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Columns
Norman Solomon

Media Year 2002, R.I.P.
December 27, 2002

It's impossible to adequately sum up any year, and 2002 is probably more difficult than most to grasp. Bursts of militaristic fervor bracketed the 12 months, which began in the terrible aftermath of 9/11 with the United States waging a fierce war in Afghanistan. Now, an even larger war against Iraq seems about to begin.

We can try to remember the nonstop avalanche of media that came between New Year's Day and late December, but most of it is forgettable -- if we're lucky. This is a more or less constant problem in our lives as we avail ourselves of daily mass communications. Whether the medium is television, radio, print or the Internet, the vast majority of what passes before our eyes and gets into our ears is not worth remembering.

The end of a year lends itself to introspection and reminders of mortality. We don't have time to waste, and we may fear that we're wasting it anyway! An old TV Guide or a pile of yellowing newspapers is testimony to the brief shelf-life of media sizzle.

There's no doubt that the new media technologies have opened up fantastic possibilities -- and appreciable disadvantages. For example, take e-mail. By now you probably find it hard to take. If your inbox is anything like mine, most of it is filled each day with advertisements and other stuff that just seems like clutter.

Sure, I want to learn what's happening in a lot of different places, and I'm often glad to hear from people whose names are unfamiliar. But during the past year alone, the level of out-and-out commercialism via e-mail has escalated so rapidly that the computer mode of communication now often seems more like a curse than a marvel.

As for television, the critique of TV as mostly junk is nothing new. Mad Magazine was making that point quite acutely back in the 1950s. Now we have a lot more channels -- and, we assure ourselves, a great deal more sophistication. Oh, and did I mention the enhanced color and depth-of-field that High Definition television will soon confer on our great nation?

Despite the bright spots, TV viewing generally depletes much more than it gives. People want to feel connected and certainly want to be entertained. But having a large number of channels to choose from doesn't prevent the choices from remaining severely limited. And when imaginations can stretch no wider than what's been green-lighted by corporate sponsors, underwriters, and network executives, it's time to look elsewhere for the news reporting and creative artistry that can challenge and sustain us.

The numbing effects of corporatized media, it seems to me, fit in comfortably with the kind of militarism that runs through American society and gets unleashed periodically with yet another war blessed by the man in the bully pulpit at the White House. A culture accustomed to finding substantial meaning in TV commercials and an array of phony prime-time shows is unlikely to rouse itself to human connection and moral action when the nation's powers-that-be decide on yet another war. While a grisly reality prevails elsewhere, courtesy of the Pentagon, an air of unreality dominates countless living rooms. "Since no one seems to live on television," media critic Mark Crispin Miller has observed, "no one seems to die there."

It would be preferable to end the year on an upbeat note. But I don't know if I can do better than to recall the graffiti that the great Latin American writer Eduardo Galeano tells of seeing written on a wall: "Let's save pessimism for better times."

When journalists and artists take risks to do their work with integrity, the results can be energizing and inspiring. In contrast, the ultimate triumph of routine media is to make us feel anesthetized and encourage us to be passive (other than going out and buying things). Yet in the face of personal, political and social adversity, the habit of passivity is apt to be our frequent undoing.

As calendars cannot stop reminding us, change is constant. Sometimes it seems that only our awareness is static. But our perceptions, however unspoken, are also evolving. What we do with them remains to be seen.

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Norman Solomon's new book "Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn't Tell You," coauthored with foreign correspondent Reese Erlich, will be published in late January by Context Books.


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

Norman Solomon

"Media Year 2002, R.I.P."
  December 27, 2002

"Sean Penn in Baghdad -- Image gives way to substance"
  December 23, 2002

"Decoding Some Top Buzz Words of 2002 "
  December 11, 2002

"Media Spin can Separate War from Death"
  December 6, 2002

"If Commercial Radio Actually Trafficked in News"
  November 29, 2002

"Unilateral Power -- By Any Other Name "
  November 21, 2002

"Time Capsule: Looking Backward at 2002"
  November 14, 2002

"Branding New and Improved Wars"
  October 29, 2002

"Polls: when measuring is manipulating"
  October 18, 2002

"Media Guide: How to view the United Nations"
  October 4, 2002

"Drown out drums of war with the sound of dialogue"
  October 3, 2002

"Determined Journalism Can Challenge Injustice "
  September 24, 2002

"Baghdad, Autumn 2002: City of Doom"
  September 20, 2002

"Media Sizzle for an Army of Fun"
  September 14, 2002

"The Powell Trap: Easing Us Into War"
  September 5, 2002

"What If We Didn't Need Labor Day?"
  August 30, 2002

"'Wag the Puppy' -- New Twist in Media War"
  August 22, 2002

"True Confessions of a Media CEO"
  August 15, 2002

"Fending off the Threat of Peace"
  August 8, 2002

"The Old Spin on the 'New Economy'"
  August 6, 2002

"War and Forgetfulness -- A Bloody Media Game"
  August 1, 2002

"Will this be an 'Official Scandal' -- or Something Else?"
  July 25, 2002

"Renouncing Sins Against the Corporate Faith"
  July 11, 2002

"'Monomedia' and the First Amendment"
  June 28, 2002

"A Modest Proposal for Media Reform"
  June 25, 2002

"A Creeping Indifference and a Silent Hollowing Out"
  June 17, 2002

"Three Decades Later, Watergate Is A Cautionary Tale"
  June 13, 2002

"Nuclear Weapons and Media Fog"
  June 6, 2002

"'War on Terrorism' Winking at Nuclear Terror"
  May 30, 2002

"Media Strategy Memo to George, Dick and John "
  May 23, 2002

"The Case of the 9-11 Photo"
  May 16, 2002

"No Media Interest in a Basic Matter of Democracy"
  May 9, 2002

"Still Not Good Enough -- From Barbie to Botox "
  May 2, 2002

"Media and the Hazards of Political Faith "
  April 25, 2002

"Alice's New Adventures in Medialand"
  April 18, 2002

"NPR and the Fallow Triumph of Public Radio"
  April 15, 2002

"Palestinians Are Blurry in the Editorial Frame "
  April 5, 2002

"Profiles in Media Courage "
  March 28, 2002

"'The Liberal Media' -- A Poltergeist That Will Not Die "
  March 21, 2002

"Television Becoming Spoof-Proof "
  March 14, 2002

"Big Silver Lining for the Pentagon "
  February 28, 2002

"New Heights for a Remarkable Pundit "
  February 22, 2002

"When Nothing But a Full-Page Ad Will Do"
  February 15, 2002

"GWB and the Incredible Shrinking FDR "
  February 4, 2002

"Ashcroft's Media Scam: A Confederacy of Amnesia"
  January 24, 2002

"A Communique From the Ghost of Mark Twain "
  January 17, 2002

"A Radio Network Coming Back to Life "
  January 14, 2002

"The Discreet Charm of the Straight Spin "
  January 3, 2002




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