thought of speaking truth to power, its practitioners no longer
even have the skills required to do so with meaning, to rebut
with the gravity and power born of truth.
Conclusion:
As I stand at my office window, I look out on the Hollywood that
isn’t Hollywood. With the morning haze gone, its expanse is
clearly visible now. No other place is so associated with pure
fantasy - pure escapist fantasy. When it is produced,
distributed, and exhibited as such, the practice is called
artistic fidelity. It is often brilliant. It is America’s most
successful export and our gift to the world.
When it is not, however, when
fantasy is disguised as news, then it is propaganda. And though
we think of propaganda as the cartoonish
raised-fist-proselytizing of a Joseph Gobbles, a Tokyo Rose, or
of Pravda – that stuff is the propaganda of days past. Today,
it is American propaganda that dominates. But it is not the
stuff of a Creel Commission. It is the propaganda of the 21st
Century – and the one quality it shares with is primitive
progenitors is that like them, it threatens the world.
American propaganda is an
infinitely more sophisticated, potent and at the same time
subtle kind of carcinogen than the others. It is the product of
an unholy marriage between the psychologists of Madison Avenue
and the mythmakers of Hollywood, and it is the single most
persuasive mind-altering elixir ever concocted. And despite its
embracing of the flag and the family and every other kind of
juvenile claptrap, it is the most anti-American thing I can
imagine. Or, as another cartoonist named Walt once observed,
“We have seen the enemy and he is us.”
*
* * * *
From my window, I look again
toward the Walt Disney lot. My gaze is drawn to the Team Disney
office building. The sight of it always pleases me. In a very
un-corporate-seeming tribute to unabashed fantasy, the upper
façade of this multinational conglomerate’s headquarters
building comprises seven stone columns. Each is carved into the
shape of dwarf. Yes, the seven dwarfs.
Arms raised, the gigantic
dwarfs appear to be holding up the parapets. Sleepy, Sneezey,
Doc, Grumpy, Bashful, Happy, and Dopey. The family of man.
Cast in stone, the caricatured
columns stand, literally and figuratively, as an homage to the
movie that made the sprawling studio possible. That movie was
of course Disney’s first animated feature and mega hit, Snow
White and the… You know the one. It ends with the words, “…and
they lived happily ever after.”
Welcome to Fantasyland. Some
still call it America.
The
Author
Dom Stasi <ResponDS1@aol.com>
is chief technology
officer for an international television network based in Los
Angeles. An Air Force veteran and member of the original
Project Apollo technical team, he is a widely published science
and technology writer. The
opinions expressed are solely his own.
Footnotes & References
-
http://www.altpr.org/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=6&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0
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http://www.deviantart.com/view/9410862/
-
http://www.cedarcomm.com/~stevelm1/usdebt.htm
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http://www.cepr.net/bytes/gdp_byte_2006_01.htm
-
http://www.fijiwomen.com/index.php?id=1151
-
http://www.spectacle.org/0404/stasi.html
-
http://www.americanprogressaction.org/site/pp.asp?c=klLWJcP7H&b=176786
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