The Free Press: Speaking Truth to Power Mon Sep 08 2008
Columns
Molly Ivins

Media ownership
May 28, 2003

AUSTIN, Texas -- This is a gross scandal. The Center for Public Integrity has a stunning study out on the concentration of ownership in telecommunications. The even more stunning news is that the Federal Communications Commission, which theoretically represents you and me, is about to make all of it even worse. And behind this betrayal of the public trust is nothing but rotten, old-fashioned corruption. It's the old free-trip-to-Vegas ploy, on a grand scale.

The Public Integrity people examined the travel records of FCC employees and found that they have accepted 2,500 trips, costing nearly $2.8 million over the past eight years, paid for by the telecommunications and broadcast industries, which are, theoretically, "regulated" by the FCC. The industry-paid travel is on top of about $2 million a year in official travel paid for by taxpayers.

According to the center, FCC commissioners and agency staffers attended hundreds of conventions, conferences and other events all over the world, including Paris, Hong Kong and Rio de Janeiro. They were put up at luxury hotels such as the Bellagio in Las Vegas and ferried about by limo. Vegas was the top destination -- 330 trips -- New Orleans second with 173, then New York at 102 and London with 98 trips. Why London, you may ask. Well, do ask.

So here's the result of our regulators getting all these nice freebies where they schmooze with the industry guys. The three largest local phone companies control 83 percent of home telephone lines. The two top long-distance carriers control 67 percent of that market. The four biggest cellular phone companies have 64 percent of the wireless market. The five largest cable companies pipe programming to 74 percent of the cable subscribers nationwide.

The FCC is what is known in government circles as a "captive agency." It has been captured by the industry it is supposed to regulate. Those who work at captive agencies come to identify with their industry and believe their function is to service it, not regulate it.

The center, www.publici.org, also found that the FCC increasingly relies on industry-generated data to justify sweeping deregulation proposals. Great, it doesn't even have its own numbers.

FCC Chairman Michael ("The free market is my religion") Powell is about to pass yet another giveaway to the country's biggest media conglomerates. There will be another enormous wave of media consolidation. On June 2, the FCC will vote to end long-established rules on multiple ownership.

The big players are Rupert Murdoch's News Corp./Fox, General Electric/NBC, Viacom/CBS, Disney/ABC and the Tribune Corp. You will notice that television is not giving this story, with its enormous impact, any coverage at all, and many newspapers have done no better. (William Safire of The New York Times is a noble exception.)

These are public airwaves. They are owned by us, we the people. Neil Hickey reports in "The Gathering Storm Over Media Ownership" that at public hearings all over the country, there has been a huge outpouring of public concern and anxiety about what is happening. More and more people are speaking out, and the FCC's public reaction counts are completely negative, yet it goes right on doing it, as though the citizens are nothing.

You can register your protest before June 2 by going to www.mediareform.net, or phoning or faxing the agency. But why should you bother, especially if they're not going to pay attention anyway?

Look at what's already happened to radio. Many of the stations you listen to will not break into their programming to tell you if a tornado is headed directly for your town, or to warn you if there's a flash flood on the west side or that a toxic chemical truck has turned over near you. That's because there is no one at your radio station.

You think it's a local station because a voice with your local regional accent announces the county fair attractions for next weekend and such. But that voice is an actress in Los Angeles. She reads the announcement there, and then it is inserted digitally into the programming, which is the same across the country -- generic rock, oldies, country, whatever.

When you get this degree of concentration in the news media, the idea of a free press becomes a joke. Liberals and conservatives alike have a common interest in preventing the huge media conglomerates from getting even bigger. We must keep independent voices alive.

This is worth raising hell about. Call your congressperson, too, because, even at captive agencies, when the pols who write the budgets speak, the agencies listen. And the pols listen when the people get stirred up enough. Let's see a little citizenly responsibility from all you patriots out there. You need to do more than sing, "I'm Proud to Be an American" to keep this country free.

To find out more about Molly Ivins and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2003 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Email this article to a friend




1240 Bryden Road Columbus, Ohio 43209 Ph/Fx 614.253.2571 Email truth@freepress.org
  

Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008

Molly Ivins

"More issues in the business section"
  October 26, 2003

"Gully-washing, frog strangling..."
  October 22, 2003

"Stupefying"
  October 20, 2003

"Bush-hater strikes again "
  October 16, 2003

"Outrage and irony"
  October 8, 2003

"Why did we invade Iraq?"
  October 7, 2003

"Are you confused yet?"
  October 2, 2003

"Anyone but Bush"
  September 30, 2003

"George W. Bush's America"
  September 24, 2003

"A terrible president "
  September 23, 2003

"The Full Ostrich on Iraq"
  September 18, 2003

"These people don't want to govern, they want to rule"
  September 10, 2003

"Sigh."
  September 9, 2003

"I told you so again"
  September 4, 2003

"Arnold: Politics as showbiz"
  August 26, 2003

"Weathervanes for the wrong direction"
  August 21, 2003

"The All-American Blame Game!"
  August 19, 2003

"Hang in there, Texas Eleven"
  August 13, 2003

"National credulity fitness"
  August 11, 2003

"Utter degradation of political discourse"
  August 7, 2003

"One overwhelming impression: deception"
  August 5, 2003

"Iraq: The peace from hell"
  August 1, 2003

"It's not fair"
  July 31, 2003

"More intelligence"
  July 29, 2003

"The Other Great State"
  July 23, 2003

"Legal nonsense"
  July 21, 2003

"A stinging rebuke to the disgraceful level of journalism"
  July 14, 2003

"Recent Supreme Court action"
  June 30, 2003

"Global warming? Just edit it out!"
  June 26, 2003

"Medicare Prescription Drug Bill: 'This is soooo complicated'"
  June 24, 2003

"Iraqi gold rush"
  June 18, 2003

"'This perverse episode'"
  June 16, 2003

"Budget imbalance "
  June 12, 2003

"Psst, kids, there's money in the wind"
  June 10, 2003

"Like a bridge over troubled waters"
  June 5, 2003

"'Weapons of Mass Distortion'"
  June 2, 2003

"Media ownership"
  May 28, 2003

"The question remains: Why?"
  May 28, 2003

"The Texas Legislature"
  May 27, 2003

"Democrats With Cojones"
  May 15, 2003

"Straight from the pit of hell"
  May 14, 2003

"Bush is a liar"
  May 8, 2003

"Plastic flamingos"
  May 6, 2003

"Texas law"
  May 1, 2003

"What WMD 's?"
  April 29, 2003

"Another bad idea from the Republican Party"
  April 24, 2003

"Another big fight"
  April 8, 2003

"This is more than exciting"
  April 3, 2003

"Democracy is the big loser in this war"
  March 27, 2003

"Who's in the money now?"
  March 25, 2003

"War in springtime"
  March 20, 2003

"Bidding on societal change"
  March 18, 2003

"Bribery, blackmail and Bush"
  March 13, 2003

"Right and Wrong"
  March 11, 2003

"Taxes and Texas"
  March 5, 2003

"Spying on the UN and other US antics"
  March 4, 2003

"Axis of evil boomerang"
  February 27, 2003

"Bush has another plan"
  February 25, 2003

"Patriotic or Not?"
  February 20, 2003

"Don't boycott the French!"
  February 18, 2003

"What the hell is going on?"
  February 13, 2003

"Of tax evasion and denials"
  February 11, 2003

"Conservatives in Action"
  February 8, 2003

"Deficit at record high"
  February 5, 2003

"State of the Union"
  January 29, 2003

"Campaign donations and the State of the Union"
  January 28, 2003

"The Evil Q"
  January 23, 2003

"Health Care needs someone to care"
  January 20, 2003

"Appalling silence"
  January 16, 2003

"The Ledge"
  January 15, 2003

"Fine Print"
  January 14, 2003




Read Articles by Year:
2007 2006 2005 2004
2003 2002 2001 2000




All content © 1970-2008
The Columbus Free Press
Disclaimer