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The usual notion of big news is the unusual. Journalists are taught
to look for "man bites dog" stories -- the events that raise eyebrows
and make us think, "Wow!"
News of the ordinary also makes the cut in media outlets, of
course, but it's not what sizzles, and it's not apt to get onto front
pages or prime-time broadcasts.
A simple rejoinder to the media status quo is that what we really
need are more "dog bites man" and "dog bites woman" stories. For every
spectacular event, there are many others -- just as terrible or just as
wonderful -- that barely register on the media Richter scale because
they're happening all the time. What's earthshaking in people's lives is
often barely visible to the hype-hungry media eye.
But journalism has the challenge of simultaneously tracking what's
usual and unusual. One complication is that important ongoing realities
may occasionally receive a lot of attention as a result of media whim. A
certain social ill might suddenly get a burst of national publicity
because editors at the New York Times decided to make it a page-one news
feature.
The fly-on-the-wall conceits of reporters can distort our
understanding of what's happening in the world. For instance, even
though media coverage often skews political developments rather than
merely depicting them, journalists routinely adhere to the pretense that
they are just observing dramatic events from off-stage.
The division of labor between journalists and politicians, in fact,
is more apparent than real. Both are shaping public perceptions. Both
directly affect the likelihood of electoral victory and defeat. Neither
is inclined to openly acknowledge that they need each other to ply their
trades. And in general, to a large extent, both are slurping their
livelihoods from the same corporate troughs.
Fifteen years ago, the essayist Walter Karp observed: "The news
media in America do not tell the American people that a political whip
hangs over their head. That is because a political whip hangs over their
head." Writing in the July 1989 edition of Harper's magazine, he offered
an assessment that is no less relevant -- and no more palatable --
today.
"In the American republic the fact of oligarchy is the most dreaded
knowledge of all, and our news keeps that knowledge from us," Karp
wrote. "By their subjugation of the press, the political powers in
America have conferred on themselves the greatest of political
blessings -- Gyges' ring of invisibility. And they have left the
American people more deeply baffled by their own country's politics than
any people on earth. Our public realm lies steeped in twilight, and we
call that twilight news."
Yet not all corporate-minded functionaries are alike. The range of
discourse and debate in news media, woefully constricted, is still
meaningful. While frequently pathetic with a GOP-friendly approach, the
Democratic members of Congress collectively represent a somewhat
different set of constituencies and interests than the Republicans
running the legislative and executive branches. To a theorist --
particularly, for instance, one who is personally insulated from
poverty -- the difference might be negligible. To someone living in a
family dependent on, say, income from the legal minimum wage, the
specific policies in effect under the American system of oligarchy can
make a substantial difference.
It's not unusual for the economic system of the USA to take the
lives of people simply because they don't have the money to pay for
medical care, nutrition or a roof over their heads. It happens all the
time, and it's rarely news. At the moment, this may be the season to be
jolly, but countless Americans will be braving the cold overnight for
want of cold cash. It's not unusual -- in fact, it's part of what makes
this country not so great.
The dogs of top-down class war keep biting men -- as well as women
and children. Those humans shouldn't need to bite back before such daily
realities are newsworthy.
And, as a practical matter, journalists are part of the story.
Their reporting decisions can shift the public view, if only
momentarily. They shouldn't wait for some flashy or unusual event before
proclaiming a Really Big Story. The momentous news about the typical is
right in front of us, every day, hidden in plain sight.
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Norman Solomon is co-author, with Reese Erlich, of "Target Iraq: What
the News Media Didn't Tell You." His columns and other writings can be
found at .