The Phoenix Network:
 
 
Sign Up  |   About  |   Advertise
 
News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In
Best_2012_1000x75_Alt

Our journalism echoes our politics

If the press reflects the times, which way will it go now?
By LANCE TAPLEY  |  August 3, 2009
Journalism-hand-money_main
  The biggest myth in journalism is that news is what officials say.
Why won’t the Maine press inquire deeply into major issues? In these days of economic collapse and competition from the Internet, of course, many news organizations are running with skeleton staffs with no time to dig into anything. But for years, on numerous issues, I have seen the indications get fewer and fewer that Maine reporters want to confront government officials or other authorities and get the real story.

Take, for example, the mass torture of mostly mentally ill inmates at the Maine State Prison’s solitary-confinement “Supermax,” a subject I’ve covered for years. I’d welcome competition on this story, and in years past I would have expected it. Inmate suicides, hunger strikes, a murder, beatings by guards, official secrecy — this is raw meat for a feeding frenzy of media attention. Not this time — mostly, there has been silence.

Politicians, too, are silent on many issues. I cover the State House, and I can say categorically no politician there has expressed more than token interest in how prisoners are treated. For sure, convicted criminals are not exactly popular, but they are not a special case. Politicians also show little interest in the state’s scandalous treatment of those mentally ill people who happen not to be in the prisons. In years past, there would have been a few politicians — a few liberals, maybe — who would have seen a cause or two in these issues.

So, why, nowadays, are both politicians and press so neglectful of such issues? To try to answer this question is to illuminate the current condition of journalism in Maine and what has shaped it.

There’s a tight fit, a symbiosis, between politicians and press. They feed each other. If daily newspapers and TV news covered prison torture or the treatment of the mentally ill as the scandals they are, politicians would embark upon reform. More powerfully, though, politics feeds the press. If political actors cried for reform, the press would be on the story. American journalism and politics have demonstrated this symbiosis since the revolutionary days of the fighting and scribbling Sons of Liberty.

Freelance in Maine: Four decades of advocacy journalism. By Lance Tapley.
In politically liberal or conservative times, reflecting what is permitted by the ideological spirit of the times, the managers and practitioners of journalism become more liberal or conservative. Over my long career, I’ve witnessed an expansion and contraction of journalism’s boldness and power: from the end of a conservative era to liberal-radical activism and back to conservatism. Maine and national journalism have now contracted to the most conservative point I have seen — so far.

This wave in journalism was in synch with a political wave. Conservative politics means preserving the status quo and, on economic issues, those whom it rewards. Conservative journalism means going along with these things. It’s a contemporary cliché to say journalism’s future depends on how it meets the challenge of the Internet, which is killing newspapers while providing few places for newspapermen and -women to be employed, but journalism’s future also depends heavily on political developments.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Divide and be conquered, Poor reception, Review: Inside Job, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Barack Obama, Politics, U.S. Politics,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 04/24 ]   The Beggar's Banquet  @ Russell House Tavern
[ 04/24 ]   Fela!  @ Cutler Majestic Theatre
ARTICLES BY LANCE TAPLEY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   MAINSTREAM PROGRESSIVES GET OCCUPIED  |  April 18, 2012
    "We are the 99 percent!" reverberates in the basement of the Portland Public Library on a Saturday morning. Ninety radicals — well, maybe damn strong liberals — are plotting to take over the government — well, in any case, to harass the one percent.
  •   POLITICOS LIKE THE EAST-WEST HIGHWAY; HOW ABOUT THE PUBLIC?  |  April 18, 2012
    Peter Vigue, CEO of Maine's big construction company Cianbro, has recently been successful in promoting to the state's politicians his plan for a 220-mile, limited-access, privately owned toll highway bisecting Maine from New Brunswick to Quebec.
  •   PROGRESSIVES RALLY AGAINST RUSHED GOP AGENDA  |  April 04, 2012
    As the rush to late-April legislative adjournment begins, much is at stake for people who want to help the needy (or are needy), or value a fair tax system, or treasure Maine's unspoiled woods and shores, or want government to be run openly — in short, for many people who these days are often called progressives.
  •   OCCUPIER FINED FOR TRESPASS  |  March 28, 2012
    In a stiff sentence for an act of nonviolent civil disobedience, a judge on March 23 slapped a $400 fine plus $90 in court costs on the first of the "Blaine House 9" to go on trial. Diane Messer, 59, of Liberty, had been convicted of criminal trespass by a Kennebec County Superior Court jury in Augusta.
  •   ANGUS FOR REAL  |  March 21, 2012
    Barring an act of God, utter stupidity, or an unexpected explosion of well-financed excellence from one of the second-stringers who will prevail in Maine's Democratic and Republican United States Senate primaries, Angus S. King Jr. will be the state's next US senator.

 See all articles by: LANCE TAPLEY

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed