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The decision by the executives at MSNBC to remove Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews from the anchor position for the coverage of the 2008 U.S. presidential elections, and the New York Times' coverage of the decision1, offers a contemporary example of how accurately Herman and Chomsky's Propaganda Model2 reflects the state of mass media in the United States.
For anyone who is not familiar with the Propaganda Model, I will very briefly explain it as I understand it.3 Control over the majority of the media outlets in the United States have been consolidated into the hands of a very few powerful corporations, and the interests of these corporations invariably determine what is covered by the mass media and how the information is presented. This determination, however, rather than direct corporate intervention, tends to take the form of the following five filters:
These filters do not always exert complete control over the information delivered by the mass media, but they do determine the depth and quality of the coverage of different topics. Consider, for instance, that among the several revealing stories and outraged editorials in the New York Times over the abuse and torture of detainees in the government's Guantánamo Bay prison camps, observations by various independent media and political activists that the mass media's failure of political oversight and accountability helped to propagate these crimes were largely absent. Such an observation, however, brings the corporate media's reliance on established sources into focus, and this simply wouldn't do. Similarly, MSNBC has made the mistake of pointing out the conservative stance of the corporate media by providing a counterweight, and NBC's successful pressure on MSNBC to change the anchors for the election coverage demonstrates how effective flak can be at bringing a member of the mainstream media into line with the prevailing conservative agenda.
1. MSNBC Takes Incendiary Hosts From Anchor Seat. Brian Stelter. 7 September 2008. New York Times.
2. For a detailed description of the propaganda model, consult Manufacturing Consent, by Herman and Chomsky (2002), or, for a briefer analysis, Media Control
, by Chomsky.
3. David Cromwell's "The Propaganda Model: An Overview" and Edward Herman's "The Propaganda Model Revisited" both provide reasonable synopses of what the Propaganda Model is and how it functions.
4. For an even more sobering perspective, compare the practice of blacklisting entertainers and businesspeople during the 'Red Scare' to the provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act that specify the provision of any form of material support to an organization that the government considers subversive as a criminal act. Imagine hearing this at your trial: "Do you now or have you ever provided moral or material support to a subversive terrorist network?" If you think I'm being overly dramatic, consider that the only conviction the government has succeeded in extracting thus far from the nightmare that is the Guantánamo Bay Detention Center was for driving a truck.








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