They
say that if you can remember the sixties,
you probably weren't there. True enough,
but even I remember the "nattering nabobs
of negativity." Problem is, they never
existed. That's right, folks - they were
inventions, works of fiction. The phrase "nattering
nabobs" originated, I believe, with
Spiro Agnew, vice president under Richard
Nixon (Agnew would've been president after
Nixon but managed to get himself thrown out
of office first). The phrase referred to
the so-called liberal press snapping at the
jackboots of the Nixon reich. At the
time I was quite pleased that there were nattering
nabobs - they were the voice of the free
press, weren't they? Our guarantee that the
grand old USA was not going to become a police
state. Or was I, even then, in the barricade-storming
days of my youth, just another dupe of this
insidious fabrication?
Frankly, dear reader, I have absolutely no idea. Compared to the present day,
the press may have been marginally more liberal. The networks were old-fashioned,
neighborly, little ol' giant corporations back then. In bed with business interests,
perhaps, but not themselves owned by huge conglomerates like General Electric
(they may have been leaned on by their advertisers, but at least the networks
weren't actually contractors for military hardware).
Newspapers, of course, were more important back then. Without going into the
McLuhanesque catechism, newspapers offer in-depth coverage and allow for the
discussion of more complex issues. And there were more of them, and more
of them were independently owned (as opposed to being owned by some guy in Australia).
But here's the weird thing: although this not-so-liberal media from the old days
has never shaken off its Spiro Agnew patina, believe me it ain't liberal no more.
I know this from experience, having spent the last two months watching countless
talking heads on my 999 channels, mostly in a futile attempt to spend quality
time with my wife (call me old-fashioned). She has always been a news hound,
but having spent twelve years without a tv (for the sake of the children) she
now seems to have gone completely over the edge. The fact that this is an election
year certainly doesn't help. Nor does the fact that her last tv had about seven
channels.
Here's what's on: The McLaughlin Group (usually four against one - and
them four aren't liberals or even independents), Inside Politics, The O'Reilly
Factor, Hardball with Chris Matthews, Hannity & Colmes, and my personal
favorite, Special Report with Brit Hume. The last show features Brit Hume,
Tony Snow, Mort Kondracke, and Fred Barnes (of the Weekly Standard) on
the right, and Mara Liasson (of NPR) on the left - but now that she's off having
a baby she's been replaced by Jeff Birnbaum of Fortune on - that's right!
- the right. (There's Rivera Live of course, but Geraldo seems to have
become obsessed with non-electoral matters these days: Jon Benet Ramsey, prisons,
Las Vegas and, help me, the Olympics. But at least he invites an equal number
of conservatives when he does do political shows.)
Don't any of these other aforementioned talking heads want anyone who doesn't
already agree with them actually watching their shows? Not even one person
who thinks a little differently to lure in the unsuspecting viewer? I am an independent
who started out the year wondering if Al Gore would ever get out of his Clark
Kent mode. I could at least relate to George Bush; he seemed like a regular guy
(hey, he used to take drugs too). But even I cannot watch these shows any longer.
Most of these commentators are, to put it mildly, out of their friggin minds!
They gave George Bush's speech at the Convention an "A" ; Al Gore's
speech got a "C." And every single commentator whined about how Al
was too much of a policy wonk and stepped on his applause lines (even though
anybody with any sense could see what a great idea this was; watching at home,
you didn't have those excruciatingly long applause pauses, which make most speeches
seem so fake and so insanely slow).
Later, we had to listen to the phony debate on debate for days on end. Then we
were told that Gore was being silly and paranoid about "subliminable" advertising.
And yesterday, the first day of Bush's announced "focus on the issues," was
spent talking about Al Gore's mother-in-law and his dog (now if he'd called his
mother-in-law a dog, that would be news).
And what about Tony Brown's Journal on PBS (which was itself once a nest
of nattering nabobs)? No more. When Reaganomics cut spending for public television,
guess who those stations went to for their money? Not the flower children and
university professors who watch their shows, let's put it that way.
Wait a minute, I forgot the New York Senate race. After the Hillary-Lazio debate,
the media, en masse (including that bastion of liberal ferment, The New York
Times) said that Lazio had trounced the First Lady. Even Jeff Greenfield
(who put what in his water?) lost it on his new Friday night show (entirely
devoted to the upcoming elections). He had an entire panel on the air who thought
she'd lost the debate. (Unless I'm mistaken, I thought people paid to talk about
this stuff on tv were supposed to tell you what they think happened, not what
they wish happened.) On and on about how Lazio showed he wasn't just a
lightweight but was actually senatorial. I myself had started out thinking Lazio
would be charming and Hillary shrill. Not so. The minute Lazio started talking,
I thought: "Uh oh." And it got worse. Much worse. (Check back with
me next week and we'll see who got the most mileage out of that debate - and
who's right, those deluded commentators or yours truly.)
What the hell happened, anyway? Was the press overrun in the eighties by heartless,
self-interested yuppie journalists and newscasters who had no compassion for
the problems of the poor, the oppressed, and the underdog? As appealing as I
find this scenario, it's irrelevant. Larger, most sinister forces were afoot.
For a while I put the decline of the liberal media down to the rise of the celebrity
newscasters. If you're pulling down a couple of million bucks a year, are you
going to be a rabid radical? When I heard that that nice old bloke, Ed Bradley,
had spent a million dollars on air-conditioning his apartment, I looked
on his investigative reports with a huge grain of salt. But it wasn't the news
stars that were the culprits.
No, It's not the newscasters - perennial patsies of the conservatives - who control
news policy, it's the owners (it's the economy, dummy). And who are they
and what do they want? Well, they're multi-billion-dollar corporations and their
interests are not those of the average working stiff or inner-city mother. (And
it wouldn't make a wick of difference if Peter Jennings and Dan Rather were secret
adherents of Pol Pot. )
I hate to be the one to tell you this, but Scrooge McDuck is writing the scripts
we live by (more of this in an upcoming column). And if you think Big Brother
is just a TV show, think again, babe.
P.S. Almost forgot the most important thing: the Kiss!!! I've heard this issue
discussed upwards of fifty times on tv and everybody, and I mean everybody, dismisses
it as scripted, not spontaneous. But just watch the tape. Closely (it'll be played
again, for sure). According to my wife, Coco (and probably a few million other
women who are not paid to give their opinions on tv), Tipper does not know that
the Kiss is headed her way. She offers her cheek and then is slightly horrified
("in front of all these people!") and has to be pulled into it. Watch
the tape. If that was planned, the DNC must have Meryl Streep on the payroll.
And the ensuing embrace..... Coco pointed out to me that that Al Gore actually closes
his eyes. Believe me, that wasn't planned either. He ain't that smart.