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Next entry: CA: Out-of-state same-sex marriages prior to enactment of Prop 8 to be recognized as of Jan. 1 Previous entry: WSJ Poll: 12% of Americans judge the Bush decade ‘good’ or ‘great’

The pains of being “fair and balanced”

Salon has put together a list of the 11 most bogus media stories of 2009.  A few of them, such as the balloon boy hoax or Lady Gaga’s non-existent penis, are just those silly stories that capture the public imagination from time to time.  I don’t actually mind those stories—-except in the case where the coverage gets so intense it starts to seem like a human rights abuse of its targets, such as the Tiger Woods story (which didn’t make the top 11!)—-because you often learn something about your fellow Americans by which stories fascinate them.  Then there are a couple of others, such as the phony Abu Gharib story and the overblown role Twitter was given in the Iranian protests, that I can chalk up to a weird confluence of events.  But the majority of the stories fit one theme.  See if you can guess what it is:

*Death panels
*Dick Cheney doesn’t like President Obama!
*Some kids punked ACORN through videos that were badly shot but suspiciously professionally edited
*Tea baggers exponentially multiply through making up numbers
*Obama bowed to the Emperor of Japan
*Some scientists said something in a private email that could be taken out of context, so THERE IS NO GLOBAL WARMING SHUT UP AND START DRIVING A HUMMER

I’m sure you guessed correctly.  All of these bogus stories are right wing conspiracy myths and/or hoaxes that were taken seriously by the mainstream media when they should have been debunked immediately.  By compiling this list, Salon does create an excellent run-down of how much right wing bullying of the mainstream media has been effective.  Right wing bullies claim they want a better media, but it’s obvious here that they want a worse media, one where common sense and reasonable reporting are thrown out the window, and whatever the Drudge Report claims is news goes.

How did this get so bad?  Well, it’s been dealt with before, but it bears repeating—-it’s surprisingly easy to guilt-trip the mainstream media about the “unfair” treatment right wing ideas get just because they’re crazy and full of shit.  Many in the media are desperate for an opportunity to show how fair-minded they are, and so they too quickly pounce on an opportunity to say, “Okay, the right wingers are right on this one.”  This is true, no matter how many times the right wing nuts burn you.  No one wants to be caught with their pants down on that one day that the right wingers actually land a fair punch, without lying or misrepresenting the situation.  Then you will be accused until the end of time of not being fair-minded, simply because you exercise reasonable caution with people who are known liars and charlatans, who repeatedly and openly lie to you over and over and over again. 

Hey, the right wing nuts did land one blow this year.  Many of them were on the side of right on—-of all things!—-a rape case.  If Roman Polanski hadn’t been the epitome of a hated Euroweenie film director with rich friends, though, I hardly think the same crowd that tends to dismiss women at every turn would have stumbled into being right on this one.  But there you go.  If you want to score a point for being fair-minded to people who have proven that they don’t have an ounce of respect for the truth, there’s your point.

Not that bloggers don’t do it, too.  Feminist bloggers are easy to guilt trip, and I say this as someone who has to monitor herself for this very thing.  Sarah Palin and her followers exploit this to the hilt, demanding that feminists be outraged at every little thing that happens to her, whether real or imaginary.  Liberal bloggers aiming to be serious are easy to hoodwink, too.  If you’re a right wing nut who wants to play them for fools, all you have to do is be not-crazy on some issue, and they’ll be so eager to show they’re fair-minded that they’ll rush to ignore the fact that you are batshit crazy until you do something so batshit they have to throw in the towel.  Ross Douthat managed to ride that train until he got a spot at the NY Times, where the elevation of his position made it impossible to ignore what a megawatt asshole he is, and how he has no qualms about giving air time to overt right wing lies.

In other words, right wingers get a handicap.  It’s almost like we pity them for their continued inability not to ever get anything right, and so we toss them “gimmes” like the ACORN debacle so they can be right once in awhile, even when they’re not.  Clearly, we all think right wingers are mental children, or else we wouldn’t play along with their delusions on occasion to make them feel better, relieving them of the responsibility not to be lying assholes.  But, as the ACORN debacle shows, real human beings pay the price when everyone pretends that we’re not seeing what we’re seeing in order to throw right wingers a bone.  It was shockingly obvious how much a put-on those videos were, if you actually bothered to watch them.  Voice-overs? Giggles? Heavy editing to imply that things happened in offices where they didn’t?  The obviously fake costumes that precluded anyone actually taking them seriously?  The lying about how often the cops were called on their asses? 

I refuse to believe that there are that many fools in the mainstream media.  It was all a matter of throwing the right wingers a bone, handicapping things so the mental children can play with the grown-ups.  (Like letting kids have more money or more chances to buy property when playing Monopoly.)  Even Jon Stewart played along.  The problem is that right wingers aren’t children, and they shouldn’t be treated like children.  And indulging their lies to make it “fair” was deeply unfair, to ACORN and all the people that they help.  Sure, ACORN has serious management problems that need to be addressed.  But that wasn’t the purpose of this stunt, and that wasn’t its effect, either.  Instead, people lost their jobs, ACORN lost its funding, and a whole lot of people who need help will go without.  So that the mental children get to play and feel important, too.

The lesson for 2010 should be this: Remember the story about the snake and the mountain. When right wingers float a story, you are not obliged to take it on good faith.  They are snakes, and they will bite.  Heavy duty skepticism should be your automatic response when dealing with known con artists.  If, after the story has been thoroughly and skeptically researched, they have a point, okay, give it to them.  That won’t happen often, if at all.  But if they actually are held to the same standards as everyone else—-i.e., they don’t get to float obvious bullshit as legit stories—-maybe they’ll actually try harder to produce something real.  Or give up, which is more likely.

 

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Posted by Amanda Marcotte on 11:32 AM • (29) Comments

They don’t want us to think about the Tiger Woods story ... it makes it too painfully obvious that straights don’t need gays getting married to “destroy marriage” - married heterosexuals are already doing a great job on their own!

Comment #1: Ms Kate  on  12/22  at  12:10 PM

Not that bloggers don’t do it, too.  Feminist bloggers are easy to guilt trip, and I say this as someone who has to monitor herself for this very thing.  Sarah Palin and her followers exploit this to the hilt, demanding that feminists be outraged at every little thing that happens to her, whether real or imaginary.  Liberal bloggers aiming to be serious are easy to hoodwink, too.

It’s a real problem. I deal with it by being an asshole.

Comment #2: atheist  on  12/22  at  12:13 PM

The easy and correct way to address balance of the batshit “news” would be to have two sides argue whether the proponents are lying greedy dirtbags or wacked-out, deluded loons.

Comment #3: helen w. h.  on  12/22  at  12:21 PM

Or what atheist said just before me.

Comment #4: helen w. h.  on  12/22  at  12:22 PM

Don’t forget the other side of this coin:  Any progressive positions are taken prima facie to be batshit whackaloonery, even when proven right.  See for example the cries coming from the left since the 1990s about the graft, greed and bubble problems built into the system that would result in a fiscal meltdown.  If you’re Krugman you get a Nobel Prize (which is, don’t forget, not decided-on by Americans); if you provide warnings similar to Krugman’s and be proven equally right you’re a fucking crank.

Comment #5: seeker6079  on  12/22  at  12:31 PM

I think a big part of the problem with right-wing influence on media is our polite little agreement that everyone is entitled to his opinion. Sure, we’re not going to unleash the thought police, but you’re also responsible for what you say and think… and if it is stupid or dishonest bullshit, you don’t get a pass just because you’re “entitled to your opinion.” Chatting with friends-of-friends or listening to classroom “discussion,” I hear this a lot. From exasperated idiots who are losing an argument.

I think it has completely infected the “centrist” media, and the reason it has is because the entire concept of “impartiality” frees journalists from being responsible for what *they say themselves*. You’re entitled to spout off dishonesties, or launch your own cable news channel to do the same, but if I repeat those myself, without applying a critical process, that makes me responsible for the lie, too. That’s the only way rational discourse works.

The left is increasingly waking up to this, but I think we need to be a lot more conscious of that (especially in education—where people learn to think). We ALL have a moral duty to call bullshit.

Comment #6: humanadverb  on  12/22  at  12:35 PM

How these bogus stories multiply is largely due to various media (Fox, right-wing blogs) mixed with those wanting to believe their crap so badly, then passing their daily myths on to others (who in turn spread the myths to still others) where they spread exponentially like a virus.

I saw a perfect example recently on a comment board for You Tube (linked below) when dozens of righties were outraged when MSNBC’s Norah O’Donnell asked a young woman in line at a Palin book signing in Michigan why she liked the former governor so much. The girl responded with Palin having opposed Congress’ emergency bailout plans in Sept 2008.

However, when O’Donnell informed her that Palin had, in fact, backed the bailout initiatives alongside her then running mate, John McCain, the young woman replied with puzzlement.

Long story, short: the next day Glenn Beck began a rumor that the young lady from Michigan was only 13, and that O’Donnell was guilty of viciously attacking the poor little lamb for not allegedly having her facts straight - a story that Beck’s zombie-like followers on You Tube…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PjovbveUgtc

...then parroted mindlessly despite the woman being 18 years old, as she herself claimed that ‘08 was the first time she had been eligible to vote in a presidential election. Even worse, after other posters (including myself) pointed this factoid out, Beck’s followers dug in their heels by continuing to babble the “She was 13; O’Donnell victimized her!” meme even harder.

So in essence, the moral of the story is that contrary to Al Franken’s recent statement on the Senate floor….

http://rawstory.com/2009/12/franken-slams-gop-senate-floor-youre-entitled-facts/

...the right-wing blogosphere is, in fact, entitled to its own set of facts. And they will zealously defend them.

That is all.

Comment #7: CHV  on  12/22  at  01:47 PM

”...the right-wing blogosphere is, in fact, entitled to its own set of facts. And they will zealously defend them.”

I’d say they and their wingnut sycophants believe they’re entitled to their own alternate reality, not just their own facts. 

The whole thing is more like a religious cult than a political movement.  The first thing any cult leader demands is that believers cut off contact with those who are not believers.  This allows the flow of information to be controlled so Inconvenient Truths (pun intended) can be dismissed or ignored…

Comment #8: MikeEss  on  12/22  at  02:22 PM

he first thing any cult leader demands is that believers cut off contact with those who are not believers.  This allows the flow of information to be controlled so Inconvenient Truths (pun intended) can be dismissed or ignored…

Also big on the domestic abuser playlist.

Comment #9: LC  on  12/22  at  02:42 PM

Mike @ 8:

The whole thing is more like a religious cult than a political movement.

Cult of personality, definitely.

What Beck and others like him do is all about the controlled dissemination of reality, which we can thank the Bush Administration (esp Cheney) for perfecting into a twisted art form.

Comment #10: CHV  on  12/22  at  02:55 PM

I have a coworker who recently admitted that he likes Fox News because “the government” doesn’t like them.  “The government” also doesn’t like polio; so shouldn’t he be traveling to a country that still has outbreaks so he can try to catch it?

Comment #11: bananacat  on  12/22  at  04:08 PM

It’s also worth point out to your dumbass coworker that America is a democracy, and in a democracy, “the government” is HIM and YOU and ME.

If he’s setting himself up in opposition to the government, then he’s basically setting himself up in opposition to his own community.

Comment #12: Mighty Ponygirl  on  12/22  at  04:40 PM

I refuse to believe that there are that many fools in the mainstream media.

I understand where you’re coming from, but only the bosses have to be fools to drive the coverage in a certain direction. Ah, the stupid/evil debate will live on.

Comment #13: Seebach  on  12/22  at  04:45 PM

  I refuse to believe that there are that many fools in the mainstream media.

I understand where you’re coming from, but only the bosses have to be fools to drive the coverage in a certain direction. Ah, the stupid/evil debate will live on.
Comment #13: Seebach on 12/22 at 02:45 PM

Actually it doesn’t even require that the bosses be fools.  Just mercenary enough to realize that, if they don’t treat the winger bullshit with deference, they will lose those readers/viewers/listeners.

Comment #14: oldfeminist  on  12/22  at  05:11 PM

Well, it’s been dealt with before, but it bears repeating—-it’s surprisingly easy to guilt-trip the mainstream media about the “unfair” treatment right wing ideas get just because they’re crazy and full of shit.

This pretty much sums up what I think is going on @ NPR with the “political” coverage lately.

Comment #15: Danica Lefse Queen  on  12/22  at  05:21 PM

It’s also worth point out to your dumbass coworker that America is a democracy, and in a democracy, “the government” is HIM and YOU and ME.

Anyone who thinks “the government” is some monolithic, heterogeneous entity is probably immune to logic like this.  Considering he’s been watching Fox News, I don’t want to suggest that he is the government, because I’m afraid he’ll go off on some conspiracy theory that the government doesn’t really represent him because ACORN committed massive fraud.  When I got a tetanus shot recently, he warned me about “bad stuff” in vaccines.  I said, “Oh, what stuff?”, and he couldn’t answer but kept insisting that there’s generic “bad stuff” in them.

Comment #16: bananacat  on  12/22  at  05:51 PM

CHV @ 7

http://jivemofo.com/node/165

It’s a pretty simple formula: repeat the lie long enough and it “magically” becomes “truth.”

Comment #17: phil zombi  on  12/22  at  06:26 PM

I know I became a lot less polite towards wingnuts when I realised they were not just ignorant, but aggressively ignorant - they had no interest in understanding a complex reality, but sought to simplify and distort facts down to conform with their biases.

At that point, I decided to be an asshole towards them. They’re not worth pissing on.

Comment #18: Phoenician in a time of Romans  on  12/22  at  06:31 PM

catgirl, at that point, I would have a hard time not fucking with his head. I mean, if he’s all upset about there being “bad stuff” in vaccinations, I would have to accuse him of being a virus and stick to that conviction as passionately as he sticks to his conviction that there’s “bad stuff” in the vaccine. He’s showing about as much intelligence there.

Dude needs to turn off the Glen Beck and get a life.

Comment #19: Mighty Ponygirl  on  12/22  at  06:49 PM

I wish I could win the lottery.  Because I want to fund massive national media campaigns repeating stuff that is ACTUALLY true, to see if it would stick as well as lies.  Things like “Abortions save lives” and “Education is the foundation of the country so we should fund it” with catchy little slogans.

I’d like to have that kind of money.

Comment #20: Antigone  on  12/22  at  06:54 PM

It’s the most bogus stories of 2009, not “of all time”.

Comment #21: Doug S.  on  12/22  at  09:04 PM

I have always been partial to “Condoms prevent abortion.” But to really make your chosen slogan worthy of the mainstream media narrative; you have to scream it from the metaphorical roof tops. And demonizing those who disagree with you goes a long way towards establishing your “credibility.” As in “They” (The Establishment) want to silence me! They are Evil! Death Panel! Death Panel! Death Panel!

@Antigone

“Education is the foundation of the country so we should fund it.”

Agreed. Not much of a soundbite though. It’s too long. Too many syllables. K.I.S.S. You know?

Comment #22: phil zombi  on  12/22  at  09:41 PM

It’s not just about cutting off other sources of news, it’s about initiation. Parroting crazy sh*t like this is the modern equivalent of putting you hand over a candle or slicing your palm.

Comment #23: paul  on  12/22  at  10:28 PM

Two years ago, I was writing about media bias, and I realized that I had used “limbo dance” and Rush Limbaugh in the same paragraph. I started to apoligize for the pun, then I thought, “Just go with it.” So I wrote out: “Limbaugh dancing: when the media bends over backwards as far as it can in hopes ol’ Rush won’t find something to whine about in the inch their shoulders are off the floor.

Comment #24: Judge Moonbox  on  12/22  at  11:59 PM

I’m sick of the Republicans lying about what’s actually in the bill in order to systematically strip it of anything useful to anyone except private insurance companies, but SHIT LIKE THIS doesn’t help convince me that the Dems are on our side, either. Whiskey. Tango. Foxtrot. First they throw women’s healthcare under the bus, and now they expect us to whore ourselves out in support of it?!? F*UCK THAT SHIT.

Comment #25: vervain  on  12/23  at  09:47 AM

The reality is that modern media is driven by sales numbers and really always has.  Prior to the invention of the internet the media had more room to report the truth since everybody had to get their information from some news.  Most major cities had 1-3 newspapers and most slanted one way or the other.  Now, it’s a political free-for-all with any ass with a keyboard can “report” news, such as how cameras have a hard time picking up darker skin tones due to the CMOS chips natural physics and turn it into some crazy story of racism.

It’s a ratings game, plan and simple.  The wingnuts are a voting/watching/breathing bloc and unless their combined economic might can sway advertisers characters like Glenn Beck will continue to lie.

Comment #26: Xeranar  on  12/23  at  10:11 AM

Well, as far as this ACORN thing goes, is what they did so bad? ACORN was already in a lot of hot water. I give them a pass on it, even with their stunts, it revealed just how corrupt and degenerate these quasi governmental tax money sucking ACORN nuts are. IF there is one use for any opposition, it is to keep a check on the ones in power, and they scored with that one. I have no problem with ACORN losing it’s funding and if all of them got fired, good riddance. Let’s not forget their contribution to voter fraud and the mortgage crisis. Good intentions are not a pass on corruption and incompetence.

Comment #27: Morrisminor  on  12/23  at  08:33 PM

Morrisminor, it’s great that you believe and support the dick conservative asshole and his dick conservative girlfriend doing some dick stuff to some ACORN people unfortunate enough to have to encounter their dickish conservatism shenanigans.

It makes it so much easier to immediately discount your comments as Faux-level bullshit to be ignored…

Comment #28: MikeEss  on  12/24  at  04:28 PM
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