1. What is the mainstream media? What does MSM mean when you use the term? What does it mean when Trump and his spokespeople use the term? I see that phrase used often but what does it mean exactly? If a news organization reports a fact that reflects negatively on Trump (like a court ruling that does not go in his favor), does that make it MSM by default? How does a given news organization become a member of MSM? If a news organization is MSM, does that mean it is automatically illegitimate because it is MSM?
The best definition I know of, at least in the ballpark sense, comes from Noam Chomsky back in the 1990s. Before the 1990s the mainstream media was pretty much defaulted as the Big Three broadcast networks, the international news services and the major newspapers. Today that's still mostly the case, but with some differences.
Chomsky's definition is,
"Mainstream Media refers collectively to the various large mass news media that influence a large number of people, and both reflect and shape prevailing currents of thought."
The term is used to contrast with
Alternative Media which may contain content with more dissenting thought, as they do not reflect the prevailing opinion of the masses.
There's a lot wrapped up in his defintion, and a lot that's left out, such as the corporate factor of who owns what and the narrative they want to tell for their own particular reasons (political and profit). You've got concentrated media ownership by large media conglomerations that often include print, radio and television that results in a spoon-fed homogenized viewpoint presented to consumers of news that ends up doing far more shaping of prevailing thought than reflecting that thought.
Other than reaching and influencing large numbers of people, one of the keys to being a mainsteam news media outlet is having the resurces and ability to do original reporting, which then sets the tone for other smaller news organizations which lack resources, by creating conversations that cascade down to smaller news organizations using wire services like the Associate Press and UPI, parent affiliate networks (ABC, NBC, CBS), as well as major newspapers like the NYT and WaPo and other means of news aggregation.
To sum it all up, these elite mainstream nes outlets set the agenda, and then smaller news organizations parrot it.
When people talk about the Mainstream Media, they're talking about the broadcast networks of ABC, CBS, NBC (including MSNBC), CNN, AP, Reuters, Bloomberg, NPR, WSJ, NYT, Tribune. AFP, and that's about it.
News organizations like Politico, USA Today, Washginton Times, Yaho News, McClatchy, NY Post, while they reach a lot of people, they don't do a lot of original reporting that sets the conversational tone for smaller organizations.
Some will argue that Fox News is also included in the category of Mainstream Media. I would not be one to make that argument. While it is true they reach a lot of people and do some serious influencing, they're still the red headed stepchild of the MSM. For one, they were invented literally to be the mounthpiece of the conservative party as straight-up agendized news, propaganda on a grand scale. Old habits are hard to break, but they are rapidly moving away from that towards a more non-partisan, unbiased presentation of the news (not necessarily on their talk shows, but rather in the news stories and how they are presented).
There was some interesting timing of several things that resulted in such a rapid shift. They took their marching order from Roger Ailes, and at the same time of his sudden departure and the subsequent departure of a few key on air personalities and behind the scenes producers, CNN, NYT and others in the elite MSM went blatantly and brazenly, unabashedly all-in for Clinton and all-against Trump, throwing any pretense of impartiality out the window. They looked then, as they do now, like journalistic jackasses. Fox News dropped the laughable uber-fake "Fair and Balanced" slogan and in a Twighlight Zone-esque kind of way actually moved to become more fair and balanced. There was a memo that got sent out (news division, radio and TV) that basically told everyone that a bias is one thing, as long as it's acknowledged and then checked in the reporting, but the blatant cheerleading stops here and now. For the most part they've stuck with that. Again, not to much in the talk shows and with the talking head panels, but as a whole they're getting there.
The Five still gangs up on Juan Williams, but Dana Perino brings a pragmatic, level-headedness to the discussion (full disclosure, I'm a huge fan of hers, ever since she was a White House Press Secretary, mainly because she sticks to the journaistic code of ethics no matter what). On the talks shows it used to be they would have a token liberal on to use as a punching bag, or as a bowling pin to be set up in order to be knocked down. More recently, like on this new show, The Experts, they have liberals on there and engage them in actual debate and conversation. Very Twighlight Zone. But it's working.
When Diane and I lived in Minnesota, KSTP radio carried the Limbaugh show. It also carried Jesse Ventura. It also carried sports talk shows and the Associated Press news feed. Do you consider that station to be MSM? How does a news outlet come to be defined as MSM? Is KSTP a news outlet at all?
KSTP is certainly a news outlet, but by defintion it is local and regional radio, not mainstream radio. They (mostly) parrot the news and talking points of the MSM, though, so in a real sense they are a part of the MSM.
Is Fox News MSM? Is Fox fake news? What do these terms mean exactly?
I'm still going with Fox News not being MSM. They do some, but not enough original reporting, very rarely break news on their own. They don't focus 93% of their time on a single news story and instead present a wide range of news stories, so they're getting closer to MSM. As soon as they start getting quoted by other news organizations on a regular basis and begin influencing smaller news organizzation, that's when they'll be MSM.
Are the Fake News? No. They used to be. I've defined Fake News elsewhere in this thread, but while fake news is certainly fiction presented as fact, fake news in the current context is mostly when facts are cherry picked and/or omitted in order to craft the narrative to tell the story to further the partisan political agenda.
The Fake News Media (snicker) likes to claim that any story they report that Trump doesn't like, he calls it Fake News. But that's not the case at all. He's said it many times, and his responses, or lack thereof, to various stories back it up, that he doesn't mind negative stories, as long as they are accurate and fairly reported. Every time a news outlet reports that "Trump called the news media the enemy of the people," he calls that Fake News, because it's (A) inaccurate and (B) unfairly reported when they say that to make Trump look bad. The fact is, he said "FAKE NEWS is the enemy of the people." Fake News is Trump calling on the "Second Amendment people" to assassinate Hillary Clinton. Fake News is "MAYBE Russia can find Hillary's deleted emails" as being reported as Trump calling on Russia to hack Hillary's email server.
At the G20 Couples Dinner he sat and had a second meeting with Putin. Imagine that, the leader of the United States and the leader of Russia having an informal meeting at dinner, in the presence of 18 other world leaders. Trump hammered the press as Fake News when they reported it. He didn't hammer them because they reported it, but he hammered them because they reported the meeting as "sinister." That's both fake and unfairly reported.
If Law and Order ran an episode that included an anti-Trump plot, would that be considered MSM? There are several comedians who run blistering, anti-Trump routines on late night TV. Are they MSM? If a liberal pastor preaches an anti-Trump sermon that is locally broadcast, is that MSM?
Well, MSM generally refers to news media, not mass media. I can't speak to Law and Order because I don't watch it (might catch it every now and then), but this past season both Quantico and Designated Survivor went full-on anti-Trump in their story lines, with several scripts being written with the input from former Obama administration and Clinton campaign officials. I'm sure there are other shows that do the same type of things. But that's mass media, not really mainstream news media.
If I gave you a list of 10 shows, and asked you to categorize them as MSM or not MSM, what criteria would you use to decide?
Whether or not they are news shows.
As president, he declared the media to be "The enemy of the American People."
Interesting. So you've read it and heard it repeated enough times that you actually believe he said that.
New York Times headline:
Trump Calls the News Media the ‘Enemy of the American People’
(That's a lie)
Here's the lede of the piece:
"President Trump, in an extraordinary rebuke of the nation’s press organizations, wrote on Twitter on Friday that the nation’s news media “is the enemy of the American people.”"
(Also a lie)
Here's the second paragraph:
"Even by the standards of a president who routinely castigates journalists — and who on Thursday devoted much of a 77-minute news conference to criticizing his press coverage — Mr. Trump’s tweet was a striking escalation in his attacks."
(If you believe the BS of the first paragraph, then yeah, sure, it's a striking escalation. But it's all premised on the same lie.)
Headline from the story from
The Hill:
Trump tweets: The media is the 'enemy of the American people'
(Same lie)
The lede:
"President Trump blasted the media as "the enemy of the American people" in a tweet Friday, calling out several outlets specifically."
(It's a lie)
In both the Times and The Hill's stories (and in countless others) they have Trump's actual Tweet shown right there. Yet even with the Tweet right there, the reprting tells the reader that the Tweet says something completely different than what it actually says. They tell the reader what they want it to atually mean, instead of what is means. They show the actual Tweet, and then go right back to the outrage that Trump called the media an enemy of the people, hammering away at that narrative. They crafted a narrative that they want to put forth, one that is different from reality, and that's FAKE NEWS.
What Trump Tweeted:
It's right there in all caps. How can an honest journalist or an honest news organization simply delete those two words and then use what's left as the basis for their story? The answer is, of course, no honest journalist or news organization could do that. A dishonest one would, though, in a heartbeat. And, by doing so, instead of being an honest broker of the news, they are putting out fake news.
Here's another
interesting one from
The Hill, though I've seen similar eslewhere. It's about yesterday's White House Press briefing, and the exchange between Sarah Huckabee Sanders and Fox news reporter John Roberts. The headline reads:
Sanders, Fox reporter exchange jabs over off-camera briefings
(the headline is accurate, fair and unbiased, the first paragraph lede on the other hand)
"Fox News reporter John Roberts roasted President Trump spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders on Tuesday over the White House’s refusal to allow television coverage of its daily press briefings."
See what they did there?
He roasted
her. The reporter picked sides and chose a winner. The rest of the piece, albeit short, is straight news journalism free from bias of any kind. But the damage was already done in the lede, as that frames the context for the piece itself. Is that FAKE NEWS? Not really, but by interjecting opinion seamless into a news piece it paints an inaccurate picture of what really happened. It's subtle. but it's there. And it's subtle enough that anyone who agrees with it won't even think it's opinion. And in this new day and age of Twitter and clickbait and playing fast and loose with journalistic ethics, the reporter himself might not even think it's opinion. But if you know what to look for you will find it in the vast majority of the MSM news reporting today. To quote a great American, SAD!