Russert and the Crystal Ball Media

Joseph Loconte

Joe Loconte

The death last week of political journalist Tim Russert prompted a brief burst of media reflection, not only on Mr. Russert’s professional legacy but also on the chronic superficiality of virtually all the major broadcast media. Yet this moment of reflection was merely that—it could not survive a 24-hour news cycle. Meanwhile, media coverage of the 2008 presidential campaign arguably ranks as among the most vapid, irrelevant, and poll-driven in American history. At his best, Mr. Russert swam against this tide during his long tenure at NBC’s Meet the Press.

In the current issue of The National Interest, Glenn Greenwald takes pundits and journalists to task for this self-inflicted problem. In “The Perilous Punditocracy,” Mr. Greenwald sees the same vices afflicting the print media. 

“Predicting the future is a completely inappropriate role for political reporters to play, yet it composes virtually the entirety of their election coverage. If one reads Time or the New Republic or the Politico or the Washington Post, one is hard-pressed to find any examples of straight-factual reporting about the remaining candidates, their positions, anything substantive—as opposed to endless, groupthink gossip about tactics and campaigns and winning/losing ‘horse race’ predictions. The distinction between reporters and opinionists—particularly when it comes to campaign reporting—has been eroded almost completely, so that reporters now act as though they are commentators whose principal role it is, clairvoyantlike, to declare who will likely win and lose.”

What explains this culture of pettiness and prognostication? If the nation’s media gatekeepers fail to believe that moral and religious truths powerfully shape our national debates, they will look for substitute sources of meaning—such as coded political messages, byzantine power plays, and futurology. It’s all starting to look like a return to the age of magic, horoscopes, and seances.

Fodder, Global Culture, Media, Mon 23 Jun 2008

Commenting is not available in this section entry.

Science is no substitute for virtue; the heart is as necessary for a good life as the head.

Bertrand Russell

Site Services

Search:

Advanced Search

Member Login

Join the Site

Forgotten your password?

Send this Article to a Friend

Print this Article

Print without Comments

Recent Articles

Saying ‘I Don’t Know’

Strategic Cultural Thinking

New Approach to Muslim States?

The Financial Tsunami

A Faith-based Prime Minister

Forgive Us Our Debts

Electoral Politics: The Possibility of a ‘Perfect Storm’

Conservatism and Individualism

Religion, Elections, and Foreign Affairs

Redefining Democracy, Ethics, and Evangelicalism

Readings Bundle with Slipcases .

A full collection of the in-print Trinity Forum Readings booklets, with three of our handsome slipcases for storage.

Gleanings Quick Links

Stephen Fry in America: “Such Britons hug themselves with the thought that they are more cosmopolitan and sophisticated than Americans because they think they know more about geography and world culture, as if firstly being cosmopolitan and sophisticated can be scored in a quiz and as if secondly (and much more importantly) being cosmopolitan and sophisticated is in any way desirable or admirable to begin with. Sophistication is not a moral quality, nor is it a criterion by which one would choose one’s friends. Why do we like people? Because they are knowledgeable, cosmopolitan and sophisticated? No, because they are charming, kind, considerate, exciting to be with, amusing … there is a long list, but knowing what the capital of Kazakhstan is will not be on it.” (Stephen Fry’s blog post about his new book and BBC series. • 2008 10 10)

Give Me Liberty and Give Me Death: ‘I still cursed God, as we all do when we get bad news and pain. Not even the most faith-impaired among us shouts, “Damn quantum mechanics!” “Damn organic chemistry!” “Damn chaos and coincidence!”’ (P J O’Rourke, Search Magazine2008 09 30)

Give Me That Old-Time Religion: ‘This week revealed that when real money is on the line, even the left starts screaming for old-fashioned standards. Thus rose a shout for regulatory “oversight” of markets, and they don’t mean some vague, Googlie “don’t be evil.” They want tough, punishing rules. This won’t wash. You can’t claim, as holier-than-thou politics is now, that sending an army of regulatory storm-troopers into Wall Street will ensure integrity in mere bankers who themselves come from a broader, anything-goes culture.’ (Daniel Henninger, The Wall Street Journal • 2008 09 29)

The Real Digital Revolution: Social networking is changing the marketing landscape: “Brand advertising can’t stretch the truth anymore or try and gild the lily. Because if it does, we’re going to find out about it, find out that you’ve been lying to us all along about extras that don’t work and specials that aren’t special. And our reaction is not going to be pretty.” (Alan Wolk, AdWeek; h/t: Ryan Moede • 2008 08 27)

Après Lewis (2008 08 15)
Alexander Solzhenitsyn: the line within (2008 08 11)
Atheism and Evil (2008 07 29)
Christopher Nolan’s Achievement: The Dark Knight (2008 07 22)
Unplanned Parenthood (2008 07 21)

more . . .

Other Trinity Forum Resources

cover imageOne Word of Truth: A Portrait of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn by David Aikman, Foreword by Os Guinness and Richard Ohman.

In 1989, David Aikman, then a journalist with Time magazine, was granted the first major interview Solzhenitsyn had given an American news organization for years.