The
Media Is the Villain – for Creating a World Dumb
Enough for Trump
Yet another TV executive says Trump is "good for
business." Is sudden good fortune of news media
by accident or design?
By Matt Taibbi
August 27,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The craziest part of Donald Trump's 77-minute
loon-a-thon in Phoenix earlier this week came
when he rehashed his shtick about the networks
turning off live coverage of his speech. Trump
seemed to really believe they were shutting the
cameras off because "the very dishonest media"
was so terrified of his powerful words.
"They're turning those lights off so fast!" he
said. "CNN doesn't want its failing viewership
to see this!"
Trump
is wrong about a lot of things, but it's hard to
be more wrong about any one thing than he was
about this particular point.
No news
director would turn off the feed in the middle
of a Trump-meltdown. This presidency has become
the ultimate ratings bonanza. Trump couldn't do
better numbers if he jumped off Mount
Kilimanjaro carrying a Kardashian.
This
was confirmed this week by yet another
shruggingly honest TV executive – in this case
Tony Maddox, head of CNN International. Maddox
said CNN is doing business at "record levels."
He hinted also that the monster ratings they're
getting have taken the sting out of being
accused of promoting fake news.
"[Trump] is good for business," Maddox
said. "It's a
glib thing to say. But our performance has been
enhanced during this news period." Maddox,
speaking at the Edinburgh TV festival, added
that most of the outlets that have been singled
out by Trump are doing a swimming business. "If
you look at the groups that Trump has primarily
targeted: CNN,
The New York Times,
The Washington
Post,
Saturday Night Live, Stephen Colbert," he
said, "every single one of those has seen a
quite remarkable growth in their viewing
figures, in their sales figures."
Everyone hisses whenever they hear quotes like
these. They recall the infamous line from last
year
by CBS chief Les Moonves,
about how Trump "may not be good for America,
but he's damn good for CBS." Moonves was even
cheekier than Maddox. He laughed and added, "The
money's rolling in, and this is fun. They're not
even talking about issues, they're throwing
bombs at each other, and I think the advertising
reflects that."
For
more than two years now, it's been obvious that
Donald Trump is a disaster on almost every level
except one – he's great for the media business.
Most of us who do this work have already gone
through the process of working out just how
guilty we should or should not feel about this.
Many execs and editors – and Maddox seems to
fall into this category – have convinced
themselves that the ratings and the money are a
kind of cosmic reward for covering Trump
responsibly. But deep down, most of us know
that's a lie. Donald Trump gets awesome ratings
for the same reason
Fear Factor
made money feeding people
rat-hair tortilla chips:
nothing sells like a freak show. If a meteor
crashes into jello night at the Playboy mansion,
it doesn't matter if you send Edward R. Murrow
to do the standup. Some things sell themselves.
The
Trump presidency is like a diabolical
combination of every schlock eyeball-grabbing
formula the networks have ever deployed. It's
Battle of the Network Stars meets
Wrestlemania meets Survivor meets the
Kursk disaster. It's got the immediacy of a
breaking news crash, with themes of impending
doom, conflict, celebrity meltdown, anger,
racism, gender war, everything.
Trump even sells on the level of those Outbrain
click-addicting photos of plastic surgery
failures. With his mystery comb-over and his
great rolls of restrained blubber and the
infamous tales of violent fights with his ex
over a
failed
scalp-reduction procedure,
Trump on top of being Hitler and Hulk
Hogan from a ratings perspective is also a
physical monster, the world's very own
bearded-lady tent.
Trump's monstrousness is ironic, since the image
of Trump as the media's
very own Frankenstein's monster
has been used and re-used in the last years.
Many in the business are of the opinion that,
having created Trump and let him loose in the
village, we in the press now have a
responsibility to hunt him down with aggressive
investigative reporting, to make the world safe
again.
That
might indeed be a good idea. But that take also
implies that slaying the monster will fix the
problem. Are we sure that's true?
No
Advertising
- No
Government
Grants
-
This
Is
Independent
Media
|
Reporters seem to think so, and keep trying to
find the magic formula. Just this week, staffers
at the Wall
Street Journal rebelled against
editor-in-chief Gerard Baker. Baker, who has
long been accused of being too soft on Trump,
blasted his people for going too negative on the
president in their coverage of the Arizona
speech. He sent around a letter asking staff to
"stick to reporting what [Trump] said," rather
than "packaging it in exegesis and selective
criticism."
Reporters fought back by (apparently) leaking
the memo to the rival New York Times.
This followed an incident in which a
transcript of Baker's recent interview with
Trump was
leaked to Politico earlier this month. In
it, Baker mentions being glad to have seen
Ivanka Trump in Southampton, and small-talks
with Trump about travel and golf. The
implication here is that it's improper or
unseemly for a newspaper editor to have a chummy
relationship with this kind of a president.
And it is, sometimes. Reporters who should be
challenging presidents and candidates are pretty
much always cheating the public when they turn
interviews into
mutual back rub
sessions.
But
these intramural ethical wars within our
business may just be deflections that keep us
from facing bigger problems – like, for
instance, the fact that we have been
systematically making the entire country more
stupid for decades.
We
learned long ago in this business that dumber
and more alarmist always beats complex and
nuanced. Big headlines, cartoonish morality,
scary criminals at home and foreign menaces
abroad, they all sell. We decimated attention
spans, rewarded hot-takers over thinkers, and
created in audiences powerful addictions to
conflict, vitriol, fear, self-righteousness, and
race and gender resentment.
There
isn't a news executive alive low enough to deny
that we use xenophobia and racism to sell ads.
Black people on TV for decades were almost
always shirtless and chased by cops, and the
"rock-throwing Arab" photo was a staple of
international news sections even before 9/11.
And when all else fails in the media world, just
show more cleavage somewhere, and ratings go up,
every time.
Donald
Trump didn't just take advantage of these
conditions. He was created in part by them.
What's left of Trump's mind is like a parody of
the average American media consumer: credulous,
self-centered, manic, sex-obsessed, unfocused,
and glued to stories that appeal to his sense of
outrage and victimhood.
We've
created a generation of people like this: anger
addicts who can't read past the first page of a
book. This is why the howls of outrage from
within the ranks of the news media about Trump's
election ring a little bit false. What the hell
did we expect would happen? Who did we think
would rise to prominence in our rage-filled,
hyper-stimulated media environment? Sensitive
geniuses?
We
spent years selling the lowest common
denominator. Now the lowest common denominator
is president. How can it be anything but
self-deception to pretend this is an innocent
coincidence?
This article was first published by
Rolling Stone
-
The views
expressed in this article belong to the author
and do not necessarily reflect the editorial
policy of Stop the War Coalition.