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When I think of newspaper journalists who became authors and had
enormous impacts on media criticism in the United States, two names come to
mind.
One is George Seldes. As a young man, he covered the First World War
and then reported on historic events in Europe for the Chicago Tribune from
1919 until 1928. Seldes quit the paper and went on to blaze a trail as an
independent journalist -- ready, able and eager to challenge media
business-as-usual. Naturally, he earned hostility from the kind of media
magnates he skewered in “Lords of the Press.” The renowned historian Charles
A. Beard called that 1938 book “a grand job.”
Forty-five years later, another emigre from newsrooms wrote a book that
turned out to have profound effects on critical thinking about media. When
“The Media Monopoly” first appeared in 1983, the media establishment and
many of its employees shrugged; if they paid any attention, it was usually
just long enough to dismiss Ben Bagdikian’s warning about consolidation of
media ownership as alarmist.
While the media landscape shifted, Bagdikian saw corporate behemoths on
the horizon. “The Media Monopoly” emerged as an illuminating book that
provided clarity at a time when there was little understanding -- even among
journalists -- about corporate media power and its implications.
During the past two decades, several updated editions of “The Media
Monopoly” have been published, including last year’s revised book titled
“The New Media Monopoly.” Meanwhile, an entire generation of media activists
has come of age. They understand that centralized dominance of news and
information -- as a dwindling number of humongous firms control most of the
journalistic flow in the United States -- undermines the First Amendment and
democratic possibilities.
There are a lot of parallels between Seldes and Bagdikian. In the first
half of the 20th century, Seldes did some exemplary reporting as a
mainstream journalist before opting out of the mass-media system in order to
critique it. During the last half of the century, something similar occurred
with Bagdikian, who was a high-ranking editor at the Washington Post when he
played a key role in making possible the newspaper’s revelations about
contents of the top-secret Pentagon Papers in mid-June 1971.
I’ve had the great pleasure of talking with both of those intrepid
journalists -- Seldes during an all-day visit to his rural Vermont home in
1988 (when he was 97 years old) and Bagdikian a number of times, most
recently a couple of weeks ago. Their written words clearly mirrored their
personal demeanor: steadfastly principled and compassionate while living out
a commitment to journalism on behalf of democracy and human rights.
The strong similarities between George Seldes and Ben Bagdikian include
unwavering support for labor. With his books and feisty newsletter “In Fact”
(published throughout the 1940s), Seldes fiercely advocated for the rights
of unions inside and outside the newspaper industries. “Lords of the Press”
was dedicated to “the American Newspaper Guild and others interested in a
free press.”
After leaving the Post, Bagdikian angered top management because he
vehemently critiqued the Washington Post Company’s vicious suppression of
the pressmen’s strike in the mid-1970s. At that point, Bagdikian wrote an
article for Washington Monthly magazine critical of the Post’s anti-labor
policies.
More than 20 years later, in 1997, when Washington Post owner Katharine
Graham released her autobiography “Personal History” in hardcover, it quoted
a note she’d sent to her son in the midst of the bitter labor dispute,
saying that Bagdikian’s article “literally takes my breath away it’s so
insane.” And she also quoted a memo that she’d sent to the Post’s top editor
Ben Bradlee: “I am really embarrassed to think this ignorant biased fool was
ever national editor. Surely the worst asps in this world are the ones one
has clasped to the bosom.” Graham had allowed her mogul mentality to triumph
over rationality.
When the paperback edition of “Personal History” appeared in early
1998, it contained the same number of pages and was almost identical to the
hardcover. But Graham had quietly removed her idiotic sentences about
Bagdikian: an unpublicized move that was, in effect, a tacit retraction of
her wacky defamation. The episode underscores just how furious -- and
arrogant -- big media owners can get when journalists challenge their
prerogatives and power.
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Norman Solomon’s next book, “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep
Spinning Us to Death,” will be published in early summer by Wiley. His
columns and other writings can be found at .