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WORD COUNT
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JUNE 17, 2009
INFOTAINMENT SOCIETY: JUNK FOOD NEWS – 2008/2009 by Peter Phillips and
Mickey Huff
The late
New York University media scholar Neil Postman once said about America,
“We are the best entertained least informed society in the world." From
Jessica Simpson’s weight and Brangelina’s escapades, to Britney Spears’
sister and the Obamas’ First Puppy, Americans are fed a steady “news”
diet of useless information laden with personal anecdotes, scandals, and
gossip.
Since the
middle of the 1980’s, Project Censored at Sonoma State University has
annually researched this phenomenon. We have found that topics and
in-depth reports that matter little to anyone in any meaningful way are
given massive amounts of media coverage in the corporate media. In
recent years, this has only become more obvious.
For
instance, CNN’s coverage of celebrity Anna Nicole Smith’s untimely death
in early 2007 is arguably one of the most egregious examples of an over
abused news story. The magnitude of corporate media attention paid to
the event were clearly out of synch with the coverage the story
deserved, which was at most a simple passing mention. Instead, CNN
broadcast “breaking” stories of the event uninterrupted, without
commercials, for almost two hours, with commentary by lead anchors and
journalists. This marked among the longest uninterrupted “news”
broadcasts at CNN since the tragic events of September 11, 2001. Anna
Nicole Smith and 9/11 are now strange bedfellows, milestone bookends of
corporate news culture.
While news
outlets were obsessing over Smith, most press giants were missing a far
more important story. The U.S. ambassador to Iraq misplaced $12 billion
in shrink-wrapped $100 bills that were flown to Baghdad. This garnered
little attention due to the media’s morbid infatuation with celebrity.
That is clearly news judgment gone terribly awry if not an outright
retreat from journalistic standards. The once trivial and absurd are now
mainstreamed as “news.” More young people turn to late night comics’
fake news to learn the truth or tune out to so-called reality shows
often scripted as Roman Holiday spectacles of the surreal. Welcome to
the Infotainment Society: American Media in the 21st Century.
Here are
the Top Ten Junk Food News Stories for 2008 and 2009 as chosen by
Project Censored students and the online community via
http://projectcensored.org:
1.Olympic
Medalist Michael Phelps Hits a Bong
2. Jessica
Simpson Gains Weight
3. First
Lady Michelle Obama's Fashion Sense
4. The
Brangelina Twins
5. Lindsay
Lohan Dating a Woman
6. The
Presidential First Puppy
7. Heidi
Montag "Marries" Spencer Pratt
8. Barry
Bonds Steroid Trial
9.
Jamie-Lynn Spears Gives Birth
10. The
Woes of Amy Winehouse
The
British tabloid “News of the World” published an exclusive photo of
Olympic gold medalist Michael Phelps smoking marijuana from a bong on
Sunday, February 1, 2009, with the headline, “What a Dope.” The picture
was allegedly taken during a November house party while Phelps was
visiting the University of South Carolina. The incident occurred nearly
three months after the swimmer won eight gold medals for America at the
2008 Olympics in Beijing, China. Phelps quickly apologized to the public
for his "regrettable behavior. " The bong’s owner reportedly tried to
sell it on eBay for $100,000. In the weeks following, Phelps lost his
sponsorship from Kellogg's cereal. Photos of Jessica Simpson performing
at a Florida Chili Cook-off looking a bit heavier than usual surfaced
during the week of January 26. The purportedly unflattering shots of a
curvier looking Simpson in an outfit that included "a
muffin-top-inducing leopard belt" immediately made news headlines. Was
she pregnant? Was she picking up eating habits from her NFL star
boyfriend? Or was she simply hungry for publicity? President Barack
Obama even noticed Simpson was “in a weight battle” during a pre-Super
Bowl interview.
The United
States is not only becoming a nation of obese people, but is on the
verge of another phenomenon, the equivalent of cultural and mental
obesity. We are a nation awash in a sea of information, yet we have a
paucity of understanding. We are a country where over a quarter of the
population know the names of all five members of the fictitious family
from The Simpsons, yet only one in a thousand can name all the rights
protected under the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Journalistic values have been sold out to commercial interests and not
even our core, national and constitutionally protected values are
sacred.
--
Peter
Phillips is a Professor of Sociology at Sonoma State University and
Director of Project Censored. Mickey Huff is an Associate Professor of
History at Diablo Valley College and Associate Director of Project
Censored. Frances A. Capell, a Project Censored intern, contributed to
this article.
www.projectcensored.org.
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