Chicago - A message from the station manager

By Steve Rhodes

I’ve always thought the most essential reading about Oprah was Barbara Grizzuti Harrison’s piece in The New York Times Magazine in 1989. It still holds today.
It’s not available online, but I found it in an archive and will present excerpts here, along with some other Oprah material afterward. In short, she’s a contradictory con woman who thinks both that the universe intended her to be great and that she alone manifested that greatness. Shorter: She’s full of hooey, and America’s rubes, including its media, are happy to go along for the ride. She’s the modern-day snake oil salesperson exemplar.
To wit:
“Her audiences are co-creators of the self and the persona she crafts. Her studio is a laboratory. She says hosting a talk show is as easy as breathing. Here she is, an icon, speaking: ”I just do what I do – it’s amazing . . . But so does Madonna. . . . Everybody’s greatness is relative to what the Universe put them here to do. I always knew that I was born for greatness. . . .
”If it’s not possible for everybody to be the best that they can be, then it has to mean that I’m special, and if I’m special then it means the Universe just goes and picks people, which you know it doesn’t do . . . I’ve been blessed – but I create the blessings . . . Most people don’t seek discernment; it doesn’t matter to them what the Universe intended for them to do. I hear the voice, I get the feeling. If someone without discernment thinks she hears a voice and winds up being a hooker on Hollywood and Vine, it is meaningful for the person doing it, right now. She is where the Universe wants her to be . . .
”According to the laws of the Universe, I am not likely to get mugged, because I am helping people be all that they can be. I am all that I can be. . . . I am not God – I hope I don’t give that impression – I’m not God. I keep telling Shirley MacLaine, ‘You can’t go around telling people you are God.’ It’s a very difficult concept to accept.”
Just to be clear, she’s not God.

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Posted on January 22, 2018

The Real Jonathan Pie

“News – Told The Way It Should Be”

Meet Tom Walker, accidental political (and media) satirist.

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Posted on December 20, 2017

Study: Network News Largely Ignoring FCC Plan to Kill Net Neutrality

By Jake Johnson/Common Dreams

With just over two weeks left until the FCC is set to vote on chairman Ajit Pai’s plan to decimate net neutrality, a new study published on Tuesday by Media Matters for America found that corporate cable and broadcast news coverage of Pai’s proposed net neutrality repeal has been sorely lacking – and, in some cases, nonexistent.
Based on an examination of television segments aired on major news networks since November 20 – the day Politico reported that Pai was planning a “total repeal of net neutrality rules” – the study found that NBC, ABC, and CBS have devoted just over two minutes combined to net neutrality.

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Posted on November 29, 2017

FCC Wraps New Gift For Sinclair

By Tim Karr/Free Press

Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai circulated a proposal Tuesday to review and revise the agency’s national television-ownership cap. Pai’s actions begin a rulemaking process that will likely result in the removal of even more safeguards designed to protect localism, diversity and competition over the public airwaves.
The move could lift the existing cap set by Congress, which says no single company can own TV stations reaching more than 39 percent of the national audience. The FCC does not have the power to lift, change or waive this limit set by statute, but it plans to move ahead anyway.

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Posted on November 22, 2017

Trump FCC Opens Corporate Media Merger Floodgates

By Jessica Corbett/Common Dreams

In “an awful new low” that elicited warnings about “a new wave of media consolidation,” the Federal Communications Commission on Thursday rolled back media ownership regulations under the guise of trying “to modernize its broadcast ownership rules & to help promote ownership diversity.”
“Any pretense that this vote will help journalism or increase ownership diversity is cynical and offensive,” said Free Press president and CEO Craig Aaron, warning that the move will “lead to more mergers, more layoffs, and more communities that have no news outlets in place to cover important stories and hold officials accountable.”
In response to Thursday’s move by the FCC, Aaron’s group vowed to fight the decision and initiated a campaign to file suit.

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Posted on November 18, 2017

With Massive Handouts To Sinclair, FCC Clears Path For New Wave Of Media Consolidation

By Tim Karr/Free Press

The Federal Communications Commission voted along party lines Thursday to erase several longstanding media ownership limits that prevented one broadcast company from controlling too much media in a single market.
The agency rolled back a local television ownership rule that barred a broadcaster from owning multiple stations in smaller local markets and weakened the standards against owning more than one top-rated station in the same market.

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Posted on November 17, 2017

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