"The Liberal Media" -- A Poltergeist That Will Not Die
by Norman Solomon author,
"The Habits of Highly Deceptive Media." His syndicated
column focuses on media and
politics.
You've probably heard a lot
of spooky tales about "the liberal media."
Ever since Vice President Spiro
Agnew denounced news outlets that were offending the
Nixon administration in the
autumn of 1969, the specter has been much more often cited
than sighted. "The liberal
media" is largely an apparition -- but the epithet serves as an
effective weapon, brandished
against journalists who might confront social inequities and
imbalances of power.
During the last few months,
former CBS correspondent Bernard Goldberg's new book
"Bias" has stoked the
"liberal media" canard. His anecdote-filled book continues to benefit
from enormous media exposure.
In interviews on major
networks, Goldberg has emphasized his book's charge that
American media outlets are
typically in step with the biased practices he noticed at CBS
News -- where "we
pointedly identified conservatives as conservatives, for example, but for
some crazy reason didn't bother
to identify liberals as liberals."
But do facts support Goldberg's
undocumented generalization? To find out, linguist
Geoffrey Nunberg searched a
database of 30 large daily newspapers in the United States.
He disclosed the results in an
analysis that aired March 19 on the national radio program
"Fresh Air."
Nunberg discovered "a big
disparity in the way the press labels liberals and conservatives
-- but not in the direction
that Goldberg claims." Actually, the data showed, "the average
liberal legislator has a 30
percent greater likelihood of being identified with a partisan label
than the average conservative
does."
When Nunberg narrowed his
search to the New York Times, the Washington Post and the
Los Angeles Times -- three
dailies "routinely accused of having a liberal bias" -- he learned
that "in those papers,
too, liberals get partisan labels 30 percent more often than
conservatives do, the same
proportion as in the press at large."
And what about Goldberg's claim
that media coverage is also slanted by unfairly
pigeonholing stars of the
entertainment industry? His book declares flatly: "If we do a
Hollywood story, it's not
unusual to identify certain actors, like Tom Selleck or Bruce
Willis, as conservatives. But
Barbra Streisand or Rob Reiner, no matter how active they
are in liberal Democratic
politics, are just Barbra Streisand and Rob Reiner."
Again, Nunberg found, the facts
prove Goldberg wrong: "The press gives partisan labels to
Streisand and Reiner almost
five times as frequently as it does to Selleck and Willis. For
that matter, Warren Beatty gets
a partisan label twice as often as Arnold
Schwarzenegger, and Norman Lear gets one more frequently
than Charlton Heston does."
The results are especially
striking because the word "liberal" has been widely stigmatized,
observes Nunberg, a senior
researcher at Stanford's Center for the Study of Language and
Information. "It turns out
that newspapers label liberals much more readily than they do
conservatives."
So, while Goldberg hotly
contends -- without statistical backup -- that conservatives get a
raw deal because they're
singled out for ideological labeling more than liberals are,
Nunberg relies on empirical
evidence to reach a very different conclusion: "If there is a bias
here, in fact, the data suggests that it goes the other
way -- that the media consider
liberals to be farther from the
mainstream than conservatives are."
It's unlikely that factual
debunking will do much to slow the momentum of those who are
intent on riding the
"liberal media" poltergeist. It has already carried them a long way.
Not surprisingly, President
Bush displayed Goldberg's book for photographers at the
White House a couple of months
ago. For a long time, GOP strategists have been
"working the refs" --
crying foul about supposed media bias while benefitting greatly from
the efforts of an unparalleled
national media tag-team that includes the likes of Rush
Limbaugh, a slew of
corporate-funded think tanks and plenty of rightward pundits in print
and on television.
It doesn't hurt that -- during
the last 70 years -- the Republican presidential candidate has
received most of the daily
newspaper endorsements in 16 out of 18 elections. How's that
for "liberal media"?
But, like a ghost that long ago
assumed corporeal form in the minds of millions, "the
liberal media" cannot die.
That's mostly because its image keeps being pumped up by
huge media outlets.
In its first edition of this
year, the Wall Street Journal published a lengthy lead editorial
lauding Goldberg's new book -- even showcasing a photo of
the cover at the center of the
editorial, which declared that
"a liberal tilt in the media" is among the "facts of life so
long
obvious they would seem beyond
dispute."
Overall, Goldberg's book is a
muddled hodgepodge. While bashing journalists as
excessively sympathetic to the
homeless, laid-off workers and poor people, he attacks the
media establishment as elitist.
With variations of faux populism, he expresses indignation
that low-income people are
rarely heard or seen in mass media -- yet he lambasts
advocates for striving to widen
the range of media coverage to include the voices of such
people.
On bedrock issues of economic
power, what passes for liberal-conservative debate in
news media is usually a series
of disputes over how to fine-tune the status quo. In the
process, the myth of "the
liberal media" serves as a smokescreen for realities of corporate
media.