Condit
'show' was journalistic perversity
Robert Jensen
Department of Journalism
University of Texas
Austin, TX 78712
work: (512) 471-1990
fax: (512) 471-7979
rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu
copyright Robert Jensen 2001
Newsday, August 27, 2001, p. 20-A.
by Robert Jensen
IS REP. Gary Condit a creep? In my book, without a doubt.
Did Connie Chung do a lousy job interviewing the California Democrat on PrimeTime
Thursday? As a journalist and journalism professor, I say, without a doubt.
But that's all relatively trivial. What we should take away from this "ground-breaking"
interview and the saturation media coverage of the case of Chandra Levy is
that we live in a truly pathetic political and media culture. The parasitical
relationship between politicians and journalists has reached such depthsthat
it is no longer clear which of them benefits more, who is being exploited
or who deserves the most contempt.
It is time for all of us to register our disgust with the whole enterprise
and, as citizens, demand more of journalists and politicians. The coverage
has gone so far that it is past the point of jokes; we are now in an eraof
journalism-as-self-parody.
Gary Condit has a lot of people to answer to - his family, the police and
his constituents. Unless we learn later that he has been involved in foul
play, he is on the hook to explain what appears to have been an inappropriate
relationship. No news there; older men with power in this culture routinely
exploit their positions in personal relationships with younger women.
His potential crimes, or sins or misjudgments are at best grist for local
coverage in his district and a cop story in the District of Columbia. Instead,
the entire nation has been treated all summer to something too depraved to
be called a media circus; such a description does a disservice to even the
grimiest backlot circus and grifters.
Everyone agrees - including, it seems, most of the journalists covering the
story - that the coverage has been excessive and sensational. Chung's interview,
in which she seemed more intent on playing some caricatured version of aprosecutor
from a television drama ("Did you kill Chandra Levy?") than ajournalist,
was perhaps a bit absurd, but not that much more than the routinecoverage
of the case.
But there is a more central point: It's not that the coverage of the story
has been too much, but that it's not an ongoing story at all. It's not aquestion
of how bad the coverage is, but of why there is national coverageat all.
Why did a congressman with no serious role in national politics end up on
national television? Why should people in Idaho and Georgia care what this
guy has to say about his current predicament?
They shouldn't, and Condit shouldn't have been on TV. One has to assume he
didn't want to be. So, why didn't he do the sane thing: book a high-school
auditorium in his district, call a town meeting, and answer the questions
of his constituents?
The answer is probably simple: Once caught up in the machine, all the players
- journalists and politicians alike - go on a kind of autopilot and taketheir
places in the show. In such a heavily mediated political culture andsuch
a heavily commercialized media system, this race to the bottom is inevitable.
Whatever better instincts politicians might have to serve the public interest
get eroded, in part by the power of the media beast and its incessant quest
for material that titillates. And whatever professional instincts journalists
have that could stave off this sensationalism are trounced by the demands
of the folks watching ratings and counting the money.
It is now common in political circles to refer to the United States as an
imperial power. It's getting increasingly difficult not to think of the media
- journalistic and entertainment - as the provider of the circus that distracts
the people, the modern home of our gladiators. And it makes one wonder how
long our empire has to run.
In case anyone has missed it, there are some not-so-trivial issues floating
around in Washington that matter to regular folks. How about the question
of whether right-wing forces are going to be successful in gutting Social
Security? Or the question of how to balance short-term profits and long-term
environmental health? Or the question of whether the United States feelsany
need to be part of an international community?
Journalists too often try to slip by with the cynical excuse that they are
giving people what they want. Politicians complain they have to follow the
media's agenda.
As a journalist, my instinct is to side with my craft. But that is increasingly
difficult. These days, I find myself siding with citizens and hoping that
social movements in the United States, no matter what their primary issue,
can rally to demand more of media and the politicians.
Robert Jensen is a professor in the Department of Journalism at the University
of Texas at Austin. He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu. Other
writings are available online at http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~rjensen/freelance/freelance.htm.
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