Welcome to the Infotainment Freak Show [1]
Submitted by Steve Horn [2] on
In his essay titled, "Welcome to the Infotainment Freak Show," Marty Kaplan [3], Norman Lear Professor of Entertainment, Media and Society at the USC Annenberg School for Communication and the founding director of the Norman Lear Center [4] for the study of the impact of entertainment on society, writes [5],
"When Ted Turner launched CNN [6] in 1980, there were high hopes for the broad diffusion of news. The results of the twenty-five-year experiment in round-the-clock cable "news," which now includes Fox [7] and MSNBC [8], are now in. Here's what cable news is really good at: trapped miners, Michael Jackson, runaway brides, missing blondes, Christmas Eve murders, Princess Di, Paris Hilton, hurricanes, tsunamis, disinformation [9], whiz-bang graphics, scary theme music, polls, gotcha, HeadOn ads, 'Thanks for having me,' people who begin every answer to antagonistic questions with 'Look,' people who say, "I didn't interrupt you when you were talking," and anchors who say, 'We'll have to leave it there.' Here's what cable news is not so good at insight, context, depth, reflection, proportion, perspective, relevance, humility, information, analysis, news."
In a media atmosphere that prefers entertainment over enlightenment, segments such as the one occurring on Aug. 10 on Morning Joe [10] have become the norm. Rather than spend time talking about issues of substance, Joe Scarborough [11] and his team instead decided to spend a whole segment of his show poking fun at Rep. John Boehner [12] new tan. [13] It's not as if anything else more important [14] is occurring at the moment in the world, right? [15] Infotainment [16], as epitomized by this segment, often reigns supreme in the mess that is the contemporary American "news" industry.