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Chapter Twelve
THE MEDIA AND THEIR MESSAGES
Freedom of the press, newspapers,
radio, and television
Photograph by Steve Liss,
Time Magazine
The average American, according to a recent
study, spends about eight hours a day with the print and
electronic media -- at home, at work, and traveling by car.
This total includes four hours watching television, three
hours listening to radio, a half hour listening to recorded
music, and another half hour reading the newspaper.
The central role of information in American
society harks back to a fundamental belief held by the
framers of the U.S. Constitution: that a well-informed
people is the strongest guardian of its own liberties. The
framers embodied that assumption in the First Amendment to
the Constitution, which provides in part that "Congress
shall make no law...abridging the freedom of speech or of
the press." A corollary to this clause is that the press
functions as a watchdog over government actions and calls
attention to official misdeeds and violations of individual
rights.
The First Amendment and the political
philosophy behind it have allowed the American media
extraordinary freedom in reporting the news and expressing
opinions. In the 1970s, American reporters uncovered the
Watergate scandal, which ended with the resignation of
President Richard Nixon, and American newspapers printed the
"Pentagon papers," classified documents related to U.S.
involvement in the Vietnam War. Press reports of official
corruption that in some countries would bring arrests and
the shutdown of newspapers are made freely in the United
States, where the media cannot be shut down, where
government itself cannot be libeled, and where public
officials must prove that a statement is not only false but
was made with actual malice before they can recover damages.
We examine four topics in this chapter:
newspapers, magazines, the broadcast media, and current
issues related to the media.
NEWSPAPERS: PIONEERING PRESS FREEDOM
In 1990 the press celebrated its 300th
anniversary as an American institution. The first newspaper
in the colonies, Publick Occurrences: Both Foreign and
Domestick, lasted only one day in 1690 before British
officials suppressed it. But other papers sprang up, and by
the 1730s the colonial press was strong enough to criticize
British governors. In 1734 the governor of New York charged
John Peter Zenger, publisher of the New York Weekly
Journal, with seditious libel. Zenger's lawyer,
Alexander Hamilton, argued that "the truth of the facts" was
reason enough to print a story. In a decision bolstering
freedom of the press, the jury acquitted Zenger.
By the 1820s about 25 daily newspapers and
more than 400 weeklies were being published in the United
States. Horace Greeley founded the New York Tribune
in 1841, and it quickly became the nation's most influential
newspaper. Two media giants, Joseph Pulitzer and William
Randolph Hearst, began building their newspaper empires
after the American Civil War (1861-65). Fiercely
competitive, they resorted to "yellow journalism" --
sensational and often inaccurate reporting aimed at
attracting readers. Early in the 20th century, newspaper
editors realized that the best way to attract readers was to
give them all sides of a story, without bias. This standard
of objective reporting is today one of American journalism's
most important traditions. Another dominant feature of early
20th-century journalism was the creation of chains of
newspapers operating under the same ownership, led by a
group owned by Hearst. This trend accelerated after World
War II, and today about 75 percent of all U.S. daily papers
are owned by newspaper chains.
With the advent of television in the 1940s
and 1950s, the new electronic medium made inroads on
newspaper circulation: Readers tended to overlook the
afternoon paper because they could watch the day's news on
TV. In 1971, 66 cities had two or more dailies, usually one
published in the morning and one in the afternoon. In 1995,
only 36 cities had two or more dailies.
Overall, the number of dailies dropped only
slightly, from 1,763 in 1946 to 1,534 in 1994, and the
number of Sunday papers rose from 497 in 1946 to 889 in
1994. The combined figure is the highest number of
newspapers with the highest total circulation -- 135 million
-- in the world. Nonetheless, the largest U.S. newspapers
have been losing circulation in recent years, a trend that
can be attributed to the increasing availability of news
from television and other sources.
The top five daily newspapers by circulation
in 1995 were the Wall Street Journal (1,823,207),
USA Today (1,570,624), the New York Times
(1,170,869), the Los Angeles Times (1,053,498), and
the Washington Post (840,232). The youngest of the
top five, USA Today, was launched as a national
newspaper in 1982, after exhaustive research by the Gannett
chain. It relies on bold graphic design, color photos, and
brief articles to capture an audience of urban readers
interested in news "bites" rather than traditional, longer
stories.
New technology has made USA Today
possible and is enabling other newspapers to enlarge their
national and international audiences. USA Today is
edited and composed in Arlington, Virginia, then transmitted
via satellite to 32 printing plants around the country and
two printing plants serving Europe and Asia. The
International Herald Tribune, owned jointly by the
New York Times and the Washington Post, is a
global newspaper, printed via satellite in 11 cities around
the world and distributed in 164 countries.
In 1992, the Chicago Sun-Times began
to offer articles through America Online, one of the first
companies that connected personal computers with the
Internet. In 1993, the San Jose Mercury-News began
distributing most of its daily text, minus photos and
illustrations, to subscribers to America Online; in 1995,
eight media companies announced formation of a company to
create a network of on-line newspapers. Now, most American
newspapers are available on the Internet, and anyone with a
personal computer and a link to the Internet can scan papers
from across the country in his or her own home or office.
MAGAZINES' NICHE
The first American magazines appeared a half
century after the first newspapers and took longer to attain
a wide audience. In 1893, the first mass-circulation
magazines were introduced, and in 1923, Henry Luce launched
Time, the first weekly news magazine. The arrival of
television cut into the advertising revenues enjoyed by
mass-circulation magazines, and some weekly magazines
eventually folded: The Saturday Evening Post in 1969,
Look in 1971, and Life in 1972. (The
Saturday Evening Post and Life later reappeared
as monthlies.)
Magazine publishers responded by trying to
appeal more to carefully defined audiences than to the
public at large. Magazines on virtually any topic imaginable
have appeared, including Tennis, Trailer Life, and
Model Railroading. Other magazines have targeted
segments within their audience for special attention. TV
Guide, Time, and Newsweek, for example, publish
regional editions. Several magazines are attempting to
personalize the contents of each issue according to an
individual reader's interests.
This specialization has brought an upswing
in the number of magazines published in the United States,
from 6,960 in 1970 to 11,000 in 1994. More than 50 magazines
had a circulation of over one million in 1994. The top two
in circulation were both aimed at retired persons: NRTS/AARP
Bulletin (21,875,436) and Modern Maturity
(21,716,727). Rounding out the top five were Reader's
Digest (15,126,664), TV Guide (14,037,062), and
National Geographic (9,283,079).
In 1993, Time became the first
magazine to offer an on-line edition that subscribers can
call up on their computers before it hits the newsstands. In
1996, software magnate Bill Gates started Slate, a
magazine covering politics and culture that was intended to
be available exclusively on-line (Slate's publisher soon
decided to add a print version).
Meanwhile, a new hybrid of newspaper and
magazine became popular starting in the 1970s: the
newsletter. Printed on inexpensive paper and often as short
as four to six pages, the typical newsletter appears weekly
or biweekly. Newsletters gather and analyze information on
specialized topics. Southern Political Report, for
example, covers election races in the southern U.S. states,
and FTC Watch covers the actions of the Federal Trade
Commission. Newsletters can be the product of small staffs,
sometimes only a single reporter who produces the issue by
computer.
The newsletter has been joined by the "zine,"
highly personalized magazines of relatively small
circulation, sometimes with contents that are meant to
shock. Afraid, for instance, is a monthly zine
devoted to horror stories.
THE ROLE OF RADIO
The beginning of commercial radio broadcasts
in 1920 brought a new source of information and
entertainment directly into American homes. President
Franklin Roosevelt understood the usefulness of radio as a
medium of communication: His "fireside chats" kept the
nation abreast of economic developments during the
Depression and of military maneuvers during World War II.
The widespread availability of television
after World War II caused radio executives to rethink their
programming. Radio could hardly compete with television's
visual presentation of drama, comedy, and variety acts; many
radio stations switched to a format of recorded music mixed
with news and features. Starting in the 1950s, radios became
standard accessories in American automobiles. The medium
enjoyed a renaissance as American commuters tuned in their
car radios on the way to work.
The expansion of FM radio, which has better
sound quality but a more limited signal range than AM, led
to a split in radio programming in the 1970s and 1980s. FM
came to dominate the music side of programming, while AM has
shifted mainly to all-news and talk formats.
Barely in existence 25 years ago, talk radio
usually features a host, a celebrity or an expert on some
subject, and the opportunity for listeners to call in and
ask questions or express opinions on the air. The call-in
format is now heard on nearly 1,000 of the 10,000 commercial
radio stations in the United States.
Despite the importance of TV, the reach of
radio is still impressive. In 1994, 99 percent of American
households had at least one radio, with an average of five
per household. Besides the 10,000 commercial radio stations,
the United States has more than 1,400 public radio stations.
Most of these are run by universities and other public
institutions for educational purposes and are financed by
public funds and private donations. In 1991, more than 12
million Americans listened each week to the 430 public radio
stations affiliated with National Public Radio, a
nationwide, nonprofit organization headquartered in
Washington, D.C.
TELEVISION: BEYOND THE BIG THREE
Since World War II television has developed
into the most popular medium in the United States, with
enormous influence on the country's elections and way of
life. Virtually every American home -- 97 million of them in
1994 -- has at least one TV set, and 65 percent have two or
more.
Three privately owned networks that offered
free programming financed by commercials -- NBC, CBS, and
ABC -- controlled 90 percent of the TV market from the 1950s
to the 1970s. In the 1980s the rapid spread of pay cable TV
transmitted by satellite undermined that privileged
position. By 1994, almost 60 percent of American households
had subscribed to cable TV, and non-network programming was
drawing more than 30 percent of viewers. Among the new cable
channels were several that show movies 24 hours a day; Cable
News Network, the creation of Ted Turner, which broadcasts
news around the clock; and MTV, which shows music videos.
In the meantime, a fourth major commercial
network, Fox, has come into being and challenged the big
three networks; several local TV stations have switched
their affiliation from one of the big three to the newcomer.
Two more national networks -- WB and UPN -- have also come
along, and the number of cable television channels continues
to expand.
There are 335 public television stations
across the United States, each of which is independent and
serves its community's interests. But the stations are
united by such national entities as the Public Broadcasting
Service, which supplies programming. American taxpayers
provide partial funding for public television, which is
watched by an estimated 87 million viewers per week. Among
the most popular programs is "Sesame Street," a children's
show that teaches beginning reading and math through the use
of puppets, cartoons, songs, and comedy skits.
Beginning in the late 1970s, U.S. cable
companies have offered services to selected segments of the
population. Programs broadcast by the Silent Network come
with sign language and captions for the network's audience
of people with hearing problems. In 1988, Christopher
Whittle founded Channel One cable network, which provides
educational programming -- along with commercials -- to
about 40 percent of American high school students. In
addition, the convergence of the computer, TV, and fiber
optics has raised the possibility of interactive TV, which
would allow viewers to select specific programs they wish to
see at times of their choosing.
CURRENT ISSUES
Many Americans are disturbed by the amount
of violence their children see on television. In response to
citizens' complaints and pressure from the Congress, the
four major TV networks -- ABC, CBS, NBC, and Fox -- agreed
in 1993 to inform parents of violent content at the
beginning of a program, and cable networks have agreed to
give similar warnings. In 1996, the commercial and cable
networks went a step further and established a rating
system, based on the amount of violence, sexual content,
and/or profane language that a program contains. A symbol
indicating the show's rating appears on the television
screen at the beginning of, and intermittently during, the
broadcast.
Such voluntary measures seem preferable to
government regulation of programming content, which would
probably violate the First Amendment. Another possible
solution to the problem is technological. Beginning in 1998
new television sets sold in the United States will be
equipped with a "V-chip," a device that will enable parents
to block out programs they would rather their children not
see.
Similar complaints have been voiced about
the words and images accessible on computers. Congress
recently passed a law attempting to keep indecent language
or pictures from being transmitted through cyberspace, but a
federal court struck it down as unconstitutional. If this
problem has a solution, it probably lies either in close
parental supervision of children's time on the computer or
the development of a technological barrier to use of certain
computer functions.
One of the most debated media-related issues
facing Americans today has little to do with technology and
much more to do with the age-old concept of personal
privacy: whether any area of a person's life should remain
off-limits once he or she becomes a public figure. In 1988,
a leading presidential candidate, Senator Gary Hart,
withdrew from the race after the press revealed his affair
with a young woman. Politicians from both parties complain
that the press is "out to get" them, and some conservative
members of Congress assert that the media are biased in
favor of liberals. Many critics believe that increased
prying by the media will deter capable people, regardless of
their beliefs, from going into politics.
On the other hand, in the old days reporters
virtually conspired with politicians to keep the public from
knowing about personal weaknesses. President Franklin
Roosevelt's crippled body was not talked about or
photographed, and his poor physical health was kept from the
electorate when he ran for a fourth term in 1944. A majority
of voters might have chosen Roosevelt anyway, but shielding
them from the facts seems dishonest to most Americans today,
who believe that in a democracy it is better to share
information than to suppress it.
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