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Tue Dec 02 2008
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Columns
Norman Solomon
When Junk Interrupts Junk
March 4, 2005
Once in a while, mass media outlets give a fair hearing to radical
ideas that make sense. But those ideas have little chance to take hold --
mainly because followup is scant. Instead of bouncing around the national
media echo chamber, the offending concept falls like a tossed rock.
That's what happened a few weeks ago when Parade magazine featured an
essay directly challenging the nation's TV commercials.
"With the advent of television, the nature of concentration was
altered," Norman Mailer wrote in the magazine's Jan. 23 edition. "Yet
children could still develop such powers by watching TV. Video and books
had a common denominator then -- narrative." But television did not long
retain the continuity of "uninterrupted narratives." Before long, for
viewers, "there were constant interruptions to programs -- the
commercials."
Year after year, the situation has worsened. "On the major networks,
the amount of time given to commercials and other promotional messages
increased by 36 percent from 1991 to 2003," Mailer noted. "Each of the
four major networks now offers 52 minutes of commercials in the three
hours from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. every day."
Young people are not spared. "It is as bad for most children's
shows," Mailer lamented. "Soon enough, children develop a fail-safe. Since
the child knows that any interesting story will soon be amputated by a
kaleidoscope of toys, food, dolls, clowns, new colors and the clutter of
six or seven wholly different products all following one another in 10-,
20- and 30-second spots all the way through a three-minute break, the
child also comes to recognize that concentration is not one's friend but
is treacherous. For soon enough, attention will be turned inside out."
Hence, Norman Mailer's conclusion: "If we want to have the best of
all possible worlds, we had better recognize that we cannot have all the
worlds. I believe that television commercials have got to go. Let us pay
directly for what we enjoy on television rather than pass the spiritual
cost on to our children and their children."
Confronting present-day television would also require addressing
other key points. Here are two: The content of commercials is routinely
corrosive if not toxic. And the programs being interrupted are,
themselves, commonly junk that rots people's minds.
Are such descriptions too polemical? I don't think so.
Seen out of corners of our eyes, TV commercials maintain much of
their power because we don't think about them very much, even while we
absorb them. However, if we set out to consciously scrutinize a random
sample of commercials for a while, we're liable to be jolted by just how
awful they are. A wide range of netherworld adjectives apply. For
instance: nauseating, insulting, degrading, idiotic, insipid, asinine,
numbing, mind-warping, stultifying...
And how about the programs that the commercials interrupt? The other
night, I clicked from the celebrity-and-crime fare now dominating CNN's
prime-time lineup to an episode of the much-hyped ABC show "The
Bachelorette." With breathtaking acculturated stupidity, the show was so
painfully dehumanizing that any interruption from a barrage of
mindless commercials was actually a relief.
The fact that tens of millions of viewers, including young people,
watch such insidious programming is cause for despair. Overall, the United
States is heavily socialized by the likes of what dominates TV screens.
Mailer is quite correct. In recent decades, gradually and profoundly,
corporate programmers have cut up the televised tales an inch at a time as
commercials splice and dice continuity into fragmentation. And everything
moves faster. On the evening news, sound bites are now often sound nibbles
or mere crumbs. Entertainment shows flash images for split seconds.
Thoughts and emotions are not communicated or portrayed so much as
suggested, truncated and dispatched with inarticulate
pseudo-sophistication.
It's true that not all the shows on commercial television are in the
range of mediocre-to-atrocious. And on PBS affiliates, the programs often
go uninterrupted, though the "enhanced underwriter credits" that bracket
them are increasingly lengthy pitches aiming at affluent demographics
(commercials by any other name). Yet certain messages -- fixations on
money, glitz and appearances -- dominate. The distances from public
television's "Nightly Business Report" to "Entertainment Tonight" to "The
Bachelorette" are short leaps.
Televised representations of life become distinctly more apparent
than real. In the inorganic fog that wet-blankets televisionland, a
pernicious smog of thinly veiled befuddlement is the best we're supposed
to hope for.
___________________________________________
Norman Solomon's next book, "War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits
Keep Spinning Us to Death," will be published in early summer by Wiley.
His columns and other writings can be found at www.normansolomon.com.
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Norman Solomon
"Journalists should expose secrets, not keep them" December 30, 2005
"Announcing the P.U.-litzer Prizes for 2005" December 22, 2005
"A new phase of bright spinning lies about Iraq" December 22, 2005
"Hidden in plane sight: U.S. media dodging air war in Iraq" December 17, 2005
"Colin Powell: Still craven after all these years" December 17, 2005
"The bogus blurring of terrorism and insurgency in Iraq" December 13, 2005
"At the gates of San Quentin" December 13, 2005
"Rumsfeld’s handshake deal with Saddam: history out of media bounds" December 10, 2005
"The Woodward scandal should not blow over" November 30, 2005
"Colin Powell: Still craven after all these years" November 30, 2005
"Thanksgiving and more taking" November 24, 2005
"Getting out of Iraq" November 22, 2005
"Axis of hardliners, from Tehran to Washington" November 5, 2005
"After the Libby indictment, the press is acquitting itself" October 31, 2005
"At the White House, the spin doctor is ill" October 30, 2005
"Iraq is not Vietnam. But..." October 25, 2005
"Media at a huge crossroads, 25 years after Reagan’s triumph" October 25, 2005
"Judith Miller, the Fourth Estate and the Warfare State" October 17, 2005
"The news media are knocking Bush -- and propping him up" October 16, 2005
"The occasional media ritual of lamenting the habitual" October 15, 2005
"What’s happening out of camera range?" October 14, 2005
"“The War on Terror” -- in Translation" October 10, 2005
"Torture and the “Controversial” Arc of Injustice" October 9, 2005
"Beyond the “Vietnam Syndrome”" September 21, 2005
"Dodging the Costs of the Warfare State" September 20, 2005
"Firing Michael Brown is not enough. How about Bush and Cheney?" September 6, 2005
"Bush’s implicit answer to Cindy Sheehan’s question" September 4, 2005
"Ending the Impunity of the Bush White House" September 2, 2005
"Triangulation for war" August 30, 2005
"Will News Media Help Bush Exploit the 9/11 Anniversary Again?" August 27, 2005
"Bush’s option to escalate the war in Iraq" August 24, 2005
"The Iraq War and MoveOn" August 22, 2005
"Blaming the antiwar messengers" August 17, 2005
"Someone Tell Frank Rich the War Is Not Over" August 16, 2005
"Rage against the killing of the light" August 11, 2005
"Big Star-Spangled Lies for War" August 8, 2005
"The Incredible Blight of TV Punditry" August 7, 2005
"Media flagstones along a path to war on Iran" August 4, 2005
"Thomas Friedman, Liberal Sadist?" July 29, 2005
"General Westmoreland’s death wish and the war in Iraq" July 21, 2005
"War and Venture Capitalism" July 18, 2005
"Terrorism, "the War on Terror" and the Message of Carnage" July 10, 2005
"Judith Miller -- Drum Major for War" July 7, 2005
"Mourn on the Fourth of July" July 1, 2005
"Letter From Tehran: In Washington's Cross-Hairs" June 16, 2005
"And Now, It's Time For ... "Media Jeopardy!"" May 26, 2005
"News Media and “the Madness of Militarism”" May 24, 2005
"Political Bluster and the Filibuster" May 13, 2005
"Iraq: War, Aid and Public Relations" May 3, 2005
"Intervention spin cycle" April 26, 2005
"When Media Dogs Don’t Bark" April 18, 2005
"Why Iraq Withdrawal Makes Sense" April 17, 2005
"Beyond the Narrow Limits of News Coverage" April 7, 2005
"A Quarterly Report from Bush-Cheney Media Enterprises" April 1, 2005
"Little Reporting on Paranoia in High Places" March 26, 2005
"Why Iraq Withdrawal Makes Sense" March 21, 2005
"MoveOn.org: Making Peace With the War in Iraq" March 11, 2005
"When Junk Interrupts Junk" March 4, 2005
"Ex-Presidents as Pitchmen: Touting Good Deeds" February 25, 2005
"Great Media Critics: Intrepid for Journalism and Labor Rights" February 21, 2005
"Far from Media Spotlights, the Shadows of “Losers”" February 13, 2005
"What They Really Mean..." February 10, 2005
"Iraq Media Coverage: Too Much Stenography, Not Enough Curiosity" February 3, 2005
"A Shaky Media Taboo -- Withdrawal from Iraq" January 21, 2005
"Acts of God, Acts of Media" January 7, 2005
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