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Connecting the Dots What NBC Did For Money
You gotta love the mainstream media. They re-define chutzpah.
BY Mark Shea April 29- May 5, 2007 Issue |
Posted 4/24/07 at 7:00 AM
You gotta love the mainstream media. They
re-define chutzpah. In an amazing triple play, the media have given us Nancy
Grace, the Don Imus imbroglio, and now NBC’s “coverage” of the horror at
Virginia Tech. Boy, is Edward R. Murrow dead.
In
her TV news persona, Grace plays a snarling vampire who stalks the nightmares
of decent people, hurling charges at the innocent for the delectation of CNN
viewers. She has been accused of driving one distraught mother to suicide with
charges of killing her missing child, and hers were among the harshest of the
news stories that destroyed the lives of the Duke Lacrosse players by pounding
the drum of guilt for the past year.
When
the DNA evidence was undecided, she declared it would “make or break” the case.
When the DNA showed nothing, she declared that this did not mean they weren’t
guilty. For a year, she was considered the harpy from hell leading a pack of
journalists in the prosecution of what turned out to be innocent men. Her
courageous response to their exoneration? She was nowhere to be seen the day of
the verdict. Time to change the subject. Mum’s the word. In a more civilized
era, she would have been told to clean out her desk and then been met at the
doors of CNN by a mob pelting her with mud and rotten vegetables. Instead, she
retains her highly lucrative job because she pulls in an audience.
Not
so Don Imus. After his umpteenth act of boorishness, Imus suddenly found
himself without work after he uttered a racial slur against a team of black
athletes from Rutgers. One might be tempted to commend CBS for this, except for
the fact that Imus has been making ugly remarks for years and CBS did nothing
about it.
Why
the sudden act of contrition? The sponsors were frightened by the sudden hubbub
and refused to underwrite Imus’ hitherto lucrative show. When the money dried
up, CBS suddenly declared that they were shocked — shocked — to discover that
Imus said ugly things about minorities and women on his show and canned him.
Yessirree, bob! There’s nothing like taking a principled stand when you have
nothing left to lose and everything to gain.
But
perhaps nothing defines the grossness of American mainstream media better than
the behavior of NBC in the wake of the slaughter at Virginia Tech. A lunatic
kills a student and a resident advisor in a dorm, then goes back to his room
and writes a sob story blaming everybody for what he’s about to do (including
photos starring himself in various violent poses).
He
ties the whole thing up in a bow by announcing that his victims made him do it.
Then, he mails the whole evil pile of blame-shifting to NBC and goes off on his
mission of murdering 33 people in cold blood, including himself.
NBC
gets this steaming pile of self-excusing psychodrama the next day, as the
country is reeling in shock from the worst campus slaughter in history.
Families are in ruins. Thousands are in tears. Everybody needs time to
cope. So how does The New York Times describe
NBC’s reaction to the arrival of the murderer’s little package? The headline
says it all: “Package Forced (sic) NBC to Make Tough Decisions.”
Excuse me: “Forced”? Just what was that “tough” decision? Why, it was the
decision to rush right on to the air with their exclusive valuable treasure
trove of pictures of the killer and excerpts of his self-excusing blather.
Get
real. The package no more “forced” NBC to air this swill than the victims
“forced” their killer to slaughter them in cold blood.
The
suits at NBC freely and deliberately chose to air it, presumably because they
wanted to destroy the competition with huge ratings from viewers motivated by
the same impulse that makes people stare at car accidents. There was absolutely
nothing of news value in airing those images of a vanity-driven psychopath
waving his guns.
The
public had no need to hear this nutjob’s self-excusing manifesto for murder or
reward him (and other future nutjob murderers) with world-wide instant
tele-fame. But NBC did it anyway — for the money. And in so doing, they helped
to put another knife in the hearts of the victims’ loved ones and to degrade
still further American public discourse. The murderer’s self-excusing blather
can at least plausibly be chalked up to mental illness. What excuse does NBC
have?
Television
news exists primarily to sell beer and shampoo, not to inform. For now abide
three things in the mainstream media: ratings, prestige and money. But the
greatest of these is money.
Mark Shea is content editor for CatholicExchange.com.
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