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Former CBS anchor Cronkite warns
drive for big media profits threatens democracy
Feb 08 4:22 PM US/Eastern
NEW YORK (AP) - Pressures by media
companies to generate ever-greater profits are
threatening the very freedom the United States
was built upon, former CBS News anchor Walter
Cronkite warned Thursday.
In a keynote address at Columbia University, Cronkite
said today's journalists face greater challenges
than those from his generation. No longer could
journalists count on their employers to provide
the necessary resources, he said, "to expose
truths that powerful politicians and special interests
often did not want exposed."
Instead, he said, "they face
rounds and rounds of job cuts and cost cuts that
require them to do ever more with ever less."
"In this information age and
the very complicated world in which we live today,
the need for high-quality reporting is greater
than ever," he told journalism students and
professionals at Columbia's Graduate School of
Journalism. "It's not just the journalist's
job at risk here. It's American democracy. It
is freedom."
Cronkite said news accuracy has
declined because of consolidations and closures
that have left many American towns with only one
newspaper. And as broadcasters cut budgets and
air time for news, he said, "we're all left
with a sound bite culture that turns political
campaigns into political theatre."
The former anchor urged owners of
media companies - newspapers and broadcast alike
- to recognize they have special civil responsibilities.
"Consolidation and cost cutting
may be good for the bottom line in the short term
but that isn't necessarily good for the country
or the health of the news business in the long
term," he said.
Michael Copps, a commissioner on
the Federal Communications Commission, later said
that looser broadcast regulations - such as those
that had required stations to regularly prove
they serve the community interest - have resulted
in less local coverage, less diversity of opinion
and fewer jobs for journalists over the past quarter
century.
Without directly naming the nation's
largest radio station operator, Clear Channel
Communications Inc., Copps complained that many
local musicians were being pushed aside when "media
behemoths" distribute playlists from a central
office.
The FCC is considering relaxing
the rules even more. The agency decided in June
to reopen the hotly disputed issue of ownership
limits, which currently restrict the number of
radio and television stations that one owner can
have as well as cross-ownership between newspapers
and broadcasters.
Many of the broadcast television
networks and large media companies such as the
Tribune Co. and Gannett Co. have complained that
current restrictions are outmoded in a digital
age in which consumers also have the Internet
and cable TV from which to choose.
Considering television alone, the
country saw the number of major networks grow
from three to five, said Benjamin Compaine, author
of "Who Owns the Media?: Competition and
Concentration in the Mass Media." Add to
that several 24-hour news channels on cable, he
said.
But opponents of loosened rules
worry that changes would hurt minorities' access
to the airwaves, curtail children's and local
programming and limit musical diversity.
"We have more outlets now,
more in sheer numbers, engaged in news presentation
than we've ever had," said Tom Rosenstiel,
a former political reporter for the Los Angeles
Times and now director of the Project for Excellence
in Journalism. "The problem is most of them
are not engaged in a lot of serious news gathering.
They are largely engaged in repackaging material
that other people have produced."
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