I usually don’t make comparisons to the way things are now, with the way things were. Usually our fantasies about the past are just that—fantasies. But in the case of news reporting, I think it helpful to compare the reporting of Walter Cronkite in the sixties and the seventies with our situation today. Cronkite was called “the most trusted man in America” and held the American publics trust for many years even though he did not always tell us what we wanted to hear and sometimes got the facts wrong. But even when we later learned that his reporting wasn’t completely accurate we still believed that it was an honest mistake and we forgave him. The other two major networks NBC and ABC were always trying to hold themselves to Cronkite’s standards because he was the standard for ethical reporting.
Along the way something has happened that has created a mean spirited and ethically bankrupt journalistic (and I use the term loosely) environment. This situation is primarily on the cable TV networks and on talk radio. You can even extend that criticism to blogs (maybe even this one). Accurate and civil reporting seems to be a thing of the past. And because there is so much dead air that needs to be filled, we are inundated with the same meaningless or vitriolic material 24/7. We only get relief early in the morning when the infomercials hit the airways. Gauged by the stuff that we get during the day, infomercials are a paragon of truth and virtue. And cable news continually rails about the same subjects over and over, not even giving us a variety of arguments. How many times have we heard that tax cuts are the answer to creating jobs or that we need more government spending to get us out of the recession. And the interviews, where they have up to six pundits shouting at each other at the same time, with the so called moderator hogging the mike and talking over the other guests, makes my head ache. Nothing new is uttered and the information given is usually inane, unintelligible, or cut off by a commercial.
To make things worse, we are now seeing these cable stations taking pot shots at each other. Whether it’s Fox TV shooting at Steven Colbert or Jon Stewart or vice versa, the new form seems intent on attacking each other. Since I now have to check in with all these shows including Glen Beck, I realize that I’m contributing to the problem. Even though I’d rather not be in that position, I’ve become addicted. It’s like going to the Roman Coliseum and seeing the blood sports of the time—they repulse me, but I feel compelled to watch. It’s sick.
In a recent Gallup poll of July 28, 2010 it was shown that only 9% of people rated members of congress as having high ethical standards. Business executives were rated at 12% with journalists rated at 23%. And even though we have lost trust in these professions, our frustration and anger is fueled by the constant need for ratings and our thirst for blood lust.
So, why do I keep watching??????

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