SMRs and AMRs

Thursday, June 25, 2009

The O'Reilly Procedure

By Roger Ebert
Chicago SunTimes

Bill O'Reilly has been brought low by the same process that afflicted Jerry Springer. Once respected journalists, they sold their souls for higher ratings, and follow their siren song. Springer is honest about it: "I'm going to Hell for what I do, and I know it," he likes to say. O'Reilly insists he is dealing only with the truth. When his guests disagree with him, he shouts at them, calls them liars, talks over them, and behaves like a schoolyard bully.

I am not interested in discussing O'Reilly's politics here. That would open a hornet's nest. I am more concerned about the danger he and others like him represent to a civil and peaceful society. He sets a harmful example of acceptable public behavior. He has been an influence on the most worrying trend in the field of news: The polarization of opinion, the elevation of emotional temperature, the predictability of two of the leading cable news channels. A majority of cable news viewers now get their news slanted one way or the other by angry men. O'Reilly is not the worst offender. That would be Glenn Beck. Keith Olbermann is gaining ground. Rachel Maddow provides an admirable example for the boys of firm, passionate outrage, and is more effective for not shouting.

Much has been said recently about the possible influence of O'Reilly on the murder of Dr. George Tiller by Scott Roeder. Such a connection is impossible to prove. Yet studies of bullies and their victims suggest a general way such an influence might take place. Bullies like to force others to do their will, while they can stand back and protest their innocence: "I was nowhere near the gymnasium, Sister!" A recent study of school shootings found that two-thirds of all the shooters were victims of bullying, and perceived themselves as members of persecuted minorities.

What are TV shouters telling their viewers? They use such anger in expressing their opinions. Who are they trying to convince? They're preaching to the choir. Their viewers already agree with them. No minds are going to be changed. Why are they so mad? In a sense they're saying: You're right, but you're not right ENOUGH! I'm angrier about this than you are! Viewers may get the notion that there's unfinished business to be done, and it's up to them to do it.

How can one effect change? By sincere debate and friendly persuasion? O'Reilly sets the opposite example. He brings on guests who represent the "enemy," doesn't seriously engage their beliefs, and shouts: Be quiet! I'm right and you're wrong! I stand for good and you stand for evil! I'm not exaggerating. Sometimes those are the very words he uses.

(More here, with videos.)

1 Comments:

Blogger Minnesota Central said...

What’s that adage about there being no bad publicity ?

It doesn’t matter if the outrage is from Olbermann or Limbaugh, selective listeners only hear what they want to hear … heck, there are people that believe that Stephen Colbert is serious.

Media is one thing … they do it to attract an audience and make money, but what if the innuendo is from a public official ?

Case in point, Congresswoman Bachmann and her comments on what information is being requested by US Census-takers : “If we look at American history, between 1942 and 1947, the data that was collected by the Census Bureau was handed over to the FBI and other organizations at the request of President Roosevelt, and that’s how the Japanese were rounded up and put into the internment camps. I’m not saying that that’s what the Administration is planning to do, but I am saying that private personal information that was given to the Census Bureau in the 1940s was used against Americans to round them up, in a violation of their constitutional rights, and put the Japanese in internment camps.”

That sure fits Ebert’s example of the schoolyard bully inciting someone else to do your handiwork. Bachmann is not concerned about the facts (like the powers given in The Second War Powers Act of 1942) nor her support for Bush’s Patriot Act, but it’s the impact to others that hear what they want. If you read some of the online comments offered in Washington Times (or even the Minnesota Independent) website, there will be many that will defy the census-takers request.

Considering the violence that has occurred in Washington, Kansas and Arizona by some right-wingers, do not be surprised to hear stories of physical harm or intimidation of census-takers.

8:06 AM  

Post a Comment

<< Home