'Attack the Messenger: How Politicians Turn You Against the Media' by Craig Crawford
Hardball friend and frequent guest Craig Crawford has just written a new book, 'Attack the Messenger: How Politicians Turn You Against the Media.' An excerpt of the book follows:
Chapter 2
Blame the Messsenger
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The modern era of American politicians subduing the media began in 1988 with the election of the first President Bush. He ran against the liberal-leaning base of the national media establishment and won.
Liberals also attack the media. Former Vermont Governor Howard Dean, a liberal Democrat, had this to say after losing his 2004 bid for the presidency: "The media is a failing institution in this country. They are not maintaining their responsibility to maintain democracy."
Dean's criticism is ironic. It was the media that made him famous. He rose to the top of the heap in the year before the 2004 Democratic primaries, thanks largely to the campaign press corp's fascination with his dark horse, Internet-based candidacy. He was even dubbed the frontrunner before a single vote was cast.
But it was also the media that knocked him down after his loss in the first voting contest, the Iowa caucuses in January 2004. The news media obsessed on the intensity of Dean's feisty concession speech on caucus night, intended to rally hundreds of disappointed but still enthusiastic supporters. The "Dean scream," as it was labeled, was roundly criticized as a sign that the energetic politician might be a bit loopy.
Dean never recovered from the moment. His trajectory is a cautionary tale for politicians who rely too much on so-called media momentum in campaigns. As the saying goes, "If you live by the tube, you die by the tube."
It is, therefore, not unusual that Dean ended up so bitter about the media's role. Politicians almost instinctively blame the media when things go wrong.
Attacking the messenger always finds a receptive audience.
It's human nature. When you don't want to believe something, what do you do? First, you blame the messenger.
If the doctor has bad news, get a second opinion. If your bank statement doesn't balance, maybe it's the bank's fault. If you get a bad grade in school, the teacher is out to get you.
Got a bad review at work? The boss just doesn't understand you.
Sometimes the messenger is wrong. But many times you eventually have no choice but to accept what you do not want to hear.
So it is with the news. If you don't like what you read on the front page of your newspaper, maybe the reporter is biased or just plain stupid. If the evening news on television doesn't please you, blame the messenger.
Consuming news with skepticism is a good thing. Plenty of reporting is biased, misinformed, and, yes, just plain stupid.
But these days, public distrust of the news media is at a dangerously high point. Our instincts to blame the messenger are confirmed again and again.
A New York Times reporter is fired for making up stories.
A USA Today reporter and several editors are fired for a series of plagiarism incidents over a number of years.
CBS News executives are forced to admit that 60 Minutes producers relied on a forged document to question a president's military service record.
Online news is no exception. Often, you can bet that if a story is only online, it's probably wrong.
We're still waiting for the pictures of George Bush dancing naked on a bar table. Years ago, Web newsies breathlessly reported we'd soon see them.
Sometimes, however, it is a story so hot or troubling that the mainstream media does not want to touch it.
Word of Bill Clinton's sexual affair in the White House first circulated on the Internet. Even when a major newsmagazine finally decided to run the story, it leaked onto the Web before it was published.
Thanks to the Internet and its Net-citizen journalists known as bloggers, anyone with a modem can spread lies or truth. It is often difficult to know the difference.
The old ways of journalism are long gone-and for good. There was a time when a handful of elites in New York City and Washington, D.C., set the news agenda.
A network news chief riding to work in his limousine would read the New York Times and take his cues for what would lead the evening news. A president or his top aides could call an influential reporter for a major newspaper and feed him a story that would drive the next day's news cycle.
As radio personality Don Imus once said of top news chiefs, "They write the news for their friends."
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