Class overheads for Week 10


Military, press and Vietnam "lessons"

Competing "histories"

Impact on coverage of Iraq

Conventional wisdoms (Pick one)

Journalistic heroes showed true story of Vietnam debacle, the official lies and incompetence.

Journalistic traitors showed sensationalized, gruesome version of war and undermined public support for war, led to military defeat.

Communications effects assumption

Uncensored, shocking television images in the nation's living turned patriotic American against the war.

Changing government policies toward press in wartime

World War II and Korea:

"Voluntary" censorship

Journalists in uniform, "part of the team"

Suppression of gore, negative information about war effort.

Limited television (Korea)

Vietnam:

No formal censorship

Few limits on travel with troops.

Daily military briefings ("Five o'clock follies")

Leaks from officials; doubts about war progress and effort.

Extensive television coverage, but edited (film). Limited "live" coverage.

More recent historical research (nonpartisan)

Daniel Hallin, analysis of coverage. John P. Mueller, public opinion.

Does not support conventional wisdoms

Press mostly "objective" -- repeated official statements, facts from briefings

Limited TV showing of violence showing U.S. casualties

Effect of news coverage public opinion not as extensive as expected in polling data (Gallup) Reinforcement, not conversion. Tone of press coverage may have trailed U.S. public opinion, not led it.

Consequences of conventional wisdom about Vietnam in Iraq

Great White House and Pentagon concern with public opinion toward war

Extensive Pentagon public relations campaigns to influence news coverage in U.S. and in Iraq. Banning of pictures of coffins of U.S. casualties.

Journalistic travel with troops largely limited to press "pools"

Official briefings, but journalists can attempt to find other sources of information without official protection from violence.

Despite positive early press coverage, U.S. public opinion toward war in Iraq following pattern of Korea, Vietnam: Initial patriotic enthusiasm, support erodes as casualties increase without satisfactory conclusion (Mueller)

Implications for journalists

Major U.S.news organizations (Washington Post, New York Times, TV networks, rethinking unquestioning acceptance of official rationalizations for invasion; enthusiastic coverage of military invasion, leading to "Mission Accomplished, "2003. Possible milestone:

NBC, LA Times officially refer to Iraq situation as a "civil war," despite White House objections. Action compared to CBS anchorman Walter Cronkite's 1968 broadcast in which he concluded Vietnam war was unwinnable.

Belated skepticism of White House press corps, other mainstream journalists, long after public opinion shifted against war, Bush (Mueller)

Spreading independent news coverage (blogs, cable news), but no data on how consistent or influential on general public opinion.

Expect: Continuing debate among (and about) journalists over what should be appropriate role of journalism in wartime.


Cable, communcation satellites and the changing marketplace of ideas on TV

Technology ends "mass" audience monopoly of three-network system, launches new wave of specialization, niche formats.

 1950s-1970s Over-the-air, licensed broadcasting stations, slow expansion of cable from Community Antenna TV systems. Telstar satellite, 1965.

1980 Ted Turner launches first cable superstation, WTBS, followed by CNN, "Chicken Noodle News." Has to pay cable station operators to allow on systems.

1991: Gulf War I, first "live" television war for the U.S. Break-even point of profitability for CNN. Impact of "live" foreign affairs broadcasting prompts concern over the "CNN Effect" on foreign policy, "telescoping" of events.

Bernard Shaw

New cable news competitors: Fox, MSNBC. BBC, Aljazeera

Spread of multiple channels (500-channel universe?) by satellite/cable erodes "mass" audience of three networks, but does it increase diversity of content?


Reforming the mass media

Rare communications-wide study of media: news, broadcasting, economics, role in democratic society.

Commission on Freedom of the Press, 1932-1947, "Hutchins Commission"

Chair: Robert M. Hutchins, president, University of Chicago

Sponsor: Henry Luce, founder and publisher, "Time," "Fortune," "Life," etc.

Luce Concerns: (1937) Vulgarity, sensationalism, antagonistic attitude of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, fear of government regulation, censorship, and concentration of ownership (Hearst), future role of press in democracy.

Commission members: Intellectuals, scholars from broad range of fields. Journalists were not invited.

Conclusions: (1947):

Press freedom in danger: Too much sensationalism, threats from government, economic pressures from advertisers , drive for profits, publishers and broadcasters with political agendas.

Press no longer serving the public. Needed: More responsibility to society.

1. Trutful, comprehensive account of the day's events in a context which gives them meaning.

2. Forum for exchange of comment and criticism.

3. Present truly represenative picture of society

4. Help society clarify its goals.

5. Full access to information.

Remedies -- how to reform press

Rejected:

More government licensing, enforcement of anti-trust laws.

Self-regulation thought unlikely, professional groups since 1920s unable to be effective.

Journalism schools ("apologists for the business.")

Primary recommendation:

Create independent (non-government) agencies to review press performance

"Press Councils"

Negative responses from industry, journalism schools and Luce himself -- cut off money to publish report.

But news council experiments continue:

National News Council, 1972-84

Regional councils: Minnesota, Washington

Journalism reviews

Civic journalism movement (2000-)